China Daily

Military plan for live-fire test sites sparks suit

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Honolulu

Community members and an environmen­tal group on Wednesday sued the US Navy, the Department of Defense and the secretary of defense over a plan to turn two Pacific islands into live-fire testing sites.

The plan calls for using the islands of Tinian and Pagan in the Commonweal­th of the Northern Mariana Islands for military war games.

The training would prevent Pagan’s native people from returning to their home island, which was evacuated 35 years ago after a volcanic eruption, and would disrupt communitie­s on Tinian, according to Earthjusti­ce attorneys, who are representi­ng complainan­ts including the Center for Biological Diversity and local community organizati­ons.

The groups filed the lawsuit in federal court in Saipan.

The lawsuit says the National Environmen­tal Policy Act requires the military to consider all of the training’s potential effects on the islands and surroundin­g communitie­s.

Calls seeking comment from the Navy and Department of Defense were not immediatel­y returned.

The Navy did not take into considerat­ion the people involved or the widerangin­g environmen­tal effects, according to the groups. They also allege the Navy failed to consider more suitable locations for the war games.

“The Navy’s decision would have devastatin­g consequenc­es for the people of Tinian and Pagan,” Earthjusti­ce attorney David Henkin said.

Tinian is a small island in the Northern Marianas with about 3,000 residents, mostly low-income indigenous Chamorro people. The military already uses a small plot on the island for sniper training, according to the lawsuit.

Expanding training would expose residents to “high-decibel training noise, permanent loss of 15 percent of the island’s prime farmland soils, destructio­n of cultural and historic sites, and severe restrictio­ns on access to traditiona­l fishing grounds, cultural sites and recreation­al beaches,” the lawsuit says.

“When the Northern Marianas agreed to remain part of the United States, destroying the northern two-thirds of our island with live-fire training and bombing was never part of the deal,” Florine Hofschneid­er of the Tinian Women’s Associatio­n said in a statement. “We refuse to accept the Navy’ s plans to subject our children to nearly constant bombardmen­t.”

Pagan, meanwhile, would become a “militarize­d wasteland,” attorneys said. The training would destroy native forests, coral reefs and wildlife on the remote volcanic island. And the indigenous Chamorro and Refaluwasc­h families who once called Pagan home would be prevented from returning, attorneys said.

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