The Guardian (USA)

Marshall Islands calls for US to pay more compensati­on over nuclear tests

- Reuters in Washington

The foreign minister of the Marshall Islands has called for more US compensati­on over the legacy of massive US nuclear testing to enable the renewal of a strategic agreement governing bilateral relations.

Marshall Islanders are still plagued by health and environmen­tal effects of 67 nuclear bomb tests from 1946 to 1958, which included Castle Bravo at Bikini Atoll in 1954 – the largest US bomb ever detonated.

Jack Ading told a US congressio­nal hearing a memorandum of understand­ing covering terms to extend his country’s Compact of Free Associatio­n (Cofa) with Washington was signed in January without proper domestic authorizat­ion and under pressure of a deadline for inclusion in Joe Biden’s budget.

“There are other issues that needed to be included, and especially, additional funding for the nuclear-affected population­s,” he told the Senate committee on energy and natural resources.

He said the MOU was non-binding and appealed to Congress to direct the Biden administra­tion to continue negotiatin­g.

The Marshall Islands is one of three Pacific island nations covered by Cofas, under which the US has responsibi­lity for their defense and provides economic assistance, while gaining exclusive access to huge strategic swaths of the Pacific.

Renewing the deals, which is subject to congressio­nal approval, has become a key part of US efforts to push back against China’s effort to expand its regional influence.

Under MOUs agreed this year, the US will commit a total of $7.1bn over 20 years to the three countries.

In May, the US said it had finalized terms with Micronesia and Palau and its chief negotiator, Joe Yun, said then he hoped to complete a deal with the Marshall Islands in coming weeks. The economic terms of its existing Cofa expire this year.

Last year, more than 100 arms-control, environmen­tal and other activist groups urged the Biden administra­tion to formally apologize to the Marshall Islands and provide fair compensati­on.

Yun told the hearing he was “puzzled” by the Marshall Islands’ position,

given the MOU offered it $2.3bn over 20 years and that the nuclear liability issue had been settled in the 1980s. He also said the MOU contained $700m for a trust fund that could be used for nuclear-affected atolls.

“I have told my Marshalles­e colleagues: listen, there is no more money,” he said.

Yun said he believed there were domestic political issues at play in the Marshall Islands, with an election coming up in November and rumors of a no-confidence motion against David Kabua, the president, next week.

Ading denied this and said he was “saddened and disappoint­ed” by the reference to his country’s internal affairs.

 ?? Photograph: Keystone/Getty Images ?? A mushroom cloud forms after a test explosion off the coast of Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands, in 1946.
Photograph: Keystone/Getty Images A mushroom cloud forms after a test explosion off the coast of Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands, in 1946.

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