As nuclear tensions increase, dangerous times have raised legally-loaded questions about nuclear weapons. What happens now the U.S. is withdrawing from Iran nuclear deal? Does the president have unfettered power to launch a preemptive nuclear strike on North Korea? What’s the legal status of the Trump administration’s intention, telegraphed in the Nuclear Posture Review, to expand U.S. nuclear capabilities and arsenals when the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty supposedly commits us to cutting and eventually eliminating them?
But there’s an even broader legal dilemma looming over production, testing and threatened use of nuclear weapons: how they affect the human rights of future generations. Those threats to the future are also compounded by nuclear energy, which generates radioactive waste we’re manifestly unable to control, and by destabilizing the climate that has enabled and sustained human civilization.
Can such crimes against the future be legal? How can we respect the human rights of future generations in view of them? International symposia at the University of Basel (Switzerland), University of Caen (France) and Charles University in Prague (Czech Republic) recently grappled with those questions. The Basel conference produced a declaration on human rights and trans-generational crimes resulting from nuclear weapons and nuclear energy.
Protecting future generations from the threat of nuclear weapons was an important consideration in the International Court of Justice’s 1996 affirmation that threat or use of nuclear weapons is generally illegal, given their long-term and indiscriminate impact. But despite the Court’s decision, most nuclear-armed states retain (illegal) policies to use nuclear weapons, including in a first, pre-emptive strike.
In general, current law fails to safeguard the rights of future generations. But that doesn’t make failure defensible, sustainable or in accord with legal principles. Evolution of this area of law is necessary and inevitable.
Some 2000 nuclear weapons were detonated for “testing” since 1945, releasing millions of curies of radiation. This impacted human health globally, and will continue to do so for generations. Most nuclear testing victims live in remote areas like the Pacific islands, the Kazakhstan steppe, or the North African Sahara. They have largely been forgotten; today’s younger generations are unaware of their sacrifice. Yet forgetting is perilous, because today’s youth will be tomorrow’s victims unless the cycle is broken.
There are some legal efforts to break it. For example, the 2017 Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons obligates signatories to provide environmental remediation and assistance for nuclear testing victims. But the provision is unenforceable, because none of the nine nuclear weapons states signed the treaty.
Like nuclear weapons, nuclear energy also poses enduring threats to human health. The Chernobyl explosion caused widespread contamination across the region and the whole European continent. High volumes of radiologically contaminated water from Fukushima continue to leak into the Pacific.
These, too, are crimes against the future. Some lethal isotopes in nuclear waste have half-lives of thousands of years. Waste repositories will need to be guarded for unimaginable time periods, with associated financial, logistical and security implications for future societies, an enormous burden we leave to our descendants.
Like the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) asserts a human right to health, applicable to nuclear contamination. But in practice that right isn’t respected.
For example, Japan ratified the covenant, and the Japanese constitution even defends the trans-generational principle of human rights in articles 11 and 97. But despite those legal principles being articulated, the Japanese media is still prevented from reporting on current events in Fukushima, and medical research on the effects of the meltdown is still restricted. The Japanese government maintains that small amounts of radiation are harmless, so limits for public radiation exposure could be increased from 1 to 20 millisieverts per year, the same as for radiation workers.
That’s unconscionable and untenable, not to mention discriminatory against young women and children who are much more susceptible to radiation exposure than men, with higher risks of cancer and non-cancerous diseases. Radiation exposure may present mutations and diseases in their offspring decades later. That’s why Japan’s handling of the Fukushima nuclear disaster fails to accord with its own constitution as well as the ICESCR.
Failing to combat climate change effectively is also a crime against the future. The chances of meeting the Paris goal of limiting global warming to 2°C are receding since the U.S. withdrew and financial contributions of many signatories remain out of scale with the problem. Greenhouse gas emissions have risen in the two years since the Paris accord. If we stay on this too-little, too-late trajectory, we’ll not only fail to protect human rights, but much of life on Earth.
Can all this be considered legal? Not for long. The dawn of the nuclear age marked the acquisition of unprecedented human power over the Earth and all forms of life, as the Caen symposium pointed out. Many legal experts believe that in this new anthropocene era, a new code of medical and legal ethics is necessary. Trans-generational impacts of nuclear war, nuclear catastrophes and climate change must now be seriously considered, and require a paradigm shift in our legal thinking about the future.
The District Court of the Hague took a step in that direction in 2015 when it affirmed in Urgenda Foundation v. the Dutch State that the government had a responsibility to protect future generations by limiting greenhouse gas emissions. A similar case in the United States brought by young people — Juliana et al v. United States — was granted jurisdiction and is proceeding to consideration of its merits.
There remains a long way to go to adapt the current legal framework to the realities of nuclear threats and climate change. Current laws need better implementation, and new laws need to be established. But those changes are vital to protecting the human rights of future generations.
Emilie Gaillard is an Associate Professor of law and a researcher at the University of Caen Normandy (France). She is a member of the Pôle Risques, Qualité et Environnement Durable at Maison de la recherché et des Sciences de l’Homme (Caen).
Andreas Nidecker MD is a Professor Emeritus of Radiology at the University of Basel, Switzerland. Board member and past president of PSR / IPPNW Switzerland and member of the organizing Committees of the symposium “Human Rights, Future Generations & Crimes in the Nuclear Age.”
Alyn Ware is a member of the World Future Council and consultant for the International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms.
What about the nuclear test victims, in the continental United States? Over 900 open air detonations were done in Nevada. The western United States is the most Radionuclide contaminated area, in the world! The thousands of open-air and underground detonations. The massive amounts,of radionuclides. Millions of tons of, uranium waste, bomb-making waste, hi level waste, so-call low level waste. I feel bad for innocents in the Marshal islands and elsewhere but, the united states, is no gleeming citadel of freedom and eco purity. That is what the evil-monkeys, would have you believe. It is the most radioactive shithole in the world. It is getting worst.
The silicon billionaire preppers. The rightwing preppers want society to fall apart, to appease their bigotry, and elitism. They hate democracy. They worked hard to get Trump elected! The disruption, raping of america now by trump will lead to chaos.
The full chaos they crave,
has many more ramificactions than they realize. They consider themselves the aristocracy. They believe in neo-feudalism, and some, even extremest violence or chaos to get what they want.
When the boot drops and a big meltdown and or fuel fire occurs in a rickety, american nuclear-reactor, the first to go, will be the baby boomers born 1954 to 1963.
They had the hell irradiated, out of them, in their mothers wombs, during the open-air nuke tests of that time. There was a huge increase, in autism during that period, and now their descendants are getting it. Autism is doubling every five years.
That was from the open air testing all over the globe, and meltdowns in that time.
One cannot, necessarily see radionuclide fallout. There is the pink glow at fukushima now. Our dna knows, our chromosones know, our rna, and fragile cell structures in our body know, our damaged stem-cells know! The already damaged baby-boomers, born in the 50s and early 60s, will get sick first from the mega irradiation and radionuclide fallout, of another major meltdown, post fukushima, and or a fuel pool fire, in the continental USA. The average life expectancy for late baby boomers, gen xers, and beyond, has gone down from previous generations, from 75 to 65.
A major nuclear accident, and or fuel fire in america, will effect the open-air bomb irradited , late baby boomer profoundly
Many already have chronic illness. Their immune systems will go, their already damaged bone marrow will fail. Their bodies repair mechanisms. and feed back systems will completely fail.
Important cancer cell elimination mechanisms, in their bodies will be gone, from the damage of a second major irradiation. Any heart defects or, organ malfunction will be amplified a thousand times. Awful stuff. Cancer rates will soar. Thyroid, dysfunction and cancer. Lung cancer sky hi, unprecedented leukemia. Acute radiation sickness for those closest to the nuclear meltdown will occur. It is coming. It is coming soon. Nobody cares
What these and othe ayn rand ideologues, who hate democracy, and working poor forget, is all those nuclear reactors, nuclear fuel pools, all the nuclear waste and nuclear bombs, will totally contaminate the biosphere, and make it uninhabitable once their caretakers are gone, as they unravel society.
This will occur as society descends into chaos and civil war. Hard to imagine how any person or group of people could be so selfabsorbed and irrational
But they are!
This is the real reason silicon valley billionaires and, other ayn rand neofeudalist, are prepping for the future
https://www.salon.com/2018/05/12/the-real-reason-tech-billionaires-are-prepping-for-doomsday/