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HomeSourcestelegraph.co.ukHow officials bought luxury 'government' cars with funding for victims of US...

How officials bought luxury ‘government’ cars with funding for victims of US nuclear testing

Marshall Islands officials went on spending spree to buy ‘assets’ for the Bikini people leaving no money for healthcare and living costs

The hydrogen bomb exploded at 6.45am, vaporising three islands in a fireball four-and-a-half miles wide and sending a tower of radioactive debris high into the atmosphere.

At 15 megatons, the Castle Bravo device – detonated on March 1, 1954 – was the most powerful nuclear weapon ever detonated by the United States, with a yield a thousand times greater than the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The fallout from the test, and the 22 other nuclear weapons detonated in the Marshall Islands until the late 1950s, devastated the lives of the people who lived on Bikini Atoll, on the northern tip of the country. Hundreds of families had to leave when testing began in 1946, never to return because of the dangerous levels of radiation.

It was only in the 1980s that the US government created two trust funds to compensate victims of its nuclear testing programme, with the payments scheme to help with health care, housing and living costs running like clockwork for decades.

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