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http://www.nydailynews.com/news/local/story/180337p-156686c.html
Soldiers demand to know health risks
Special Investigation
By JUAN GONZALEZ
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Doctors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center recently
told Staff Sgt. Ray Ramos that a biopsy revealed his rash comes from
leishmaniasis, a disease spread by sandflies and contracted by hundreds
of G.I.s in Iraq.
Until last week, however, Army doctors refused requests by Ramos and
a few others in the 442nd Military Police to have their urine analyzed
for depleted uranium, a procedure that can cost up to $1,000.
Three of the nine tested in the Daily News investigation ? Sgt. Herbert
Reed, Spec. William Ruiz, and Spec. Anthony Phillip - also were tested
by the Army in November. But the results were withheld for months despite
repeated inquiries.
Last week, after Army officials received press inquiries about the 442nd
and discovered that a group from the company had sought independent testing,
an administrator at Walter Reed told Reed and Phillip that their tests
from November had come back negative for depleted uranium.
The News' tests also showed negative results for Reed and Phillip, but
Ramos tested positive. The soldiers of the 442nd are not the only ones
to raise questions about depleted uranium in Samawah.
In August, a contingent of Dutch soldiers arrived in the town to replace
the Americans. Press reports in the Netherlands revealed that Dutch authorities
questioned the U.S. beforehand about the possible use of DU ammunition
in Samawah. According to Sgt. Juan Vega, senior medic for the 442nd, the
Dutch swept the area around the train depot with Geiger counters and their
medics confided to him they had found high radiation levels. The Dutch
unit refused to stay in the depot, Vega said, and pitched camp in the
desert instead.
And in February, after Japanese troops moved into the same town, a Japanese
journalist equipped with a Geiger counter reported finding radiation readings
300 times higher than background levels.
"There'd been a lot of fighting in Samawah before we got there," said
Staff Sgt. Ray Ramos, 41. "The place was dusty as hell, and the sandstorms
were hitting us pretty good."
Felled at first by what he thought was the sweltering Iraqi heat, Ramos
expected to recover quickly.
"My health just kept getting worse," he said. "I
tried to work out each day to get through it but I kept getting weaker.
A numbing sensation hit my hands and my face, and the migraine headaches
became constant. I was afraid I was having a stroke."
He was sent first to a Baghdad hospital for treatment, but with no neurologist
available, he was shipped out to Germany and eventually to the U.S.
"I had rashes on my stomach for four months," Ramos said. "And
now, whenever I [lie] down, my hands fall asleep."
Doctors at Walter Reed have been stumped. They've given Ramos braces
to wear on his arms at night to try to prevent his hands from falling
asleep, and they've prescribed a host of muscle relaxants and painkillers,
but nothing seems to work.
"I have four kids. What happens to them now if I can't work?" said Ramos,
who was looking forward to a transfer from the NYPD Housing Bureau to
the robbery unit in Brooklyn's 75th Precinct once he returns from active
duty. "I need them to investigate what's going on with my body."
Cpl. Anthony Yonnone, 35, a cop with the Veterans Administration in
Fishkill, N.Y., has the highest DU levels of the four soldiers who tested
positive, said Dr. Asaf Duracovic, who performed the testing funded by
The News.
Yonnone said his nausea, skin rashes and migraines
began in Samawah. "The
headaches are constant and they don't want to stop," he said. "The rashes
seem to come and go.
"We were always passing blownout tanks when we were
out doing patrols."
He recalled that American units in the town burned
trash and waste each night in big drums near the train depot. "The combination of smoke and
sand when we lit those fires covered everybody," he said.
Evacuated from Iraq in August for minor surgery, Yonnone was sent first
to Germany.
"They gave us a questionnaire. I marked that I wasn't exposed to depleted
uranium because nobody had even told us what it was back in Iraq," he
said.
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