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Atomic tests man sues MoD
Friday 18th April 2008, 11:50AM BST.
A Shropshire nuclear veteran is one of 180 former servicemen suing the Ministry of Defence for damages of more than £50,000 after he was involved in the testing of atomic bombs.Leslie Lund, from Telford, has joined forces with other survivors from the Royal Navy ship, HMS Diana, to sue the MoD for the damage allegedly caused by the atomic bomb testing of 1956.
London-based Rosenblatt Solicitors has served a High Court writ against the MoD on behalf of the surviving servicemen or the family members of the deceased.
The great-grandfather, from Hollinswood, today claimed he had suffered a catalogue of health problems, including skin and bone complaints, since the 1970s, after he served on the destroyer when two atomic bombs were detonated off Montebello Island, off the Australian coast.
Mr Lund, 72, said his memory of the bomb detonation was as clear today as back in 1956.
“On the horizon you saw the cloud and then it went out,” he said.
“We had to turn our backs on it for the actual explosion and then when they thought it was safe enough to turn around we watched the mushroom cloud.
“We certainly felt a shockwave – and that was 22 miles away for the second one, which was the most powerful as it was such a deadly weapon.”
Atomic bomb Mosaic G1 was detonated on May 16, 1956, with Mosaic G2 tested a month later.
Mr Lund said the servicemen, some as young as 15, had to “batten down the hatches” while the bomb went off.
He said some of the men involved wore “special suits and breathing apparatus”, but he had nothing but his uniform.
“We went through the atomic cloud as it dropped back down,” he said.
“It wasn’t pleasant in any way at all,” added the veteran.
Mr Lund said he first realised the seriousness of the effects of the atomic bomb testing at a reunion in 1987, when he and his friends discussed their health problems.
By Kirsty Marston
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I wish him and his comrades well.
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The only member of the Ships Company I knew who served on that Commission was a Signalman named Woodhall who came from Birmingham. I have tried to trace many of the Crew members I served with but have been unsucessful so far and that includes “Woody” Woodhall.Brian Clark
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I recommend that Leslie Lund gets a copy of “Beyond Belief, The British Bomb Tests: Australian Veterans Speak Out”, by Roger Cross and Avon Hudson, from the Wakefield Press.
Dr Dick van Steenis was a medical student in Adelaide when the Maralinga atomic test of October 1956 caused Adelaide to have five days of radioactive fallout, and in 1959, the wards of Adelaide Childrens Hospital were packed with children with all kinds of cancers and leukaemias.
The cancer records from Adelaide would be of great assistance in any court action regarding exposure to atomic tests, but the Australians were told by the UK to destroy all hospital records for the first 22 years & that’s what they did.
Tony Blair’s family were also in Adelaide in the 1950s and the Shropshire Star of 30 April 2003 or 2004 had a picture of Master Tony Blair mooching about Adelaide on his trike. That picture was reproduced in the fanous Australian monthly magazine, “The Bulletin”, in September 2004.
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