Off the wire
2nd LD-Writethru: China's Xi urges implementation of reforms  • Myanmar woman detained for drug trafficking  • World's athletics body bans Kenya's CEO  • Spanish congress brings forward investiture debate  • London's newest rail to honor Britain's longest-serving monarch  • Key int'l boxing tournament kicks off in Bulgaria  • U.S. stocks open lower as oil retreats  • Ukraine declares end of deadly flu epidemic  • BiH takes terror threats seriously: security minister  • EU, Brazil to work together on 5G mobile technology  
You are here:   Home

Hollande admits impact of nuclear tests in Polynesia

Xinhua, February 24, 2016 Adjust font size:

French President Francois Hollande has admitted that the nuclear tests conducted in Polynesia, one of France's overseas territories, had ecological and health consequences.

"I recognize that the nuclear tests conducted between 1966 and 1996 in French Polynesia had an environmental impact and caused health consequences," according to a speech by the French president that was posted on Tuesday on the website of the Elysee.

"Without Polynesia, France would not now have nuclear weapons, the power of dissuasion and the ability to better contribute to peace," Hollande said in his first visit on Monday to Papeete, capital of French Polynesia.

He pledged to review the processes for compensating victims of the nuclear tests.

Hollande also announced a loan worth about 5.8 million euros (6.4 million U.S. dollars) to improve services at the oncology department of the local hospital, in addition to continued and reinforced missions to measure the impact of the nuclear tests on atolls and lagoons there. Endi