Pencemaran Radiasi di Bukit Merah
          radiation  in Bukit Merah even after 18 years 
        Radiation around the Asian Rare Earth (ARE)  plant in Bukit Merah and its permanent waste dump site at Bukit Kledang, both  in Perak, is still at a hazardous level - despite the factory having closed 18  years ago. 
      The radiation level at the gate of Japan  Mitsubishi chemical's Asian Rare Earth plant's radioactive waste permanent  depository achieved 0.269micro Sv per hour and we also saw the guards were all day  exposed to it.
      This disturbing finding was recorded by anti-Lynas  group Save Malaysia Stop Lynas (SMSL) during a fact-finding visit to Perak over  the weekend. 
      According to SMSL chairperson Tan Bun  Teet (right), SMSL members armed with radiation reading devices were not  allowed to enter the plant and dump site, but the radiation readings around  both locations showed worrying results. The reading near the plant was around  0.19 microsievert per hour while the reading near the dump site stood at about  0.2 microsievert per hour. Both readings, if extrapolated to annual basis, are  beyond the safe level of 1 milisievert per year as advised by the Atomic Energy  Licensing Board ( AELB =  MINT =  Malaysian Institute of Nuclear Technology = Nuklear Malaysia = terletak di  belakang Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Bandar Baru Bangi = lokasinya  dikelilingi bukit rendah berhutan dan ramai orang tak tahu di dalamnya juga ada  reaktor nuklear mini beroperasi = Andai loji ini bocor = Next Fukushima  Malaysia ! ), Tan said. The average background reading of Malaysia is 0.05  microsievert per hour.
    
"It is regrettable that within the 1.7km  buffer zone of the dump site, we still found fish breeding, as well as animal  and vegetable farming activities (left)," Tan said. AELB  had earlier claimed that the plant site has been decontaminated, with radiation levels  dropping from 0.65 microsievert per hour to 0.17 microsievert per hour, which  is safe for human activities. The board also claimed that it had requested the  authorities to move illegal farms and squatters living within the buffer zone  around the waste dump site. The ARE plant run by Japanese company Mitsubishi  Chemicals from the 1980s to the early 1990s, is blamed for spreading radiation  poisoning inas a result of poor management of radioactive waste generated from  processing tin tailings to extract rare earth.       The aftermath of the  factory's operations has been one of the largest radioactive waste clean-ups in  Asia, with a permanent dumping site set up at the foot of nearby Bukit Kledang.  The anti-Lynas movement has been using the ARE plant as an example to protest  against the Lynas rare earths plant in Gebeng, Kuantan. Members of SMSL also  met with a former contractor who was hired by ARE to dump the radioactive  waste. According to Tan, the contractor, whose three employees carrying out the  job have died at a young age.
      The contractor said they  just discarded the waste into empty plots of land within Menglembu and Lahat as  ARE had not specified a dump site. In other words, the polluted areas are  larger than what the authorities had expected, and they are difficult to trace,  Tan elaborated. Tan is also disappointed with the Ipoh Hospital which, he said,  did not trace the backgrounds of cancer patients over the years to determine  whether they were from the affected areas. This matter was conveyed to Tan by  Dr Chan Chee Khoon, an epidemiologist from Universiti Malaya, who has been  following the issue and has had discussions with the medical personnel of Ipoh  Hospital. "This shows that the government did not follow up on the health  conditions of residents in that area," added Tan.
              Will  the Gebeng story be a replay of the tragic saga that began in 1979 and is yet  to end?
    To understand today, we sometimes have to look back at  yesterday. To understand why there is so much opposition to the Lynas rare  earth plant, we have to look at the sad history of Bukit Merah New Village,  just a few kilometres south of downtown Ipoh. 
    Life changed forever for the mainly Hakka community of  Bukit Merah after Asian Rare Earth Sdn Bhd (ARE) began operations there in July  1982 to extract yttrium, a rare earth, from monazite.
    Within a few years, the villagers began noticing  physical defects in their newborns, and at least eight leukaemia cases were  confirmed. Medical examinations on children in the area found that nearly 40%  of them suffered from lymph node diseases, turbinate congestion and recurrent rhinitis.  Seven of the leukaemia victims have since died.
    Equally heartrending is the parallel story of the  villagers' attempt to stop the ARE operations. It was a saga that ran for more  than two decades, and it pitted the villagers, helped by various civic  organisations, against big business and powerful state authorities. An exercise  to decommission the ARE plant finally began in 2003, but the work to  decontaminate the area is still going on and is estimated to cost RM300  million. The New York Times called it "the largest radiation cleanup yet in the  rare earth industry".
    ARE was a collaboration between Mitsubishi Chemical  Industries Ltd (35%), Beh Minerals (35%), Lembaga Urusan dan Tabung Haji (20%)  and several Bumiputera businessmen (10%). The company was incorporated in 1979.
    The Penang Consumer Association has compiled a  chronology of events in the Bukit Merah tragedy to help us appreciate the  tenacity of Malaysians who rose to act to protect their health and environment  against a government that placed profit before the people's welfare.
    Here are  some highlights:
      Soon after it was incorporated, ARE seeks the advice  of the Tun Ismail Research Centre of the Science, Technology and Environment  Ministry about radioactive waste produced by processing monazite. It is decided  that the waste, the property of the Perak state government, would be stored  with a view to profiting from it as a source of nuclear energy.
      June: Residents of Parit, Perak, learn that the  government has earmarked a nine-acre site in their vicinity as a storage dump  for ARE's radioactive waste. They protested against this and gained the support  of political and social organisations. The government scraps the plan and  begins to look for another dump site. July 11: ARE factory begins operations
      In November, residents of Papan, adjacent to Bukit  Merah, find out that ARE is building trenches outside their town to store  radioactive waste. The site was picked by the government.
      May 24: About 6,700 residents of Papan and nearby  towns sign a protest letter and send it to the Prime Minister, the Perak  Menteri Besar, the Health Minister, and the Science, Technology and Environment  Minister.
    May 31: About 200 residents from Papan protest against  the proposed waste dump. They block the road leading to the site.
    June 5: Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad says the  government has taken every precaution to ensure safety and that construction of  the Papan dump will go ahead.
    June 18: About 300 Papan residents demonstrate for the  second time against the proposed location of the dump.
    June 28: The Science, Technology and Environment  Minister Stephen Yong states that the Papan dump is safe because it is being  built according to stringent standards. He challenges critics to prove that the  dump will be hazardous to health and the environment. Meanwhile, ARE is dumping  thorium waste into an open field and a pond next to its factory.
    July 1: About 3,000 people, including women and  children, hold a peaceful demonstration against the Papan dump.
    July 18: A Bukit Merah Action Committee is formed,  comprising residents of Bukit Merah, Lahat, Menglembu and Taman Badri Shah, to  support the Papan residents. Sahabat Alam Malaysia (SAM) sends a memorandum to  the prime minister stating that radiation levels at the open field and pond  next to the ARE factory are too high.
    Sept 19: Three experts from the United Nations'  International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) visit the Papan site at the  invitation of the government. They declare the trenches there as unsafe.
    Oct 5: A British physicist and safety analyst, William  Cannell, is invited by the Papan residents to visit the dump. He finds the  engineering work to be "extremely shoddy".
    Oct 21: An American expert, Edward Radford, is invited  by the Papan residents to review the dump. He finds that the site is unsuitable  for radioactive dumping and that the walls of the trenches were too thin and  cracked in some parts.
    Nov 7: A Japanese industrial waste expert, Jun Ui, is  invited by the Papan people to inspect the waste dump. He finds it unsuitable  for storing hazardous waste.
    Nov 28: The Cabinet discusses reports submitted by two  regulatory bodies. The report by the British National Radiological Protection  Board said that residents would be safe only if certain conditions were  observed by the Perak government and ARE. The second report by IAEA said the  trenches did not meet required specifications.
    Dec 9: More than 1,500 residents in Papan stage a  one-day hunger strike to protest against the government's decision to go ahead  with the plan to locate the dump in Papan. Bukit Merah residents bring in a  Japanese radiation and genetics expert, Sadao Ichikawa, to measure radiation  levels at the open field and pond next to the ARE factory. He finds the levels  there dangerously high, the highest at 800 times above the permissible level.
    Dec 12: Acting prime minister Musa Hitam declares a  personal interest in the Papan affair. He pays a visit to the dump.
      Jan 11: After a Cabinet meeting chaired by Musa Hitam,  the government decides to relocate the proposed dump site to Mukim Belanja in  the Kledang Range, about five kilometres from Papan and three kilometres from  Menglembu.
    Feb 1: Eight residents on behalf of themselves and the  Bukit Merah residents file an application in the Ipoh High Court to stop ARE  from producing, storing and keeping radioactive waste in the vicinity of the  village. The Atomic Energy Licensing Act of 1984 is enforced. It ensures that  operators of nuclear installations (including the government) are held liable  for nuclear damage. A five-member Atomic Energy Licensing Board (AELB) is  formed under the Act, with representatives from Puspati.
    Oct 14: Justice Anuar Zainal Abidin of the Ipoh High  Court grants an injunction to the Bukit Merah residents to stop ARE from  producing and storing radioactive waste until adequate safety measures are  taken. More than 1,500 residents of Bukit Merah turn up at court to hear the  decision.
      Sept 22: ARE claims it has spent more than RM2 million  to upgrade safety measures (as required by the court) that follow IAEA  standards. It invites an American atomic energy expert, EE Fowler (formerly  with the IAEA), to visit the factory. Fowler states that radiation levels near  ARE facilities have met ICRP standards and that the factory is safe for  operation.
    Oct 5: About 3,000 residents in and around Bukit Merah  stage a demonstration against ARE's plan to keep radioactive waste in its  permanent dump in the Kledang Range.
    Oct 28: Ichikawa, on his second trip to Bukit Merah,  reveals that radiation around the ARE factory is still above the acceptable  level. He is denied entry into the factory.
    Nov 16: A team from AELB checks out a few illegal  thorium waste dump sites in Bukit Merah. It is assisted by ARE ex-contractor Ng  Toong Foo, who had carried out the dumping. Readings at one dump are between  0.05-0.10 millirems/hour, above the maximum safety level of 0.057  millirems/hour set by the ICRP.
    Nov 26: Residents of Bukit Merah, Lahat, Taman Badri  Shah, Menglembu, Papan, Falim and Guntong form the Perak Anti-Radioactive  Committee (PARC).
    Dec 8: Minister Kasitah Gadam of the Prime Minister's  Department says that radiation levels at two illegal dumps in Bukit Merah  checked by AELB are safe. He says that although the AELB found that the levels  exceeded the normal radiation levels this does not pose a danger as such dumps  are few in number.
      Feb 6 : Disregarding the High Court injunction to ARE  to stop operations, the Malaysian AELB grants a licence to ARE to resume  operations.
    April 10: Fourteen foreign experts invited by PARC to  Bukit Merah are denied entry into ARE. At a forum held in Bukit Merah, these  experts concur that ARE presents severe health hazards.
    April 12: About 10,000 people march through Bukit  Merah in protest against the resumption of operations by ARE.
    May 24: Federal Reserve Unit police disperse about 300  people demonstrating near the ARE plant. More than 20, including three women,  are injured in two clashes. ARE's construction work for a road to the proposed  permanent dump site in the Kledang Range is halted by residents.
    July 23: A Canadian doctor, Bernie Lau, is engaged by  PARC to set up radon gas detectors outside ARE. He finds significant amounts of  radon gas escaping from the plant.
    Sept 7: The hearing of the suit filed by Bukit Merah  residents against ARE begins before Justice Peh Swee Chin in the Ipoh High  Court. About 1,000 show up in court to give their support.
    Sept 11: Residents march from Bukit Merah to the Ipoh  High Court for the last day of hearing. Their number in the court grounds  swells to 3,000.
    Sept 18: Bukit Merah residents file contempt  proceedings against ARE for breaking the injunction granted to them by the Ipoh  High Court in 1985.
    Oct 27: More than 100 people are detained under the  Internal Security Act. Among them are PARC officials. They are freed after two  months.
    November : ARE starts building the permanent waste  dump in the Kledang Range.
      Jan 25: The trial resumes.
      Feb 13: The trial comes to a close after 65 days of  hearing stretched over 32 months.
      July 11: The people of Bukit Merah win their suit  against ARE. The Ipoh High Court orders the shutdown of the ARE factory within  14 days.
    July 23: ARE files an appeal at the Supreme Court  against the High Court order. Mitsubishi Chemicals in Japan tells PARC that ARE  filed the appeal without the corporation's consent.
    July 24: Following an ex parte application by ARE, the  Lord President of the Supreme Court suspends the High Court order to ARE to  stop operations.
    Aug 3: Over 2,000 people from Bukit Merah turn up at  the Supreme Court to hear the appeal. However, the judges postpone the hearing  to Aug 5 because of "pressure exerted by people picketing" outside the  courtroom.
    Aug 5: The Supreme Court allows an application by ARE  to suspend the High Court order. According to the judges, the closure would  bring hardship to the company and its 183 workers.
      March 15: The scheduled hearing of the appeal filed by  ARE at the Supreme Court is postponed.
    Dec 23: The Supreme Court says it overturned the High  Court decision on two grounds. The court is of the opinion that ARE's experts  were more believable in the results of the radiation tests. Secondly, the  judges say, the residents should have gone back to the AELB to ask that it  revoke ARE's licence, because AELB has the power to do so under the Atomic Energy  Licensing Act. The Atomic Energy Licensing Act, however, does not have any  provision for appeals by affected communities or the public for the revocation  of a licence granted to a company.
    Despite the success of ARE in their appeal, the  company later stops operations and begins cleaning up, due to public pressure  both nationally and internationally.
      Jan 19: ARE announces the closure of its Bukit Merah  plant.
      Nov 6: ARE, in a letter to the Consumer Association of  Penang, says it has not begun the decommissioning and decontamination of the  Bukit Merah plant. It says this will happen only when the Perak government and  ARE finalise an agreement.
      A decommissioning and decontamination exercise begins.
    About seven years later, former premier Dr Mahathir  Mohamad said "a small amount" of nuclear waste was buried in Perak.
    "In Malaysia," he said, "we do have nuclear waste,  which perhaps the public is not aware of. We had to bury the amang in Perak,  deep in the ground. But the place is still not safe. Almost one square mile of  that area is dangerous."
    Following his remarks, The Star reported that 80,000  200-litre drums containing radioactive waste were being kept at the dump in the  Kledang Range [ Tidak mustahil antara 10 - ke 20 tahun akan  datang bekas2 mengandungi radioaktif ini akan bocor secara beransur ansur dan  mula mencemarkan air di bawah tanah. Molekul atau atom radioaktif sebenarnya  mengambil masa yang sangat lama untuk mereput ( Half life yang sangat lama  ).  Justeru pencemaran radioaktif ke air  bawah tanah akan memasuki sungai dan mencemari sungai. Di hilir sungai pula  biasa terdapat loji penapis air yang menapis bekalan air minum.... Kementerian  Kesihatan pula tidak menguji parameter radioaktif dalam bekalan air minuman dan  mereka mengatakan bekalan air minuman anda adalah bekalan air minuman yang selamat  di minum !!! - tidak hairanlah sekarang kes kes kanak kanak dilahirkan cacat  atau mati dalam kandungan meningkat di Hospital Teluk Intan umpamanya...  ] The site is about 3km from Bukit Merah and Papan and about 15km from Ipoh.  And the waste is thorium hydroxide, not amang. 
    The Papan-Bukit  Merah story is a tragedy of betrayal of leadership. It is about people  in power losing their moral compass to the pull of profit. Will the Gebeng  story be just as tragic?
              Bukit Merah survivor: Our tears have run dry
    It  has been nearly 30 years to the day that Lai Kwan first set foot on the grounds  of the Asian Rare Earth (ARE) factory in Bukit Merah, Perak. She had just found  out that she was pregnant with her sixth and youngest child, but poverty left  her little choice as she had to take up a job as a labourer with a local  contractor, hired to build an additional structure at the facility. Unknown to  her, that decision to earn her family's daily bread would ultimately break her  heart.
  
Several months after her stint at the ARE plant, her son, whom she asked only  to be identified as Kok Leong, was born disabled.
The boy had severe problems with his eyes, eventually losing sight in his left  eye when he was five. He also suffers from a hole in his heart.But what pains Lai Kwan the most is that her precious son is mentally  challenged.
Kok Leong is now an adult of 29 years, but his mind is no more developed than a  toddler's. He has little or no capacity for speech, and he has never been out  of diapers. To keep him from wandering out of the safety of their home, he is  kept at the back of their modest unit - separated from the rest of the world by  a makeshift wire mesh door that stands up to his chest. And that is where Lai  Kwan, now 69, has spent the past three decades, caring for her boy all these  years in much the same way that she had from the first day she brought him  home.
One of Lai Kwan's daughters had to quit school, even before she finished Remove  class, to help support the family, since her husband had abandoned them and she  could not leave her son's side. "When you see me and my son, can you feel how I  feel?" she said in Hakka, the only dialect she is fluent in due to her limited  education.
  No clue on radiation  exposure
      The ARE plant, run by Japanese company Mitsubishi Chemicals from the 1980s to  the early 1990s, is blamed for spreading radiation poisoning in Bukit Merah due  to what is claimed to be its poor management of radioactive waste generated  from processing tin tailings to extract rare earth. The aftermath of the  factory's operations has been one of the largest radioactive waste clean-ups in  Asia, with a permanent site set up at the foot of nearby Kledang hill.
      Ghosts of the health hazards leaking out of the ARE episode resurfaced recently  when plans by Australian mining firm Lynas to build another rare earth processing facility,  this time in Gebeng, Pahang, were made public. Recounting her time working on  the ARE premises, Lai Kwan said it was a bit odd that all staff members were  required to wear a thermometer-like pin over their chests whenever they were on  site, which she found out later was used to measure exposure to radioactivity. "Every  time at work, I would smell something really awful. It made me thirsty but  otherwise I didn't feel anything strange. "I only found out (about radioactive  waste) when the residents of Kg Papan started protesting against the factory  over plans to bury the wastes in the village. The villagers told me about it,"  she said.     
Another senior citizen, whose family was also afflicted by radiation poisoning  from the ARE plant, said it has been hard for her youngest daughter, having  been constantly going in and out of the hospital since she was a baby. Panchavarnam  Shanmugam, 55, was working as a labourer clearing forest cover on a plot of  land right next to the ARE factory in 1987 when she noticed a lot of water  being flushed out from the factory. "Our work took us about seven months to  finish. Many times, there would be a lot of water coming from the factory and  it would rise to almost as high as our knees. The water was very smelly," she  said at her home.
        A year later, Panchavarnam's youngest child, Kasturi, was born and almost  immediately the complications arose. She recounted how as a baby, Kasturi  suddenly suffered inflammation all over her body to the point that she had to  be treated in a sterile environment at the hospital.
    
Her daughter also had constant, splitting headaches, which came with heavy nose  bleeds and on some occasions, fainting. It was only when Kasturi was around 10  or 11 years old that doctors discovered that she was suffering from leukaemia.  Neither of her two elder siblings has the disease, nor could Panchavarnam  recall anyone in her family having the condition. "She could not run like her  friends, and she just found it hard to concentrate on anything. She can speak  English, but it's difficult for her to focus... she could not finish her Form  Five," Panchavarnam (right)  said of her daughter. Kasturi, now 23, is now working in a nearby textile  store, but Panchavarnam noted that her daughter still goes in and out of the  hospital regularly. "It has been hard for her," said the doting mother. And, as  described by Lai Kwan's daughter, who asked not to be named, it is hard not  only on those made sick by the radiation but also on their families, who are  helpless to change the fortunes of their loved ones. "I had a hard time in  school before I stopped, because my classmates would make fun of my brother  because of how he is. My mother couldn't go for wedding dinners, or celebrate  Mother's Day because there wouldn't be anyone to take care of my brother. "We  have cried so much that our tears have run dry," she said.