Use of banned weapons
June 14, 1999
 Graphite bombs aimed to electric plants
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During the aggression on Yugoslavia, the aggressor has used the ammunition and weapons forbidden by the international conventions, which represents a war crime, an act deserving an international court, as estimated by numerous world experts. NATO has admitted that it had used bombs with the radioactive depleted uranium. Dangerous consequences of such weapon have been already proven in Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as in Iraq, where they had been used before the aggression on Yugoslavia. Among all the other dangerous effects, a notable increase of the patients suffering from leukemia, cancer and the babies born defective, as a result of radioactivity, was noticed. About 80000 American soldiers who took part in the Gulf War is suffering from the syndrome equal to the radiation sickness. This weapon of the global destruction, causing the same consequences as in Chernobyl, endangers those who dare to use it as well, so NATO was hiding its use from the publicity. It creates another illegal, criminal aspect to the aggression of NATO, besides it was carried out without a mandate by the U.N.
Forbidden weapon
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In two months of the aggression only, NATO has dropped some 15000 cluster bombs, forbidden as well, mostly on civilians. Their destructive power has killed and injured thousands of people and according to the so far experiences, many people would be hurt by them subsequently, the children mostly.
Cluster bombs in Nis downtown
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During the war, many other, non-human weapons were used for the first time on this territory (such as graphite bombs used for demolishing of the electrical plants and the bombs developing the temperature to 2000 degrees), practiced for the massive killing of the civilians mostly.
Child injured by cluster bomb
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