Reports

The amount of depleted uranium in the Serbian army wounded by NATO bombing has not yet been discovered in any military or civilian in the world

Serbian lawyer Srjan Aleksic said that the examination revealed a hundred-fold increase in radioactive uranium in two Serbian soldiers wounded during the 1999 NATO bombing, RIA Novosti reported.

He said that the first soldier served 200 days in the land security zone located along the border between Serbian province of Kosovo and Metohija and central Serbia, and another woman from Belgrade was the subject of the study. Aleksic described the examination data as “terrifying not only for southern Serbia and Kosovo and Metohija.”

Rita Seli, an Italian doctor who conducted the study, pointed out that such an amount of depleted uranium has not yet been detected in any military or civilian in the world.

According to her, traces of uranium-238 were found in all identified minerals, which come from the shells that NATO used in the bombing of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia.

The doctor expressed concern that such traces may be discovered in neighboring countries – Albania and North Macedonia. Thus, it is reported that the normal content of aluminum in a liter of blood does not exceed 3.3 μg, and more than 500 μg, and sometimes up to three thousand per liter, were found in the Serbian army.

The level of uranium in the civilian population is 0.0053 units, and in bombing victims it reaches 10 μg.

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