
Password: nuclear
http://rapidshare.com/files/56920199/BUP.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56919870/BUP.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56919554/BUP.part3.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56919236/BUP.part4.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56918898/BUP.part5.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56918572/BUP.part6.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56918219/BUP.part7.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56917907/BUP.part8.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/56917556/BUP.part9.rar
Description
Ben Lewis traces the strange history of French atomic tests in the South Pacific from the 1960s to the 90s - a story of liberty, equality and radioactivity.
For thirty years, despite worldwide protests, the idyllic Moruroa Atoll in French Polynesia was used as a site for France's nuclear tests. Despite repeated assurances by the French government that the blasts posed no danger, today this once pristine locale is contaminated by radiation and many of its inhabitants suffer from cancer and other diseases. Blowing up Paradise uses archival footage to chronicle France's explosion of various nuclear devices, in violation of the international test ban treaty, from the first test in 1966 to the last in 1995. Interviews with former and current French government officials, scientists, and nuclear advisors illuminate France's political agenda of the era.
They also demonstrate France's continuing denial of responsibility for the social devastation wrought, and its refusal to pay any compensation to former test workers. The film vividly portrays the protests of French nuclear policy in the region, including the actions of a Polynesian anti-nuclear terrorist group, riots in the streets of Moruroa, and years of anti-nuclear activism by Greenpeace environmentalists. Blowing up Paradise reveals that the Moruroa Atoll, having undergone a complete social transformation, is today a politically destabilized society. The area remains a militarized zone and has been described by scientists as a nuclear waste dump in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Even worse, it is predicted that radiation leakages will eventually occur. Blowing up Paradise thus becomes an atomic version of Paradise Lost, with the 'sins' of past nuclear tests wreaking potentially global catastrophe in the future.
For thirty years, despite worldwide protests, the idyllic Moruroa Atoll in French Polynesia was used as a site for France's nuclear tests. Despite repeated assurances by the French government that the blasts posed no danger, today this once pristine locale is contaminated by radiation and many of its inhabitants suffer from cancer and other diseases. Blowing up Paradise uses archival footage to chronicle France's explosion of various nuclear devices, in violation of the international test ban treaty, from the first test in 1966 to the last in 1995. Interviews with former and current French government officials, scientists, and nuclear advisors illuminate France's political agenda of the era.
They also demonstrate France's continuing denial of responsibility for the social devastation wrought, and its refusal to pay any compensation to former test workers. The film vividly portrays the protests of French nuclear policy in the region, including the actions of a Polynesian anti-nuclear terrorist group, riots in the streets of Moruroa, and years of anti-nuclear activism by Greenpeace environmentalists. Blowing up Paradise reveals that the Moruroa Atoll, having undergone a complete social transformation, is today a politically destabilized society. The area remains a militarized zone and has been described by scientists as a nuclear waste dump in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Even worse, it is predicted that radiation leakages will eventually occur. Blowing up Paradise thus becomes an atomic version of Paradise Lost, with the 'sins' of past nuclear tests wreaking potentially global catastrophe in the future.

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