Belgian minister: “No more GSM phone masts”
Posted by seumasach on December 13, 2008
7th december, 2008
The minister André Antoine is concerned
about the health of people living near GSM
phone masts.
NAMUR-At present there are more than 10,400,000
mobile phones in use in Belgium. The controversy
over the risks to public health from the GSM
network and GSM masts is getting more intense.
The Walloon minister of Town Planning, André
Antoine, intends to provide better protection for the
Walloons.
“We can no longer bury our heads in the
sand,” he insists. “The fields of radio frequency The minister André Antoine (BELGA)
created by mobile phones and GSM masts are a real cause for concern.
As an elected politician, it is my duty to take my responsibilities seriously.
I have therefore decided to forbid the further development of new GSM phone
masts. It’s a matter of public health.”
Specifically this means that the minister will not permit any more GSM phone masts
to be installed in the Walloon Region except in special circumstances.
He declares: “The operators will no longer be allowed to install them unless they
are integrated into their surroundings and unless they respect scrupulously the
permitted limit of 3V/m.”
In addition to these two new restraints, André Antoine intends to do even more to
protect nearby inhabitants. “An enquiry on the installation of a new phone mast,”
he warns, “will have to last a month, and the operators will be obliged to
provide local people with a summary of the technical and health issues in
terms they can understand.
“It is essential,” he continued, “that everyone living nearby realises what a GSM
phone mast represents.
Finally, I am currently considering the possibility of increasing the radius of
notification of people living nearby. At the moment this is 50 meters, which is not
enough. I intend to have it increased to 100 or even 200 meters. I consider it my
duty to take everyone’s health into consideration.”
The assessment of the CDH minister is confirmed by two recent decisions: “First of
all, the Health Council [Conseil Supérieur de la Santé] issued a demand that the
permitted limit be reduced to 3 volts/metre. And then there was the discussion we
had with the Inter-environment Agency on 8 October. On this occasion, there was
a large consensus for reducing the limit to this level.”
Vincent Lievin
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