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Mobile phone mast fury

01:00 Mon 12th Feb 2001 |

By Merill Haseen


A COUNCIL in England has started legal proceedings against Orange, because the mobile phone company refused to remove a mobile phone mast from the grounds of a school.

Orange placed the mast there in 1997, on the understanding that it would be removed after three years if there was evidence of health risks.

Now, however, Orange refuses to remove the mast.

Orange said that the mast is vital for its expanding business. A spokesman added: 'There is no conclusive evidence that makes a link between exposure to radio waves, transmitter masts and long-term public health risks. A typical Orange transmitter site operates at levels many hundreds of times below national and international guidelines in areas where the general public would have access.'

Safety campaigners claim that telecom masts can cause children to suffer severe nose-bleeds, headaches and nausea, if they are constantly exposed to them at close range.

Debbie Collins, of Mast Action UK, said: 'It is disgusting that Orange won't remove the mast when we are convinced it affects health. In my daughter's old school an alarmingly high number of children started getting seriously ill after a mast was installed. Some suffered from such severe nose-bleeds, they had to go to hospital.'

A bid to restrict the spread of mobile phone masts goes before MPs later this month. Labour MP Debra Shipley has tabled a private Bill to ensure planning authorities take health risks into account when considering applications for sitings. Scottish ministers have already pledged legislation to include health as a factor in the planning process.

In America, too, groups of concerned parents are campaigning to stop masts being erected near schools and houses. American public safety expert M Granger Morgan has coined the phrase 'prudent avoidance' it is only prudent, he argued, to avoid siting power lines and transmitters very near to where people congregate.

Big companies are not happy about his statement, because going along with this precautionary avoidance could be seen as an admission of a risk. Then, when they are sued (as they inevitably would be in litigious America), it would be held against them that they knowingly indulged in risky behaviour.

Phone facts

  • The demand for mobiles means that the number of masts in the UK will increase from 22,000 to 50,000.
  • In three years, the number of people in the country who own mobile phones has grown from nine million to nearly 35 million.
  • More than one million mobile phones are sold every month.

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