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Russian Prosecutors Consider Probe Into Uranium Smuggling

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  • Russian Prosecutors Consider Probe Into Uranium Smuggling

    MosNews, Russia
    Jan 30 2007

    Russian Prosecutors Consider Probe Into Uranium Smuggling

    Created: 30.01.2007 12:26 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 14:02 MSK, 1 hour 30
    minutes ago


    MosNews


    Russia is considering an inquiry into possible theft of highly
    enriched uranium from its nuclear sites, as another uranium smuggling
    report surfaced from Georgia, the Reuters news agency reported on
    Tuesday quoting a spokesman for the Prosecutor General's Office.

    Georgia announced last week that in February 2006 a Russian citizen
    was arrested and jailed for trying to sell 100 grams (3.5 ounces) of
    highly enriched uranium-235 to Islamist extremists. Russia called the
    announcement a provocative act.

    Documents from the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) seen by
    Reuters suggested the uranium may have come from the Russian city of
    Novosibirsk in Siberia.

    `The Russian Prosecutor-General has asked for copies of documents
    (from Georgia) to start checks, and to consider launching a criminal
    case on the illegal purchase and holding of radioactive substances,'
    the spokesman said.

    Highly enriched uranium in big enough quantities can be used to make
    a nuclear bomb.

    A senior Georgian government official told Reuters on Monday a
    similar nuclear smuggling case occurred in 2003.

    Shota Utiashvili, head of the Interior ministry's information and
    analytical section, said border guards then caught an Armenian man
    trying to smuggle 170 grams of highly enriched uranium-235 across the
    Armenia-Georgia border.

    `According to our information the uranium was bought from Russia,' he
    said.

    Utiashvili said the man was handed over to the Armenian police but he
    was unaware what had happened to him after that.

    Armenian officials were not available for comment.

    The case has revived worries about the safety and security of
    hazardous material left over after the disintegration of the Soviet
    Union. Experts had said tightened security had reduced the chances of
    uranium being traded on the black market to virtually nil.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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