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Turkish Police Seize Weapons-Grade Uranium

Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
edited September 2002 in General Discussion
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Turkish Police Seize Weapons-Grade Uranium

September 28, 2002 10:24 AM ET

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ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkish paramilitary police have seized more than 33 pounds of weapons-grade uranium and detained two men accused of smuggling the material, the state-run Anatolian news agency said on Saturday.

Officers in the southern province of Sanliurfa, which borders Syria and is about 155 miles from the Iraqi border, were acting on a tip-off when they stopped a taxi cab and discovered the uranium in a lead container hidden beneath the vehicle's seat, the agency said.

The incident happens at a time of mounting speculation the United States could launch a military attack on neighboring Iraq for its alleged program of weapons of mass destruction.

U.S. President George Bush has accused Baghdad of clandestine efforts to develop a nuclear bomb as his administration works to build international support for an operation to oust Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

Officials at Ankara's Atomic Energy Institute would not confirm they had been notified about the material, which Anatolia had reported.

"Our investigation on whether the uranium was destined for a neighboring country is continuing," a Sanliurfa police official was quoted as saying by Anatolian.

Police officials in Sanliurfa and Ankara declined to comment on the case.

Authorities believe the uranium came from an east European country and has a value of about $5 million, Anatolian said.

It was not immediately clear when the operation was carried out. Anatolian only gave the first names of the suspects, which appeared to be Turkish.

Smugglers use Turkey's porous eastern border to import drugs, and hundreds of thousands of migrants each year illegally cross the rugged frontier on their way to more affluent European Union nations.

Police in Istanbul seized more than 2.2 pounds of weapons-grade uranium last November that had been smuggled into Turkey from an east European nation. The smugglers were detained after attempting to sell the material to undercover police officers.

http://www.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml?type=topnews&StoryID=1508708

Edited by - josey1 on 09/29/2002 09:58:47

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    Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Chernobyl Uranium for Sale
    Andrey Mikhailov
    Pravda
    Saturday, Sept. 28, 2002
    The court of Minsk, the Belarus capital, started a sensational and horrifying case: several people charged with selling radioactive uranium rods, which highly likely came from the Chernobyl nuclear plant.
    The newspaper Sovetskaya Belorussiya (Soviet Belarus) reported Thursday that the investigation department of the National Security Committee (KGB) for Minsk and the Minsk region investigated crimes committed by an international criminal group. The investigation revealed that a group of criminals attempted to sell about 1.5 kilograms of uranium dioxide 235 and 238 in Belarus at the beginning of the year.

    Numerous tests on the uranium dioxide failed to determine its origin, because the identification numbers had been removed from the uranium rods. However, the investigation revealed that the radioactive metal originates from Ukraine - the Chernobyl nuclear plant, to be precise.

    There are five people charged with this dangerous crime: one Ukrainian, Veselovsky, and four Belorussians: Kurdesov, Bankalyuk, Volchenko, and Gurinovich. It is because of the involvement of the Ukrainian, Veselovsky, that the uranium is said to originate from the Chernobyl nuclear plant.

    The investigation discovered that Veselovsky came to Chernobyl in 1987 and was appointed the chief foreman in the reactor shop where radioactive elements were processed. Before the appointment, he worked at a nuclear power plant in Russia. Therefore, it is evidently he who had access to the uranium.

    In addition, zirconium tubes with uranium dioxide, similar to that brought to Belarus in 2002, was stolen from the Chernobyl nuclear plant in 1993. A criminal investigation was opened, but no results were achieved. The investigation failed to determine who was involved in the theft. It is astonishing that the same Veselovsky was a key witness in that case.

    The Ukrainian origin of the uranium is also confirmed by the fact that the dangerous substance was brought to Belarus in a train Chernigov (Ukraine)- Iolcha (Belarus) through the railway checkpoint of Novaya Iolcha, where border security is weak.

    In other words, there is much evidence of the Ukrainian origin of the uranium, and it is highly likely that Veselovsky is connected with the theft in 1993.

    It is quite natural that the man decided to wait for some time for the scandalous theft to be forgotten, and then he decided to sell the stolen uranium.

    Veselovsky denies the charges and says it was Kurdesov who obtained the uranium. The latter lays the blame on Veselovsky and says it was he who had stolen the tubes. The investigation still failed to unravel the closed circle.

    The Belarus Internet site, www.sb.by, reported details of the unique case. According to the conclusion of the investigation, Kurdesov lived in Ukraine for many years and then moved to Mogilev (Belarus). At the end of 2001, he told an acquaintance of his, a supplier at the Minsk bearing plant, Bankalyuk, that he was looking for a client to sell a batch of uranium. Bankalyuk agreed to help him, and soon established contact with Gurinovich, who in his turn found Volchenko.

    In addition, a criminal case was initiated against Gurinovich in Belarus in January 2002 for an attempt to sell precious stones.

    The KGB learned about some people wishing to sell uranium at the end of 2001. The committee decided to place its officer into the criminal group as a potential client.

    However, Volchenko and Co. checked the man and his contacts several times before they agreed to have dealings with him. The KGB officer performed his role wonderfully: he asked the criminals to sell him only one rod at first to examine the quality of the uranium.

    Kurdesov brought a piece of uranium tube to Minsk on Dec. 28, 2001 and delivered it to Bankalyuk. The latter handed the rod over to Gurinovich, who in his turn contacted Volchenko and arranged a meeting. It was Volchenko who was the last link in the criminal chain and who met with the "client."

    The KGB paid 10,000 USD for the purchase, but it was worth it. A test on the rod determined that the criminals actually offered uranium dioxide 235 and 238 for sale. It was decided to conclude the operation and seize the whole batch.

    A special operation was held which resulted in all members of the criminal group being arrested; 5 zirconium tubes with uranium dioxide 290-300 mm long, one tube 50 mm long, and the 10,000 USD paid for the first purchase were found during the operation.

    It may be incorrect to label the people who participated in this crime an organized criminal group, as each of them was just a link in a chain of people pursuing their own objectives.

    For instance, Kurdesov and Veselovsky offered the uranium tubes for 250,000 USD. At the same time, Volchenko planned to sell the same goods for approximately 800,000 USD. The criminals didn't realized what a high price the innocent population would have to pay if the dangerous transaction wasn't prevented. It is not clear yet to what extent the sentence passed will affect the republic that has suffered so much from the Chernobyl tragedy.

    Translated by Maria Gousseva
    http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/9/27/174334.shtml

    "If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
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    will270winwill270win Member Posts: 4,845
    edited November -1
    That's just wonderful.

    "When the pin is pulled, Mr. Grenade is not our friend."
    ~Secret Select Society Of Suave Stylish Smoking Jackets~
    Will270win@nraonline.com
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    dads-freeholddads-freehold Member Posts: 1,361 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    greetings, in the first story, this sounds so much like a set up ops, to disenfrachise iraq when bush is trying to get congress to agree to take out sadam. blk ops is the name of the game, and usually works. respt submitted dads-freehold

    if your going to be a savage, be a headhunter
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    Judge DreadJudge Dread Member Posts: 2,372 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    There are 200+ 300 to 500 megaton hydrogen bombs missing from Russia
    ant they worry with the chernovil "tidbits" ...

    What a bunch of... A$$holes!!!!

    1 megagogol contingent of pungent fly's cant be wrong ,eat dung!!!
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    gruntledgruntled Member Posts: 8,218 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Why does it say "Made in W. Germany"?
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    competentonecompetentone Member Posts: 4,698 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Relax JD, they're not "missing"--the tritium just decomposed so they were pulled and recycled and somebody forgot to make note of it.

    Reading articles like this is like reading "gun issue" articles written by a press which doesn't understand the technology. Too many important questions are not being asked nor answered...
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    lurkerlurker Member Posts: 414 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Black Ops Plant? --- What?

    Seems to me if they were going to plant something they'd plant and capture it on the Iraqi border so that there'd be no doubt as to where it was headed.
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    competentonecompetentone Member Posts: 4,698 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    The news today: It is only 3 ounces of "something radioactive"--it hasn't been identified yet.

    Seems somebody forgot to subtract the 32 lbs 13 ozs (the weight of the lead container) when they weighed this "radioactive" material.

    Like I said, it's like reading articles written about "guns"--a lot of really poor reporting out there...
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