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3 held for
selling uranium in Hungary
BRATISLAVA (Slovakia)—Two Hungarians and a Ukrainian arrested in an
attempted sale of uranium were peddling material believed to be from the
former Soviet Union, and it was enriched enough to be used in a
radiological “dirty bomb,” police said Thursday.
The three, who were arrested Wednesday in eastern Slovakia and Hungary,
were trying to sell about a pound of uranium in powder form, said First
Police Vice President Michal Kopcik. “It was possible to use it in
various ways for terrorist attacks,” Kopcik said.
Investigators were still working to determine who ultimately was trying
to buy the uranium, which the three allegedly was selling for $1
million. He said police had intelligence suggesting that the suspects —
whose names were not released — originally had planned to close the deal
sometime between Monday and Wednesday. Police moved in when the sale did
not occur as expected, he said. One of the Hungarians had been living in
Ukraine. Kopcik said three other suspects — including a Slovak national
identified only as Eugen K. — were detained in the neighboring Czech
Republic in mid-October for allegedly trying to sell fake radioactive
materials. It was unclear to what degree, if any, they played a role in
the thwarted uranium sale.
“According to initial findings, the material originated in the former
Soviet republics,” Kopcik said. He said the uranium had been stashed in
unspecified containers, and that investigators determined it contained
98.6 percent uranium-235. Uranium is considered weapons-grade if it
contains at least 85 percent uranium-235. The arrests heightened
long-standing concerns that Eastern Europe is serving as a source of
radioactive material for a “dirty bomb,” which would use conventional
explosives to scatter radioactive debris.
Experts say roughly 55 pounds of highly enriched uranium or plutonium is
needed in most instances to fashion a crude nuclear device. But they say
a tiny fraction of that is enough for a dirty bomb — a weapon whose main
purpose would be to create fear and chaos, not human casualties. Eastern
Slovakia’s border with Ukraine is the European Union’s easternmost
frontier, and authorities have spent millions tightening security in
recent years, fearing terrorists or organized crime syndicates could
smuggle in weapons, explosives and other contraband.
In 2003, police in the Czech Republic, which borders Slovakia, arrested
two Slovaks in a sting operation in the city of Brno after they
allegedly sold undercover officers natural depleted uranium for
$715,000. Slovak and Hungarian police worked together on the new case
for several months, said Martin Korch, a Slovak police spokesman. He
would not say how long the suspects were under surveillance, or detail
how they were arrested and to whom they were trying to sell the
material.
The Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, which closely
tracks reports of illicit trafficking in radioactive materials, said it
was trying to contact Slovak and Hungarian authorities for more
information.
Richard Hoskins, an IAEA official who administers the tracking database,
said that last year alone, the U.N. nuclear watchdog registered 252
reported cases of radioactive materials that were stolen, missing,
smuggled or in the possession of unauthorized individuals — a 385
percent increase since 2002.
But Hoskins cautioned that the spike probably was due at least in part
to better reporting and improved law enforcement efforts. Of the 252
cases, about 85 involved thefts or losses, and not all the material was
suitable for use in a weapon, he said.
Even so, “there are far too many incidents of material not being
properly controlled,” Hoskins told The Associated Press in a telephone
interview. “If we can do a better job, we can help keep these materials
from falling into terrorist hands.”
If terrorists ever succeeded in gathering enough material to make a
nuclear weapon and detonate it, he added, “the consequences would be so
catastrophic, the world would be a different place the next day.”
—Agencies
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