Customs in the southern Russian city of Orenburg have seized a container with 37 kilograms of depleted uranium heading to Kazakhstan
Published:
30 January 2005 y., Sunday
Customs in the southern Russian city of Orenburg have seized a container with 37 kilograms of depleted uranium heading to Kazakhstan, the RIA-Novosti news agency reported on Friday.
The agency cited the chief customs inspector in charge of media relations, Maksim Prytkov, as saying that the container had been detected by a special radioactivity sensor installed at the customs post. The car was searched and the metal container with 37 kilograms of uranium-238 was found.
Curiously, the container was mentioned in the customs declaration as a sports weight. The owner said he had found it in a dump and used it as a training weight for some time. A criminal case has been instigated.
Uranium-238 cannot be used to produce nuclear weapons, but it is a radioactive and highly toxic substance that can be used to make a so-called “dirty bomb” and also can be enriched to produce weapons-grade plutonium-239.
Šaltinis:
mosnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Males the world over regard China's liberated women as most sexy while the booming Communist nation is ranked fourth as "the most sexy country."
more »
Lost footage of John Lennon has been uncovered by documentary makers, showing him clowning around with Mick Jagger
more »
A guitar played by the late George Harrison during the Beatles’ last public performance has been sold for £289,000 in a public auction
more »
Robot shows stiff Czech PM how to loosen up a bit
more »
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has been in Turkey, but not on business or political affairs
more »
The flash mob phenomenon has hit London
more »
A golden eagle and its handler
more »
Norwegian drinkers knocked back more alcohol in 2002 than at any point in the past hundred years
more »
Germany's capital has come alive to the sound of techno music as the famous Love Parade returns to Berlin for another year
more »
Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Australia and the Netherlands ranked as the best countries in which to live, in the 2003 UN Human Development report
more »