Burning
ship had tonnes of radioactive material
After
a freighter went up in flames at the start of the month while
carrying radioactive material into Hamburg's harbour, it has emerged
that the German port city receives such hazardous cargo up to seven
times a month.
17
May 2013
Fire
fighters said they had only narrowly been able to prevent a
catastrophe on May 1st when the freighter "Atlantic Cartier"
caught fire - complete with its radioactive load.
Tens of
thousands of people were gathered just a few hundred metres away to
celebrate the Evangelical church day when the ship went up in
dramatic flames.
Fire
fighters were able to quickly identify the containers which had the
radioactive cargo and remove them before anything worse happened. The
authorities confirmed that the ship had been carrying around nine
tonnes of the dangerous uranium hexafluoride, a toxic chemical used
in the nuclear industry, as well as four tonnes of explosives, the
Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported.
The Green
party forced the information into the open with a written question to
the city government, local radio station NDR 90.3 reported.
"Hamburg
just managed to scrape past a catastrophe on May 1st," Anjes
Tjarks, Green spokesman for harbour policy told the Süddeutsche
Zeitung.
"It is
a monstrosity that the government did not inform the public about
this near-catastrophe of its own initiative. One has to speak of a
cover-up attempt."
Yet Frank
Reschreiter, spokesman for Hamburg's interior authority, said the
dangerous cargo was known about - which was why the fire fighters
knew to remove the relevant containers. Nothing dangerous leaked, he
said.
Now the
city government has admitted that radioactive material had been
brought into the harbour on Atlantic Container Line ships 21 times in
the past three months.
Concrete
information about which ships were being used to take the radioactive
substances, and which route they were taking, would not be revealed,
Hamburg's government said.
Most of the
shipments were due for a uranium-enriching facility in Lingen, Lower
Saxony, NDR 90.3 reported on Friday.
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