Radioactive
material container from hijacked truck found empty in Mexico
Mexican
police located a stolen truck which contained dangerous radioactive
material the UN warned could be used to construct a “dirty bomb.”
The safety container holding that cargo was found empty, with the
material abandoned nearby.
RT,
5
December, 2013
The
vehicle was found close to where it was stolen
outside of Mexico City as it was transporting cobalt-60 from a
hospital in Tijuana to a radioactive waste storage center. Mexico’s
nuclear safety director Juan Eibenschutz said radioactivity had been
detected about a half mile (1 kilometer) from where the truck and
container were located.
General
view on December 4, 2013 of the place in Tepojaco, Hidalgo state
where the Volkswagen Worker truck transporting a "teletherapy
source" containing cobalt-60 was stolen by gunmen on December 2.
(AFP Photo / Yuri Cortez)
Mexico’s
national nuclear safety commission CNSNS has said that the thieves,
thought to be unaware of the contents which have now been located,
removed it from its protective container and were exposed to
dangerous levels of radiation.
"This
is a radioactive source that is very strong,"
Eibenschutz told the AP, saying that exposure could cause death
almost immediately if in close proximity.
"Fortunately
there are no people where the source of radioactivity is,"
Eibenschutz added.
So
far there were no indications that the theft of the cobalt was an
intentional act of terrorism, said Eibenshutz. The stolen radioactive
material was used in radiation therapy equipment that is now obsolete
and is being phased out of Mexico’s public health system.
Photo
from cnsns.gob.mx
Federal
police and the military have been mobilized in the municipalities of
Hueypoxtla and Zumpango. CNSNS says the recovered radioactive
material will be returned to a sealed case as soon as possible
An
official familiar with similar cases told the AP that unintentional
theft of radioactive materials are not altogether uncommon.
In
the 1970s one thief died and another was injured when a container
also holding radioactive material was opened. That container was then
sold to a foundry where it contaminated steel reinforcement bars. All
foundries in Mexico now have equipment that can detect radioactivity.
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