WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Georgia said yesterday it had foiled the attempted sale of bomb-grade uranium on the black market in March, the latest in what it said was a series of such cases over the past 10 years.
Georgia disclosed the latest attempted illicit sale during a 47-nation nuclear security summit in Washington that aims to prevent terrorists and criminal gangs getting their hands on material that could be used to make a nuclear bomb.
The United Nations nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has documented 18 cases of weapons-grade nuclear material being stolen or going missing around the world since the early 1990s.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Georgia was one of a number of former Soviet republics where smugglers of nuclear materials operated. In recent years Russia and the United States have been cooperating to put a halt to this activity.
The Georgian delegation attending the nuclear summit in Washington said in a statement there was clear evidence of criminal groups attempting to use Georgian territory for the illegal trafficking of nuclear and radioactive materials.
“The Georgian Ministry of Interior has foiled eight attempts of illicit trafficking (in) enriched uranium during the last 10 years, including several cases of weapons-grade enrichment,” the statement said.
The Georgian authorities had detained a number of suspects in connection with the cases, it said.