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India police seize 4kgs of uranium from smugglers

HAIDER

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PATNA, Feb 19 (Reuters): Police in eastern India have seized around 4 kgs of low-quality uranium after they arrested a gang of smugglers near Nepal's border. The seizure was made in Supaul district in the eastern Indian state of Bihar late on Monday, police said. “We pounced upon them while they all were striking a deal near the border,” senior district police official told Reuters by telephone from Supaul, north of Bihar's state capital Patna. India has a major uranium mine, Jaduguda, in the neighbouring state of Jharkhand. “They are interrogating the arrested smugglers to find out where the seized uranium was actually being supplied,” he said. Police said one Indian and five Nepalese were arrested. (Posted @ 20:10 PST)
- DAWN - Latest Stories; February 19, 2008

(imagine it is recovered, and how much is already smuggled God knows. Proliferation Proliferation Proliferation lolz)
 
Uranium seized at Indo-Nepal border, six arrested


Patna, February 19, 2008
First Published: 16:33 IST(19/2/2008)
Last Updated: 16:49 IST(19/2/2008)


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The police on February 18 seized four kg of low-grade uranium and arrested six persons in Supaul district along the Indo-Nepal border.

A police official on February 19 said acting on an intelligence tip-off, four kg of low-grade uranium was seized near Virpur bus stand in Supaul late on February 18 night.

The estimated value of the seized uranium is about Rs.50 million in the international market.

The police said the operation was conducted with the assistance of Seema Suraksha Bal (SSB) personnel. Six persons, including a schoolteacher and a SSB jawan posted in Assam, were arrested.

"We will interrogate the six persons," the police said.

The police suspect that the seized uranium was being smuggled from Meghalaya to Nepal.


Uranium seized at Indo-Nepal border, six arrested- Hindustan Times
 
Haider you are talking about the smuggling of Uranium in India and i wonder if you have forgot that there had been much seriouse incidents of Uranium theft in India.

One wonders if this falls into wrong hands ;)
 
Thats the question, WEST never play any role to check Indian nuclear security apparatus.
 
Do you know Haider Uranium smuggling from India was started in the 70s
 
Was it enriched uranium?
 
It doesn't have to be weapons grade, dirty bombs can be quite damaging too.
 
It doesn't have to be weapons grade, dirty bombs can be quite damaging too.

hmmm so it means all the quantity of uranium stolen in the past in India might had fell into hands of dirty bomb makers.

There are reprots that uranium being smuggled from India end up in Middle East and South East Asia in the past. and there were fears that this might end with Al-Qaeda.
 
SMUGGLING OF URANIUM FROM INDIA: STORIES PERSIST

June 2006 Issue

An extraordinary story in the Vijay Times (Karnataka, India), by Amlan Home Choudhury, opened with the following lead:


Vijay Times, 30 April -- Jaduguda (Jharkhand):In an alarming development, smugglers are sending highly radioactive Yellow Cake or processed uranium, used in making nuclear weaponry, to Nepal through the clandestine narcotic route via the Jharkhand-Bihar-West Bengal conduit, and it is suspected that the destination might be al-Qaeda. [1]

The story went on to allege that yellowcake was so valuable, being worth between $600,000 and $900,000 per kilogram, that “smugglers are paid not in currency, but gold,” principally by purchasers from the Middle East and South East Asia. [2] However, there appear to be a number of inaccuracies in the story. First, the world price for yellowcake in 2005 was roughly $30 per pound or $66 per kilo, making the black market price quoted in the article of many hundreds of thousands of dollars per kilo rather suspect. [3] Second, the product shown in the photo accompanying the article is a large piece of rock, which might be uranium ore, but is obviously not yellowcake. Nor is a possible link to al-Qaeda very likely, a link which the local press appears more ready to include in their stories on yellowcake smuggling than the international press. [4]

The story is the latest in more than thirty years of reports in the international and Indian media on supposed thefts of yellowcake from India’s Jaduguda mine complex, in Jharkhand (formerly Bihar) province. “Yellowcake,” or uranium concentrate, is an intermediate material in the nuclear fuel cycle. It is produced at a uranium “mill,” usually co-located with a uranium mining operation, which extracts raw uranium from uranium-bearing ore, and then purifies and reconstitutes the uranium product in a solid, powdery form, known as “yellowcake,” from its yellow color. Chemically known as U308, it is sold in multi-ton quantities in international commerce, as the raw material for the manufacture of fuel for nuclear power plants. It is also an essential material for the manufacture of nuclear weapons. [5]

For both civilian and military purposes, however, the material, which is only mildly radioactive, must be extensively processed in a series of highly complex facilities. [6] Because the installations needed for these later stages are so complex, their construction and operation is considered by many experts to be beyond the capabilities of terrorist organizations. Thus yellowcake would have little utility in the hands of terrorists.

In India, yellowcake from Jaduguda is an essential raw material for both the country’s nuclear energy and nuclear weapon programs. [7] Although acquisition of yellowcake from abroad has been a key element in a number of covert nuclear weapon programs in other countries, including those of Israel, Iraq, and Libya, smuggling (or open purchases of yellowcake) from India is not known to have contributed to such efforts, despite continuing allegations of the material making its way to the international black market. [8] [9] [10]

The Jaduguda mine is the best known of the uranium mines in Jharkhand. [11] Opened in 1968, the Jaduguda mine is owned and operated by the Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL), a public sector enterprise under the administrative control of the Indian Department of Atomic Energy. Located in the mineral-rich east Singhbum district of Jharkhand, Jaduguda is the site of an underground mine along with an ore processing plant (mill) to produce yellowcake. From Jaduguda the yellowcake is transported to the Nuclear Fuel Complex in Hyderabad for fabrication into fuel rods for Indian nuclear power plants using natural uranium fuel. The material is also utilized in the reactors India uses to produce plutonium for its nuclear weapons. In addition, the Jaduguda complex is the likely source of uranium for India’s uranium enrichment program, in which uranium is upgraded for use as fuel in certain types of nuclear reactors and/or for nuclear weapons. [12]

Reports of uranium smuggling from the Jaduguda mine are not new, and thefts from this source were mentioned in U.S. government reports dating as early as the 1970s. An Office of Technology Assessment Report to the U.S. Congress dated June 1977, for example, offers the following information:
In April 1974, a uranium smuggling operation was uncovered in India. All of the details of the incident are not available, but it appears from the rather sketchy press accounts that uranium was being removed from the Jaduguda plant in Bihar, India, and was being smuggled to Nepal. From Nepal, it was smuggled to Hong Kong where reportedly Chinese or Pakistani agents took delivery. It is believed that as much as $2.5 million worth of uranium may have been involved. [13]
More recent reports dealing with the international dimension of illicit trafficking in nuclear and radioactive materials have also pointed out that uranium ore stolen from the Jaduguda mines in India have found their way into Nepal, headed for an international black market. [14] Another report authored in the fall of 2004 on nuclear trafficking routes detailing trends in Southern Asia offers the following information:
In 2001, smuggled uranium, confiscated from suspected terrorists in Balurghat, northern West Bengal, had been removed from the Jaduguda uranium mines in Bihar state, bordering West Bengal, and was planned to be smuggled across the Bangladeshi border. [15]
It should be noted that uranium ore usually contains less than 20 percent raw uranium, which would necessitate the smuggling of very large quantities to be of utility in a nuclear weapons program. Modern yellowcake contains 60 percent or more uranium oxide by weight.

Perhaps security is less than ideal at India’s uranium mills and there is some element of truth behind the continuing reports of smuggling. To date, however, a detailed and credible expose of the situation has yet to be written.






WMD Insights
 
I havent heard any comment from the indian side on this. I wonder where Mr. Salim is??
 
Best way to avoid Embarrassment by not replying :)

What randomess. Why should I be embarrassed about it?

If anyone should be embarrassed its the officials responsible for ensuring that this doesn't take place.
 
What randomess. Why should I be embarrassed about it?

If anyone should be embarrassed its the officials responsible for ensuring that this doesn't take place.


Stealth the officials arent gonna come on the forum and reply to this thread :P

maan lo you guys are avoiding it to debat beacuse you know very well India fails to check theft and smuggling of Uranium
 
Stealth the officials arent gonna come on the forum and reply to this thread :P

maan lo you guys are avoiding it to debat beacuse you know very well India fails to check theft and smuggling of Uranium

What I am supposed to say? I condemn the smuggling of uranium?
There is nothing much to comment.

Of course, if you want me to deny it or make excuses, then sure, any time...here's a great (and evergreen) excuse: Its even happening in China:

CNS - URANIUM SMUGGLING CASE IN CHINA RAISES CONCERN
 
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