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There is “extensive removal of equipment and in some instances, removal of entire buildings”, ElBaradei
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By
Hossam Al-Sayed, IOL Staff
CAIRO,
April 19 (IslamOnline.net) – Parts of Iraq’s neutralized nuclear
reactor have been resettled somewhere in the far-reaching country, an
Iraqi scientist told IslamOnline.net Sunday, April 18.
“This
can help the United States find a way out of the current limbo of
failing to come across a sniff of Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass
destruction,” the central rationale of the U.S.-led war one year
ago, said the source, who asked not to be named.
Material
and equipment from the facility, some 40 kilometers from Baghdad, have
also disappeared and been looted under the watchful eye of the
U.S.-led occupation troops, well-placed sources here told IOL.
Backed
by U.S. warplanes, gunmen disembarked frequently from unidentified
jets in the location of the Osirak reactor, looting some of its
material, the sources at the Iraqi Atomic Agency (IAA) said.
‘None
Of Your Business’
They
noted that some IAA scientists reported the incident to the U.S.-led
occupation authorities, asking for a protection to the facility and
its depots.
The
request fell on deaf ears as a U.S. Let. Gen. told the scientists
“it is none of your business”, according to the source.
“They
[the gunmen] were instructed by someone from his KIA and tampering
with the reactor under U.S. protection,” another Iraqi scientist,
who requested anonymity, told IOL.
“I
myself happened on some non-registered materials in the reactor.” he
added. “We complained umpteen times to the U.S. occupation troops,
who eventually denied us access to the facility.”
An
Iraqi translator working for the occupation troops confirmed the
incident, claiming that the gunmen were Israelis.
He
asserted that they dismantled parts of the Russian-made reactor, which
was struck by Israeli warplanes in 1981 in a preemptive strike to
undermine Iraq’s nuclear capabilities.
The
translator added that the parts were rushed to unknown
destinations in armored vehicles.
On
Friday, April 16, the head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog,
Mohammed ElBardei said he was concerned about the disappearance of
nuclear material from the occupied country.
Baradei
said in a letter to U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan on the findings,
which were based on satellite images.
The
U.N. Security Council was also kept posted on the situation in another
letter from ElBaradei.
According
to the letter, satellite imagery shows “extensive removal of
equipment and in some instances, removal of entire buildings”. in
Iraq.
“Large
quantities of scrap, some of it contaminated, have been transferred
out of Iraq,” it added.
“It
is not clear whether the removal of these items has been the result of
looting activities in the aftermath of the recent war in Iraq or as
part of systematic efforts to rehabilitate some of their locations,”
ElBaradei said in his letter.
The
IAEA chief told the Security Council March 7 that documents allegedly
proving that Iraq was seeking to procure uranium from Niger were forgeries.
David
Kay, the head of the 1,400-member Iraq Survey Group which has been
searching Iraq for alleged WMD, had recently resigned his post
over failure
to find any truce of such weapons.