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This is an archive article published on September 12, 2007

IAEA providing security against nuclear terrorism

The IAEA is providing expertise to support the security of major public events, against the threat of nuclear terrorism.

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The UN atomic watchdog agency is providing expertise to support the security of major public events, including the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, against the threat of nuclear terrorism.

“The Agency’s nuclear security work has clearly improved overall nuclear security,” UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed ElBaradei told the agency’s Board of Governors meeting in Vienna.

But, he conceded, much remains to be done in shaping the nuclear security framework, in building up-to-date security systems and in dealing with the legacy of past lax security.

“This is not a problem that can be solved overnight; it takes time and resources to achieve a sustainable, internationally acceptable baseline level of nuclear security,” he said.

Expertise for protection at major events is just one of the element among the IAEA’s arsenal of measures. The Agency has already provided support in the preparations of July’s Pan American Games in Brazil.

ElBaradei noted that over the past 12 months the IAEA continued to expand member state participation in the Illicit Trafficking Database and that nuclear security training had been provided to some 1,650 individuals from 90 countries. The Agency assisted in improving physical protection at facilities in nine states, he said.

“More than 900 items of security related equipment were supplied to member states, including border detection equipment for 29 countries,” he said.

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“Integrated Nuclear Security Support Plans were completed in 38 countries, and the agreed activities have been planned or are being implemented in each of the States concerned.”

The Agency is foreseen as playing an important role in implementing these instruments.

“To that end, we have started an effort to provide nuclear security guidance that would facilitate implementation,” ElBaradei said.

This and other programme changes entail transitioning from a situation in which strengthening nuclear security has been addressed as an ad hoc reaction to the prevailing threat of nuclear terrorism to a situation in which nuclear security will be addressed in a normative, sustainable manner, he added.

 

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