Thank you callmejoe for your post. Let’s add TigerLikesRooster post to this thread.
Thank you TigerLikesRooster for the ping to this thread.
Note: The following posts are a quote:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1885749/posts
China searches for 8 kg of “missing” uranium
Reuters ^ | 08/24/07
Posted on 08/23/2007 10:03:21 PM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
China searches for 8 kg of “missing” uranium
BEIJING (Reuters) - Eight kg (17 lb) of radioactive uranium has gone missing in China, delaying the verdict in a trial of four men charged with attempting to sell it on the black market, state media said on Friday.
A court in Guangzhou, capital of China’s southern province of Guangdong, heard the four tried to sell the material, which can be used in making nuclear weapons, between 2005 and January 2007, the China Daily said.
The men were arrested in January after a potential buyer in Hong Kong reported them to the authorities, the paper said.
However, despite having the four men in custody, police were unable to locate the uranium.
“The men claimed it had been lost because it had been moved around so much between potential buyers,” the paper said.
A verdict had yet to be reached “as the court said the trial would continue until authorities tracked down” the uranium.
Under Chinese law, the illegal trade in uranium carries a sentence of between three and 10 years in prison. In exceptional cases, it can carry the death sentence.
“The radioactive substance uranium does not explode when it is in its raw state, but it is very harmful to people’s health,” Jiang Chaoqiang, director of the Guangzhou No 12 People’s Hospital, told China Daily.
“Therefore it needed to be found as soon as possible.”
TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror; Click to Add Topic
KEYWORDS: blackmarket; china; tlr; uranium; Click to Add Keyword
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http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-08/24/content_6038939.htm
Gang on trial for attempting to sell 8kg of uranium
By Liang Qiwen (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-08-24 07:49
GUANGZHOU: Four men from Central China’s Hunan Province have gone on trial at the Tianhe District Court here charged with trying to sell uranium, a radioactive element used in the production of nuclear weapons.
The court heard that between April 2005 and January of this year, Zhang Sangang, Yang Guoliang, Li Zi’an, and Li Huibin, attempted to sell 8 kg of types U-235 and U-238 uranium.
Zhang said he met a uranium mine owner surnamed Zhou - who is being tried separately - in April 2005 and offered to sell 8 kg of the radioactive chemical for him.
Zhou said he wanted a minimum of 200,000 yuan ($26,400) for each kilogram of uranium. If Zhang was able to achieve a higher price, he could keep the difference, the court heard.
Later, Zhang met Yang and the pair agreed to work together to find a buyer.
Soon after, Yang met Li Huibin and Li Zi’an, and they also joined the team.
The court heard that at the end of last year, Li Zi’an made contact with a businessman, Peng Shuangjin, in Guangzhou, capital of South China’s Guangdong Province.
Peng claimed he had found a buyer in Hong Kong who was willing to pay 1.6 million yuan per kilogram for the uranium.
However, Peng was aware it was illegal to sell uranium and so reported Li Zi’an to the authorities.
On January 4, Li Zi’an and Li Huibin were arrested in Guangzhou in possession of a 15 g sample of the element they had brought from Hunan to show Peng.
Police in Hunan later tracked down and arrested Zhang and Yang.
However, despite having the four men in custody, police were unable to locate the 8 kg of uranium. The men claimed it had been lost because it had been moved around so much between potential buyers.
A verdict has yet to be reached in the case, as the court said the trial would continue until authorities tracked down the missing chemical.
Under Chinese law, the illegal trade in uranium carries a sentence of between three and 10 years in prison. In exceptional cases, it can carry the death sentence.
Jiang Chaoqiang, director of the Guangzhou No 12 People’s Hospital, told China Daily: “The radioactive substance uranium does not explode when it is in its raw state, but it is very harmful to people’s health.”
Jiang said if people are in close contact with uranium for long periods, they run the risk of contracting leukemia or other cancers.
He said the missing uranium could pose a threat to the health of the general public and therefore needed to be found as soon as possible.
1 posted on 08/23/2007 10:03:22 PM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
Thanks to TX Flake for the ping to this thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1885639/posts
and this article:
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=57289
“Iraqi terrorists caught
along Mexico border
American intelligence chief confirms
‘people are alive’ as a result of capture “
Posted: August 23, 2007
4:04 p.m. Eastern
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
ARTICLE SNIPPET: “President Bush’s top intelligence aide has confirmed that Iraqi terrorists have been captured coming into the United States from Mexico.
The confirmation comes from National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell, who talked about the situation in an interview with the El Paso Times recently.
“Coming up through the Mexican border is a path,” McConnell said. “Now, are they doing it in great numbers? No, because we’re finding them and we’re identifying them and we’ve got watch lists and we’re keeping them at bay.”
But, he said, “There are numerous situations where people are alive today because we caught them (terrorists).”
(Story continues below)
Intelligence officials say the numbers and details of such situations are classified, but McConnell pointed as an example to Mahmoud Youssef Kourani, who entered the United States through Tijuana, Mexico, in 2001, and later pleaded guilty to helping raise money for Hezbollah, which has been designated by the U.S. government as a terrorist organization.
The goal, McConnell said, is for terrorists to gain admittance to the United States, and then produce “mass casualties.”
“You’ve got committed leadership. You’ve got a place to train. They’ve got trainers, and they’ve got recruits,” McConnell told the newspaper. “The key now is getting recruits in. So if your key is getting recruits in, how would you do that?”
McConnell’s office did reveal some numbers, during fiscal 2006, there were 14 Iraqi nationals caught trying to enter the U.S. illegally, while so far in 2007, that number is 16.
“Now some we caught, some we didn’t,” McConnell told the newspaper. “The ones that get in what are they going to do? They’re going to write home. So it’s not rocket science; word will move around.”
Also revealed was that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection intercepted 60 Iraqis crossing the nation’s southwestern border in 2006 who were seeking asylum in the U.S., while that number so far in 2007 is 178.”