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Georgia stops the sale of $3 million of uranium that could have been used in a bomb

Georgia stops the sale of $3 million of uranium that could have been used in a bomb

Reuters17-07-2025
TBILISI, July 17 (Reuters) - Georgia's State Security Service said on Thursday that it had detained two people for handling and attempting to sell $3 million worth of uranium which could have been used to make a deadly bomb.
Georgia's State Security Service said it had prevented a "transnational crime" involving "the illegal sale and purchase of nuclear material, in particular, the radioactive chemical element uranium."
One Georgian citizen and one foreigner were arrested in the western city of Batumi on the Black Sea, the statement said. The pair, whom the statement did not name, could face up to 10 years in prison.
The State Security Service said that the uranium could have been used to make a deadly bomb with mass fatalities.
When contacted by Reuters, the State Security Service declined to give any further details on how enriched the uranium was.
The Service published video on Thursday showing law enforcement agents using a radiation scanner to inspect a passenger vehicle as well as two small vials, one of which appeared to contain a white, powdery substance.
Uranium-235 is an isotope that is fissile, meaning it can sustain the nuclear chain reaction used in nuclear reactors and nuclear bombs while Uranium-238 is not fissile.
The security of nuclear materials was one of the biggest concerns after the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union, of which Georgia was a member. There have been several serious incidents involving the illicit trade in nuclear materials in Georgia over recent decades.
In 2019, Georgia said it had detained two people for handling and trying to sell $2.8 million worth of Uranium-238. In 2016, authorities arrested twelve people, including Georgians and Armenians, in two separate sting operations within the same month and accused them of attempting to sell in total about $203 million worth of uranium-238 and uranium-235.
In 2014, Georgia caught two Armenians trying to smuggle Cesium-137, a radioactive isotope of the metal cesium, into the country.
Data from the U.N. nuclear watchdog's Incident and Trafficking Database (ITDB) showed that trafficking of nuclear and radioactive material remains very limited.
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When he was in solitary confinement, several guards went to enter his cell, only to be blocked by a group of detainees. They said, 'How could y'all do that to him? He's a good guy … ' according to Pierre. Meanwhile, despite the challenges, Taylor is trying his best to stay healthy, not have any accidents and remain hopeful about his 12 August hearing before an immigration judge, which may result in a decision on whether the US deports him. 'I gotta make sure I can be able to walk when I get out of here,' he said.

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