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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Obama: all highly enriched uranium moved from Ukraine
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 25, 2012


US President Barack Obama said Sunday that all highly enriched uranium had been removed from Ukraine, hailing it as an important step towards curbing the threat of nuclear terrorism.

Obama made the announcement on the eve of a nuclear security summit in Seoul gathering leaders or top officials from 53 nations to look at ways of locking up fissile material that could be used to build thousands of terrorist bombs.

"Just today we saw another important step forward. We learned that the Ukraine has completed the removal of highly enriched uranium from its territory," Obama told a news conference in the South Korean capital.

"I believe it is a preview of the kind of progress we are going to see over the next two days in confronting one of the most urgent challenges to global security -- the security of the world's nuclear weapons and preventing nuclear terrorism."

This week's gathering in Seoul is a follow-up to an inaugural summit that Obama hosted in Washington two years ago.

Ukraine pledged at that summit to remove its entire stock of highly enriched uranium, which can be used to make nuclear bombs, and the process of moving it to Russia for secure storage is now complete.

To replace the stock in civilian atomic energy, Ukraine was sent a small amount of low enriched uranium unsuitable for the manufacture of nuclear weapons, according to the government in Kiev.

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S. Korean activists call for end of atomic power
Seoul (AFP) March 25, 2012 - South Korean environment activists protested Sunday, calling for world leaders to abandon atomic energy completely as world leaders gathered in Seoul for a nuclear security summit.

Leaders or top officials from 53 countries including US President Barack Obama will meet on Monday and Tuesday for a summit aimed at reducing nuclear stockpiles and stopping them from falling into the hand of terrorists.

But the activists who convened in downtown Seoul accused world leaders of seeking to expand nuclear energy programmes, despite last year's quake and tsunami-triggered meltdown at Japan's Fukushima plant.

"Outcry from Fukushima calls for abandonment of all nuclear development!" read a banner held by one of the protesters.

"No nuke export! No nuke power!," read another banner.

The protesters, who police said numbered about 3,000, called for major nations with nuclear capabilities to cut their stockpiles more quickly, instead of focusing on pressuring weaker countries into abandoning their programmes.

"Emerging countries will never give up their nuclear ambitions unless current nuclear powerhouses come forward first to make disarmament efforts," the organisers said in a joint statement.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Nuclear power only option despite Fukushima: industry
Seoul (AFP) March 23, 2012
A top industry leader on Friday defended nuclear power as the only realistic way to reduce global warming despite Japan's atomic disaster last year. Director-general John Rich, of the World Nuclear Association (WNA), a global nuclear trade group, was speaking at an industry summit in Seoul as a small group of protesters from Asian countries rallied nearby. Some 200 experts and leaders fr ... read more


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