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U.S. to help Georgia combat
nuclear smuggling
Reuters
February 2, 2007
(For personal use only)
The United States will provide equipment and training to Georgia
under an accord on Friday to combat trafficking of radioactive material via the
Caucasus state which said last week it jailed a Russian uranium smuggler.
Georgia's border patrols and the country's nuclear regulatory agency will be
boosted by U.S. specialist technology and training under the agreement signed by
Georgia's foreign minister and the U.S. ambassador.
"We invite everybody and first of all our neighbors to cooperate in this
sphere," Georgia's Gela Bezhuashvili told journalists after the signing, adding
that Tbilisi was ready to reach the same agreement with Russia.
Georgia said it had arrested and jailed a Russian citizen in 2006 for entering
the country and trying to sell highly enriched uranium to agents posing as
Islamist militants.
Russia called the announcement a provocative act but later said it was
considering an inquiry into possible theft of the substance from its nuclear
sites.
Bezhuashvili told the Russian ambassador on Wednesday the smuggling incident
"goes beyond the framework of bilateral relations and is a question of
international security."
The U.S. ambassador said similar agreements had been signed with Ukraine and
Kazakhstan.