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Armenian smugglers tried to sell nuclear material to terrorists | Authorities in Georgia have revealed that two Armenian nationals tried to sell highly enriched uranium
to people they thought were terrorists in March, adding that the bomb grade nuclear material was smuggled across the border from the former Soviet republic of Armenia
in a cigarette pack. The revelation, which emerged from a secret trial being held
in neighbouring Georgia, suggested that nuclear smugglers are still very active
along the borders of the former Soviet Union, the Telegraph reports. Mikheil Saakashvili,
the president of Georgia, announced in April that his country, a staunch US ally,
had uncovered and foiled a plot to sell highly enriched uranium (HEU) to an Islamist
extremist group. The details of the operation however were not known until Sunday
when it was disclosed that two Armenian nationals, a businessman called Sumbat
Tonoyan and a physicist Óalled Hrant Ohanyan, were implicated in the smuggling
case. Both men have pleaded guilty. Meanwhile, prosecutors said that the duo had
smuggled 18 grams of HEU by train from the capital of Armenia, Yerevan, to the
capital of Georgia, Tbilisi, in a lead-lined cigarette box. The smugglers thought
that they were dealing with an Islamist extremist group, but they were actually
set up by the Georgian secret service, the paper said. However, it remains unclear
how much stolen nuclear material is already in circulation and how much may have
already been purchased by extremist groups. The HEU intercepted was 89.4 per cent
enriched and therefore usable in a nuclear warhead. There is some evidence that
the consignment, together with two others before it, was sourced from a nuclear
fuel plant in Novosibirsk in Siberia in Russia, the paper added.
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