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Egypt
admits
lapse
over
plutonium
lab
Egypt
has
acknowledged failing
to
tell
the
UN
nuclear
watchdog
about
some
of
its
research,
after
Western
diplomats
said
the
agency
was
investigating
an
Egyptian
plutonium
laboratory.
The
official
Middle
East
News
Agency
(MENA),
quoting
an
unnamed
Egyptian
official,
on
Tuesday
repeated
the
government's
position
that
its
nuclear
programme
was
peaceful. Plutonium
can
be
used
in
nuclear
weapons. It
said
Egypt
was
"completely
committed
to
its
agreements"
with
the
UN's
International
Atomic
Energy
Agency
(IAEA). It
added:
"The
difference
in
interpreting
some
aspects
of
the
safeguards
agreement
...
led
to
a
failure
to
inform
the
IAEA
about
some
experiments
and
research
activities
which
were
undertaken
and
which
are
allowed
to
be
undertaken. "This
issue
is
being
dealt
with
to
settle
it
through
complete
cooperation
and
transparency
between
Egypt
and
the
IAEA,
and
Egypt
is
showing
good
intentions
in
dealing
with
the
agency
in
this
regard,"
MENA
said. Undeclared
experiments Western
diplomats
said
on
Friday
that
inspectors
from
the
IAEA
were
in
Egypt
to
look
into
a
laboratory
designed
to
reprocess
plutonium. They
said
the
IAEA
sent
the
inspectors
after
learning
Egyptian
scientists
had
been
conducting
undeclared
experiments
with
uranium. The
safeguards
agreement
between
member
states
and
the
IAEA,
which
is
headed
by
Muhammad
al-Baradai,
an
Egyptian,
requires
disclosure
of
nuclear
materials
and
periodic
inspections
to
verify
compliance. MENA
said
most
of
the
experiments
and
activities
concerned
were
carried
out
a
long
time
ago. "We
have
felt
during
our
discussions
with
the
agency
understanding
from
its
side
about
the
limited
extent
of
this
issue,"
it
said. Aly
Islam,
president
of
the
Egyptian
Atomic
Energy
Authority,
on
Monday
denied
inspectors
were
in
Egypt
on
the
date
reported
by
the
diplomats. He
said
all
activities
in
Egypt
conformed
with
the
safeguards
agreement. The
diplomats
said
the
undeclared
experiments
with
uranium
partly
came
to
light
after
some
of
the
scientists
involved
in
the
project
published
their
research. They
said
the
laboratory
near
Cairo
may
never
have
been
used
but
added
the
IAEA
was
inspecting
it
to
determine
whether
any
work
with
plutonium
had
been
done
there.
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