Iraq's Nuke Poisoning Worries
Contamination Fears Near Plant; U.S. Slammed For Not Securing It
-
U.N. nuclear experts enter the Tuwaitha site in December on one of their 19 trips there during the pre-war inspection round. (CBS/AP)
-
Interactive Nuclear Disasters Review some of the worst accidents in the history of nuclear power, see how the body responds to radiation exposure and find out if there's a nuclear plant near you.
-
Interactive Nuclear: Harnessing The Atom Nuclear power has become a prominent energy source in the U.S. Find out more about this controversial resource.
-
Interactive Target Iraq Read bios of Saddam and his top men, see the controversial presidential palaces up close and get the facts on Iraq's weapons and the bioterror threat.
The situation around the Tuwaitha nuclear plant has drawn international scrutiny from nuclear experts concerned that materials such as uranium were stolen or dumped by thieves in the area.
Members of the Iraqi nuclear agency have also expressed worry about the potential health effects for those living nearby.
On Wednesday, dozens of members of the Iraqi Agency for Atomic Energy held a meeting with U.S. officials for the first time. They circulated an order from the Health Ministry to study the area around the dormant Tuwaitha nuclear complex, 30 miles southeast of Baghdad.
Shortly after the collapse of Saddam Hussein's government on April 9, villagers stormed the sprawling site and looted barrels and jugs filled with hazardous materials.
U.S. military officials, currently conducting a damage assessment at the site, said Tuesday that 20 percent of the known radioactive materials stored at the facility are missing.
Iraq has about 1,000 sites where radioactive materials are used in industry or medicine. But Tuwaitha, where Iraqis worked on the final design of a nuclear bomb before the 1991 Gulf War, has drawn the most concern since the recent Iraq war ended.
The Iraqis had been using the dormant plant to store declared nuclear materials that were prohibited and sealed by the U.N. nuclear agency in 1991. During the short-lived inspection regime that ran from November to the start of the war in March, IAEA inspectors visited the site 19 times.
Iraqi nuclear experts blame Americans for failing to guard the site quickly enough and prevent the looting.
"They knew that there were nuclear materials in this site, and they were supposed to protect it," Mohammed al-Hamadani, a researcher at Tuwaitha, said in an interview Wednesday.
Villagers nearby have begun reporting ill effects they attribute to contact with hazardous waste.
Menem Abed Ali, who lives in the village of al-Mansia, which is adjacent to the plant, said since the looting took place he has been suffering from exhaustion and skin irritation. Residents, he said, have been gathering to share stories of their symptoms.
The U.S. military is conducting a damage assessment at the site, but it doesn't include a health survey of the surrounding areas.
The teams are already monitoring the air around the area, and Col. Tim Madere, a U.S. specialist in unconventional weapons, acknowledged that "a potential health hazard" remains. He said 80 percent of the barrels containing radioactive material such as uranium remained intact.
Uranium, if enriched, is a key ingredient in nuclear weapons. The IAEA was monitoring 2 short tons of enriched uranium and several tons of natural and depleted uranium stored at Tuwaitha.
David Albright, an American nuclear expert who served on U.N.-led inspection teams during the 1990s, said the major health concern would involve those who went inside the facility to areas where highly radioactive sources were stored.
"These sources emit gamma radiation that penetrates the body and can pose a life-threatening risk if a person is exposed to the source too long," he said.
İMMIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




