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2/12-14/2003: IAEA TO ASSESS RADIOLOGICAL SITUATION AT SEMIPALATINSK
On 12-14 February 2003, the Special Coordination Group
(SCG) under the auspices of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) recommended
that a comprehensive assessment of the former Semipalatinsk test site be
developed. The SCG, consisting of IAEA experts and scientists from various
countries, made this recommendation during its first meeting at IAEA headquarters. SCG
members are developing IAEA
recommendations to implement UN General Assembly Resolution No. 53, which
calls for international cooperation to rehabilitate the environment and economy
of the Semipalatinsk region. The second
meeting of the SCG will take place in the fall of 2003 in Vienna.
2/6/2003: RADIATION MONITORING
LABORATORY TO BE OPENED IN KAZAKHSTAN
On 6 February 2003, ITAR-TASS reported that
a laboratory
will be opened
in the city of Kurchatov (Eastern
Kazakhstan Oblast)
to monitor the radiological situation at the former
Semipalatinsk Test Site. The
establishment of the laboratory has been undertaken by the Scientific Research
Institute of Radiological Medicine and Ecology (RME), in cooperation with the
Scientific Research Institute of
Radiation Safety and Ecology (RSE).[1]
According to RSE Director Larisa Ptitskaya, the provision of
Semipalatinsk with
special status
and transfer of site management to the
Kazakhstani
National
Nuclear Center (NNC),
which would coordinate research activities and security measures at the site,
was under consideration
as of February 2003.
Ptitskaya noted that these measures are seen as a way of preventing theft of radioactive
metals and weapons grade plutonium, which have been discovered at some parts of the
site.[2]
According to
NNC Director Shamil Tukhvatullin, the laboratory activities will be
undertaken by medical doctors and physicists, who will research the entire region of Semipalatinsk, not only the former test site.[1]
11/27/2002: UN LAUNCHES 38 PROJECTS TO
REHABILITATE SEMIPALATINSK REGION
On 25 November, the 57th session of the UN
General Assembly adopted Resolution 101 on international cooperation for the
humanitarian, ecological, and economic rehabilitation of the Semipalatinsk
region of Kazakhstan.[1] In keeping with the resolution, the United Nations is
implementing 38 socio-economic and environmental projects to rehabilitate the
region.[2] A report by the Secretary General will be made to the General
Assembly at its sixtieth session on progress achieved in the region by these
projects.[1]
6/13/2002: RADIOLOGICAL
WEAPONS TESTED AT SEMIPALATINSK UNDER USSR
On 13 June 2002, Vadim Logachev,
a representative of the State Scientific Center at the Institute of Biophysics
in Krasnoyarsk, Russia, revealed that radiological weapons were once tested at the
Semipalatinsk test site. According to the
Kazakhstani National Nuclear Center (NNC),
this information was made public for the first time. During the tests,
radioactive waste was packaged and dropped from an airplane or blown up with
explosives on the ground. In 1958, radiological weapons were deemed
unfeasible and the tests were halted.
8/2001: KAZAKHSTAN MARKS 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF
CLOSURE OF SEMIPALATINSK
On 29-31 August 2001 an
international conference entitled "XXI Century: Towards a World Free of Nuclear
Weapons" took place in Almaty. This conference was dedicated to the
10th anniversary of the Semipalatinsk test
site closure.[1] At the conference, Kazakhstani President Nursultan Nazarbayev emphasized
his country's support for tightening international nuclear nonproliferation
regimes and asked for international
assistance to clean up the test site.[2] Nazarbayev
noted that the cost of recultivation and cleanup of radioactive soil could
total $1 billion. As of August 2001, Kazakhstan had received around $20 million
in aid for cleanup efforts at Semipalatinsk.[3]
12/14/2000: FIRST PHASE OF CLEAN-UP COMPLETED
According to Shamil Tukhvatullin, director of the
National Nuclear Center, the first phase of clean-up at the former
Semipalatinsk test site has been completed. The clean-up work was carried out
under an agreement between Kazakhstan and Russia. From 1998 to 2000 one third of the test
site territory was examined. Areas with radioactive contamination were covered
with earth and fenced off with barbed wire. Testing equipment
and technical components that were exposed to radiation during nuclear
tests were mothballed in concrete bunkers to diminish the risk of
spreading radiation into the soil.
The clean-up
work is to continue with the next phase commencing in summer 2001.
8/23/2000: GOLD FOUND AT SEMIPALATINSK TEST
SITE
According to an 18 August 2000 Interfax news report, Kazakhstani geologists have discovered gold at Naimanzhal and
Koskuduk on the territory of the former Semipalatinsk test
site. The geologists estimate 60t of probable gold reserves in these
fields. The Kazakhstani
company FML Kazakhstan is planning to begin work at the gold fields in the
spring of 2001. The governments of Kazakhstan and the United States have
supported the project for developing the Namanzhal field, with the US Trade
and Development Agency financing 50% of the project's feasibility
study.
7/29/2000: FINAL EXPLOSION
DESTROYS TESTING INFRASTRUCTURE
On 29 July 2000 a conventional explosion equal to 100t of granulated TNT in gallery No. 160 of Degelen Mountain destroyed
the last of the nuclear test infrastructure at the former Semipalatinsk
Test Site. This final explosion completed a five-year Kazakhstani-US
Cooperative
Threat Reduction project to eliminate the site's infrastructure.
As part of this project, a number of calibrated explosions ranging from
5 to 25t were carried out in 1997-1998 at the Balapan area and 100MT blasts were conducted in the Degelen Mountain in August
1998 and September 1999. As in the previous
two explosions at Degelen, the explosions were used by the international
monitoring arm of the CTBT to identify nuclear explosions more precisely
in the future and to distinguish them from earthquakes. Following
the explosion, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Susan Koch signed
an amendment to increase US funding from $26.5 million to $33.5 million
for the Kazakhstan Weapons of Mass
Destruction Elimination Initiative. Koch stated that funds will
be used to eliminate other plants that manufacture weapons of mass destruction,
in particular the former Stepnogorsk Biological Weapons Production Facility.[1,2]
10/10/99: INTERNATIONAL INSPECTION TESTS ABILITY
TO MONITOR UNSANCTIONED NUCLEAR BLASTS
One week after the CTBT calibration
blast, 12 international experts assembled at Semipalatinsk to test
their ability to locate the epicenter of an unsanctioned blast. The
experts covered 25 square kilometers in 10 days, and reported their results
on 10 October 1999. In order to test the ability of experts to locate
the blast epicenter, Semipalatinsk authorities did not inform international
authorities of the exact blast location. The experts were able to
find the blast epicenter, but
concluded that future inspections should
involve more experts with more equipment. (These tests are being conducted
as part of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty verification regime, see the
CTBT Organization website at http://www.ctbto.org
for more information.)
9/25/99: CTBT NETWORK CALIBRATION
BLAST AT SEMIPALATINSK
An explosion with a yield equal to 100 metric tons (t) of granulated TNT was set off at the former Semipalatinsk test site
(now the National Nuclear Center) on 25 September. It destroyed shafts
and was also used to calibrate seismic equipment that distinguishes earthquakes
from nuclear tests.[1] A future calibrating blast is scheduled for
the year 2000.[2] For more information on previous CTBT network blasts,
see the 9/21/98 entry, below.
9/7/99: TOKYO CONFERENCE CONCLUDES WITH PROMISE
OF FINANCIAL SUPPORT
More than 200 officials from 24 governments and 12
international organizations attended the Tokyo International Conference
on Semipalatinsk on 6-7 September, including
the co-sponsors as well as the World Bank, UNESCO, WHO, FAO, EBRD, EU, OSCE and
NATO. Six international NGOs and 38 Japanese organizations, institutions, and
agencies also participated. The conference addressed health, humanitarian, environmental, and economic issues,
as well as the need to disseminate information about the effects of testing.[1] After the meeting, Japan promised $1
million for United Nations Development Program funds in Semipalatinsk.[2]
According to Japanese State Foreign Secretary Keizo Takemi, 40 percent
of the funds are intended to help women become economically independent,
30 percent will go to NGOs and the remaining 30 percent is intended for
small businesses. The conference was also the first of its kind to
discuss aid to victims of the nuclear tests at Semipalatinsk.[3] For more information, see
the conference outline at http://www.mofa.go.jp/region/.../conf9909.html.
9/7/99: FORMER OFFICIAL CLAIMS EXTENT OF CONTAMINATION
GREATER THAN REPORTED
The former head of the Department of Radiation Safety
and Environment at the Institute of Radiation Safety, Musin Zholdybayev,
said at a news conference that a National Nuclear Center report which found
that only 10 percent of the Semipalatinsk test site's territory was contaminated
is misleadingly low. Zholdybayev, who worked at the Institute of
Radiation Safety from 1994-1998, believes that up to 50 percent of
the site is contaminated and not suitable for economic development.
Zholdybayev also believes that the Russian Ministry of Atomic Energy is
interested in misinforming the public in order to avoid compensating victims
of nuclear tests.
12/14/98: KAZAKHSTAN NEEDS $43 MILLION FOR NUCLEAR
TEST SITE CLEANUP
According to international experts, at least $43 million is needed to decontaminate
the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site. The experts have defined 38 priority
projects that will be submitted to governments of donor countries for consideration.[1]
According to Anatoliy Miroshnichenko of the Ecological Center of Sustainable
Development of the Republic of Kazakhstan, the assistance projects are
divided into five sectors: environment ($7.8 million), health ($24 million),
economic ($6.6 million), humanitarian aid ($3.3 million), and information
exchange among experts in the aforementioned fields ($1.3 million). Half
the funding will come from Japan, and a conference of donor states is scheduled
to take place in Tokyo in mid-1999. [2] A UN NGO intends to allocate $5-7
million in financial aid. In early 1999 a trust company that will accumulate
financial resources for the projects is to be set up by the Kazakhstani
government.[1]
11/16/98: UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY FOCUSES INTERNATIONAL ATTENTION
ON SEMIPALATINSK
On 16 November 1998, a draft resolution on the problems of the Semipalatinsk
former nuclear test site was introduced in the UN General Assembly.
Representatives of more than 50 countries signed the resolution containing
an appeal to potential donor countries to aid Kazakhstan in the decontamination
of the Semipalatinsk region.[1] Several UN agencies also submitted
a report to the UN General Assembly based on the findings of international
experts who studied the region for a year. The report was entitled
"Situation Assessment and Priority Needs at the Semipalatinsk Region and
Nuclear Weapons Testing Site."[2] Kazakhstanskaya pravda reported
that the international experts had concluded that the consequences of the
nuclear testing at the Semipalatinsk site are a thousand times worse than
those of Hiroshima or Chernobyl and that the level of radioactive contamination
poses a threat to neighboring countries such as Russia and China.[1] Nucleonics
Week reported that thorough knowledge of the damage caused by the tests
is difficult to obtain because of the conflicting opinions of different
researchers. This is due to the difficulty of securing important
measurements in the absence of sustained monitoring, a product of the Soviet
culture of secrecy. The report calls the Semipalatinsk test site
territory a "region in crisis." Over one million people in the region
remain affected, about 30,000 seriously. The report suggests a number of
three- to five-year actions to respond to humanitarian needs and to reduce
radiation risks.[2] (See entry for 12/14/98.)
The estimated cost of meeting priority needs totals $43.4 million, including
projects on health ($24 million), urgent humanitarian needs ($3.3 million),
environmental remediation and protection (7.8 million), economic revival
($6.6 million), and dissemination of information ($1.3 million). [3] A
US non-governmental organization has already announced its intention to
contribute $5.5 million toward the minimum of $43 million necessary for
decontamination. According to Kazakhstani Minister of Ecology and
Natural Resources Serikbek Daukeyev, the first two of the 38 priority projects
defined by the experts--both public health projects--may begin in January
1999, as soon as Kazakhstan receives the first donor funds.
Head of the UN mission to Kazakhstan Herbert Behrstock reaffirmed the UN's
intention to continue supporting Kazakhstan both financially and technically.[1]
9/21/98: RESULTS OF 2ND
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NUCLEAR WEAPONS NONPROLIFERATION
Kazakhstani Minister of Science
Vladimir Shkolnik held a press conference on 21 September 1998 on the results
of the 2nd International Conference on Nuclear Weapons Nonproliferation,
held in Kurchatov on 14-17 September 1998. Over 200 participants from Kazakhstan,
Russia, the United States, Japan, and other countries discussed scientific,
medical, and environmental problems; destruction of the nuclear infrastructure;
and elimination of the consequences of nuclear tests. A CTBT network calibration
experiment was conducted on site on 17 September 1998 with a conventional
explosion in a shaft at the Semipalatinsk test site. The seismic waves
were recorded by a global seismic network that includes over 60 stations.
Data are being analyzed. According to Shkolnik, CTBT network calibration
explosions do not harm the environment, are no different than mining explosions,
and have a yield of 10t to 100t. Two more such explosions will be conducted
in Kazakhstan and the United States by the end of 1998. A plan has
been developed to completely shut down 200 shafts at the test site. Shafts
and boreholes are being sealed, 150 shafts have been decontaminated, radioactive
debris on the surface is being removed, and land rehabilitation problems
are being addressed.
7/25/98: HEALTH, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS AT SEMIPALATINSK POOR
Since the closure of the Semipalatinsk test site, the population of the
city of Kurchatov has decreased to 11,000 from its peak of 30,000, and
the area has become economically depressed. While some areas at the site
remain heavily contaminated, the Kazakhstani government lacks funds and
modern equipment for treatment of radiation-related illnesses. Between
1949 and 1989, an estimated 1.6 million people in the city of Kurchatov
and surrounding areas were exposed to radiation from tests at the Semipalatinsk
range, some as part of experiments on civilians and livestock. In 1997,
488 of every 1,000 babies born at the prenatal center in the city of Semipalatinsk
suffered from birth defects or other health problems, and 47 died.
7/98: IAEA CONTAMINATION REPORT URGES RESTRICTING ACCESS TO TEST
SITE
According to a new IAEA report, there is no or little residual radioactivity
over most of the Semipalatinsk test site. However, the IAEA identified
two heavily contaminated areas: Ground Zero and Lake Balapan. Individuals
visiting either area daily could receive an annual dose of approximately
10mSv. Permanent residence can lead to doses of over 100mSv/year. The IAEA
recommends restricting access to the sites until remedial actions can be
carried out. At present no intervention is necessary to reduce radiation
exposure outside the test site.
5/25/98: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SEMIPALATINSK
REGION
A conference of representatives from donor countries
and international organizations was held in Almaty on 25 May 1998 to discuss
the implementation of the UN General Assembly Resolution "International
Cooperation and Coordination of Activities for the Rehabilitation of the
Population and Environment and the Economic Development of the Semipalatinsk
Region in Kazakhstan." The conference was co-chaired by Madina Dzharbusynova,
director of the First Department of the Kazakhstani Foreign Ministry, and
Herbert Berstock, head of the UN mission to Kazakhstan. Berstock said that
the main task of the UN mission is to coordinate the work of the many different
groups of experts who will collect data on environmental, economic, and
social conditions at Semipalatinsk.[1] Berstock made an official visit
to the Semipalatinsk test site on 5 June 1998, visiting radiation and oncology
clinics and attending a meeting of city government departments and social
organizations. The research conducted by the international specialists
will be used to prepare a special report to the UN General Assembly, intended
to make the case for international aid for environmental restoration and
economic and social redevelopment of the Semipalatinsk region.[2]
An international donors conference for this program will be held in Kazakhstan
in 1999.[1]
4/6/98: INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR STUDIES EFFECTS OF TESTING AT SEMIPALATINSK
A seminar on the environmental and health effects of four decades of nuclear
testing at Semipalatinsk was held in Almaty the week of 6 April 1998.
Sponsored by the Union for the Victims of Nuclear Testing, the Fund for
the Humanitarian Development of Central Asia, and Germany's Friedrich Ebert
Foundation, the seminar brought scientists from Kazakhstan, Germany, and
other countries together to share information on the environmental consequences
of nuclear testing and appeal for aid from donor countries and international
organizations.[1, 2] Academician Saim Balmukhanov said at the conference
that about 1.5 million people were exposed to radiation from tests at Semipalatinsk.
In addition, Aitkhazha Bigaliyev, Director of the Kazakh Institute of Ecological
Problems, said that over 10.5 percent of children born in the neighboring
Karaganda region were born with deformities, and that cases of cancer,
dystrophy, spontaneous abortion, and mental illness were two to three times
more frequent around Semipalatinsk than elsewhere in Kazakhstan.[2]
2/27/98: CONFERENCE MARKS NINTH ANNIVERSARY OF NEVADA-SEMIPALATINSK
MOVEMENT
A conference of scholars, Kazakhstani government officials and specialists,
and accredited diplomats to Kazakhstan from "nuclear club" countries met
in Almaty on 27 February 1998 to commemorate the ninth anniversary of the
founding of the Nevada-Semipalatinsk international antinuclear movement.
The conference discussed analyses of the environmental and health situation
in the region and possible paths for the rehabilitation of the region's
environment and population. Statistics presented at the conference indicated
that from 500,000 to 8 million people were directly affected by activities
at the test site. Participants appealed to the United Nations and
members of the "nuclear club" to extend multilateral assistance to eradicate
the consequences of nuclear testing in Kazakhstan, demanded that the Kazakhstani
government compile a complete register of victims of radiation in the nuclear
test area, and called for the establishment of an international radiological
and dosimetry center in Almaty. A number of the resolution's points ended
with a proposal to hold the 3rd International Congress of the Global Antinuclear
Alliance during the 10-year anniversary of the Nevada-Semipalatinsk movement,
scheduled for 28 February 1999.
10/97: RUSSO-KAZAKH COORDINATING GROUP ON SEMIPALATINSK MEETS
The third meeting of a coordinating group of specialists from Russia and
Kazakhstan, co-chaired by A. Shcherbina and Sh. Tukhvatulin, was held in
Kurchatov in October (date unspecified) 1998. The group reviewed studies
of environmental conditions and radiation safety in the Semipalatinsk region,
adopted proposals on removing the nuclear testing infrastructure and improving
the environmental situation at the Semipalatinsk test site, and discussed
the technical aspects of work and environmental protection measures at
the test range. Work on the mothballing of the Degelen Mountain site was
completed and accepted by the commission with a rating of "excellent."
5/8/97: ROUND TABLE DISCUSSES SEMIPALATINSK
Kazakhstanskaya pravda reported that a round
table discussion was held in Almaty (date unspecified) on the criteria
for evaluating the damage caused by the Semipalatinsk nuclear testing ground.
The participants also discussed possible methods of "liquidating" the continuing
effects of nuclear testing at the site, as well as the importance of creating
a database of information pertaining to Semipalatinsk and publishing the
results of investigations.
9/2/96: KAZAKHSTANI-US NUCLEAR CONVERSION JOINT VENTURE
IN KURCHATOV
It was reported that the Kazakhstani-US joint venture KK Interconnect has been
set up in Kurchatov under the CTR program, uniting the Kazakhstan National
Nuclear Center and the US-based Kras Corp. The joint venture will be involved
in converting the Semipalatinsk test site. The first project will be to
manufacture printed circuit boards and assemble electronic devices. Initial
capital for the joint venture between Kras Corp. and
the National Nuclear Center of the Republic of Kazakhstan was provided
through the Industrial Partnerships
program of the Cooperative Threat Reduction program. (A photo
of the KK Interconnect facility is available from a presentation
given by NNC Director Yuriy Cherepnin in September 1997 at the Semipalatinsk
Test Site.)
9/96: NEW SEMIPALATINSK UNIVERSITY TRAINS ATOMIC SPECIALISTS
The Semipalatinsk State University, which was opened last year, introduced
a new specialization in nuclear reactors for the 1996 academic year. Students
will be taught by nuclear scientists from the Kazakhstani National Nuclear
Center in Kurchatov.
8/29/96: ACTIVITIES DEVOTED TO CLOSING TEST SITE
The anti-nuclear movement Nevada-Semipalatinsk, the Kazakhstani Ministry
of Science-Academy of Sciences, and the NGO International Physicians for
the Prevention of Nuclear War held a round table devoted to the Kazakhstani
president's 8/28/91 decree on closing down the Semipalatinsk test site.
The Chairman of the Executive Committee of Nevada-Semipalatinsk, Myrzakhan
Erimbetov, stated that Kazakhstan, as a non-nuclear state, has a right
to claim compensation from nuclear states for the damage done by the nuclear
tests conducted on its territory. President of the Kazakhstani Academy
of Medical Sciences M. Aliyev announced the creation of a charity fund
for the rehabilitation of citizens suffering from exposure to nuclear tests.
8/20/96: GOVERNMENT ADOPTS RESOLUTION TO ENHANCE NUCLEAR SAFETY
The Kazakhstani government adopted the resolution "On Additional Measures
to Ensure the Functioning of the National Nuclear Center of the Republic
of Kazakhstan, and Nuclear and Radiation Safety at Its Facilities" in order
to implement presidential order No. 2968, dated 30 April, 1996, "On Additional
Measures to Ensure the Functioning of the National Nuclear Center of the
Republic of Kazakhstan." With the aim of attracting foreign investment to
ensure safety at nuclear facilities belonging to the NNC, the NNC will
act as the head organization in liquidating the nuclear weapons infrastructure
at the Semipalatinsk test site in line with the 3 October, 1995 agreement
between the US Department of Defense and the Kazakhstani Ministry of Science
on liquidating nuclear weapons infrastructure.
6/22/96: RUSSIAN SCIENTISTS WILL RECEIVE EQUAL BENEFITS IN KAZAKHSTAN
It was reported that the Russian State Duma ratified the Russian-Kazakhstani
treaty on the legal status of Russian citizens permanently living in Kazakhstan.
(The ratification process requires approval by the Federation Council as
well as the State Duma.) The treaty is relevant to the status of Russian
employees of the Kazakhstani National Nuclear Center (NNC) as it guarantees
equal political, economic, and social conditions for Russians and Kazakhstanis
living on each other's territory. There has been a large outflow of Russian
specialists from the Semipalatinsk test site; by 1996 Russians reportedly
comprised a third of the staff of the Institute of Atomic Energy of the
NNC. Russian specialists in Kurchatov also hope to receive special benefits
provided by Kazakhstani and Russian governments to people suffering from
the effects of nuclear tests. The Russian and Kazakhstani presidents signed
the treaty on 20 January, 95; Kazakhstan ratified the treaty on 28 February,
95.
5/17/96: NEW MEDICAL CENTER AT THE SEMIPALATINSK TEST SITE
It was reported that a new medical center will be opened at the former
Semipalatinsk test site. The center will focus on the medical effects of
nuclear tests conducted in the area and will be financed by the Kazak government
and through international humanitarian aid.
4/2/96: FIRST TUNNEL AT THE DEGELEN NUCLEAR COMPLEX HAS BEEN
SEALED
Tunnel No. 192 at the Semipalatinsk test site has been sealed using 1,300
kilograms of conventional explosive. It was the first such tunnel to be
sealed under a US-Kazakhstani agreement to seal the Degelen Mountain complex.
Two nuclear explosions of up to 20 kilotons yield were conducted in this
tunnel in 10/75 and 11/79. 223 nuclear explosions took place from 10/11/61
to 10/10/89 in the Degelen Mountain complex.[1] On behalf of Kazakhstan,
the National Nuclear Center and the small mining enterprise "Degelen" have
been contracted to execute the sealing work. The event was attended by
representatives of the Russian Minatom and the Scientific and Research
Institute of Technical Physics. Head of the International Affairs Department
of the Kazakhstani Ministry of Science, Olga Tyupkina, said that work to
seal the Degelen complex has been agreed upon with the Russian Minatom.[2]
According to another source at a press-conference, Minatom official Anatoliy
Matushchenko said that the presence of US colleagues in some tunnels would
be undesirable due to issues of sensitivity. (See also the 10/3/95 entry,
below.)[3]
3/19/96: SARZHAL RESIDENTS ON THE EXISTENCE OF AN UNEXPLODED
BOMB
Residents of the village Sarzhal near the Semipalatinsk test site believe
that an unexploded nuclear bomb was abandoned in Lake Chagan at the test
site in 12/64. They also claim that above-ground tests at the site were
conducted until 1/25/65. Village residents worry that radioactive gases,
formed in tunnels where underground nuclear explosions took place, are
now leaking from coal deposits near the village. Contaminated areas at
the Semipalatinsk site are not fenced in or marked in any way, that would
warn local people to avoid them.
2/2/96: INTRUDERS DIG OUT CONTAMINATED CABLES IN SEMIPALATINSK
It was reported that numerous intruders dug out contaminated cables on
the territory of the Semipalatinsk test site searching for non-ferrous
metals. In one case, 48 vehicles and 5 excavators were detained at the
Opytnoye Pole site, the former epicenter of nuclear explosions. Local administrations
make the illegal digging possible when they issue licenses for collecting
non-ferrous scrap without indicating the permitted locations. The test
site is unguarded and there is no a single owner or authority controlling
the area. The territory of the Semipalatinsk site (about 1 million hectares)
is divided between the Semipalatinsk oblast (517 thousand hectares), Pavlodar
oblast (550 thousand hectares), and Karaganda oblast (24 thousand hectares).
Though the State Land Committee decided to transfer jurisdiction over the
Semipalatinsk site's land to the National Nuclear Center, this proposal
was protested by the Semipalatinsk oblast administration because of the
coal, gold and semi-precious metals deposits found at the site.
11/95: UNITED STATES AND KAZAKHSTAN SIGN AGREEMENT TO CLOSE THE
SEMIPALATINSK TEST SITE
Assistant US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and the head of Kazakhstan's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs Kasymzhomart Tokayev signed an agreement pledging
$6 million in US assistance to Kazakhstan for closing the Semipalatinsk
complex.
10/3/95: UNITED STATES TO ASSIST KAZAKHSTAN IN SEALING
THE DEGELEN NUCLEAR COMPLEX
According to a US-Kazakhstani agreement, the United States agreed to extend
up to $6 million in CTR assistance to seal the Degelen Mountain complex.[1]
The agreement calls for two phases. First, commencing in 10/95, assessments
will be conducted to determine the radiological and geological status of
each tunnel. Then, after completing the assessments, the process of sealing
the Degelen complex at the rate of 60 tunnels a year will begin. The project
is to be finished in 1999. The agreement envisions the sealing of 186 tunnels
where nuclear explosions took place; the fate of other tunnels not subject
to nuclear explosions will be decided separately.[2] The tunnels will be
sealed either by constructing concrete "stoppers" or by blowing up the
tunnel caps causing them to cave in. According to reports, intruders are
getting into the contaminated tunnels in order to steam remaining nonferrous
metals. The considerable size of the complex makes it difficult for internal
troops to prevent such trespassing. In addition, one third of the tunnels
reportedly have access to underground water sources.[3] The US Defense
Nuclear Agency will execute the project on behalf of the Department of
Defense, in cooperation with the National Nuclear Center of Kazakhstan.[4]
5/31/95: DESTRUCTION OF "NUCLEAR DEVICE"
IN TUNNEL 108 IN SEMIPALATINSK
In May 1995, in Tunnel 108, the last "nuclear device"
on Kazakhstan territory was destroyed by specialists from Russia's VNIITF
with the assistance of Kazakhstani experts from the Ministry of Ecology
and Bioresources. The operation was conducted under an agreement
between Russia and Kazakhstan.[1] Boris Lebedev was in charge of the destruction.
The explosion of the 0.3-0.4 kT undetonated device took place 425 feet
below ground. (For more information on this explosive device see the 5/94
and 8/19/94 entries below.)[2] While preserving the classified nature
of the technical specifications of the device, Kazakhstani scientists explained
at a conference in 1997 that the device was not a bomb and not a warhead.
It was a unique nuclear device constructed and placed in the Tunnel 108
in 1991. It was meant to be used within a few months after its emplacement.
However, after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, political considerations
prevented the detonation of the device. Experts determined that if left
unexploded, the device could eventually contaminate the water table.[1]
As shipping the device to Chelyabinsk-70 for disposal would have been exceedingly
dangerous, it was decided to destroy it in place using chemical explosives.[3]
Sources:
5/23/95: KAZAKHSTANI ENTERPRISE WILL ACCESS NUCLEAR DEVICE
The small Kazakhstani enterprise Degelen, which consists of 20 highly qualified
miners who formerly worked at the Semipalatinsk site, was contracted to
access a nuclear device buried in the test site. The extraction work was
conducted from 8/94 to 5/95. It was also reported that, due to the theft
of telephone cables at the site, communications on the dismantling of the
nuclear device had to be performed via satellite systems.
3/31/95: US CONDUCTS RESEARCH
ON EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING
The US GAO reports that $77,000 has
been spent on studies of long-term radiation in Kazakhstan and Russia.
Specifically, the US Department of Defense Armed Forces Radiobiology Research
Institute has been examining the results of nuclear testing at Semipalatinsk
since 1992. The US project in Kazakhstan is under the direction of Academician
Saim Balmukhanov.
2/95: THREE NUCLEAR DEVICES REMAIN AT SEMIPALATINSK TEST SITE
According to some reports, there are in fact three nuclear devices at the
Semipalatinsk test site in addition to the well-known 0.3-0.4 kiloton nuclear
explosive device that has been there since 1991. One 150 kiloton device
is supposedly located in a horizontal tunnel, and the other two, of undisclosed
yield, are in vertical shafts at a depth of 500 meters. (No other sources
have reported the existence of any additional devices.)
2/95: MEETING ON DISMANTLING NUCLEAR DEVICE
The fourth meeting of the coordinating group on dismantling the nuclear
device installed in the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site was held in Kurchatov
(Semipalatinsk region).
1/95: RADIATION SITUATION IN SEMIPALATINSK POSES NO RISK
The IAEA has told the government of Kazakhstan that the radiological situation
today around the former Soviet Union's nuclear test site at Semipalatinsk
does not a pose a health risk to local populations. The advice, qualified
as preliminary, is based on the findings of a 7/95 IAEA-led mission, during
which French, Russian, US, and UK experts corroborated Russian and Kazakhstani
data on contamination and made external dose measurements in the area.
However, the IAEA noted that two areas within the 19,000-square-kilometer
test site have high external dose rates and calls for administrative measures
to ban access to them.
8/19/94: REMOVAL OF NUCLEAR DEVICE BEGUN
Work has begun on the removal of a nuclear explosive device buried at Semipalatinsk.[1]
Radiation readings at the newly opened shaft where the device is buried
do not exceed normal background levels, according to reports, and dismantlement
work is proceeding on schedule. The Russian-Kazakhstani coordinating group
that is overseeing work at the site met in Kurchatov on 8/15-20, and verified
the radiation check. The group is expected to meet again by 9/19/94.[2]
5/94: RUSSIA AND KAZAKHSTAN PLAN TO REMOVE NUCLEAR DEVICE REMAINING
AT SEMIPALATINSK
Russian and Kazakhstani specialists are working together to implement a
plan for the removal of a nuclear explosive device that still remains buried
on the Semipalatinsk test range, according to Anatoliy Matushchenko of
Russia's Minatom. The plan for removal of the device was designed by the All-Union
Scientific Research and Planning Institute of Industrial Technology in
Moscow and may take six months to complete. Expenditures, which will be
covered by Russia, are expected to exceed 1 billion rubles. Moscow and
Almaty have signed an agreement stipulating that anything recovered from
the site is the property of Russia and that only Russians will be allowed
to examine the explosive or monitoring devices. The article notes that
this nuclear charge has been underground for an unprecedented three years,
and so has in itself become a unique experiment.[1,2,3]
The nuclear device was created in Chelyabinsk-70 and installed in gallery
No. 108 in 5/91. The 0.3-0.4 kiloton charge was designed to test new types
of weapons and military equipment for resistance to the destructive factors
of an atomic explosion, specifically the impact of extremely high x-ray
radiation, using special measuring devices which were buried along with
the charge. Analysis of the results would then permit further refinement
of military weapons technology. The nuclear charge was installed at the
end of the gallery, which runs roughly 600 meters into the rock, at a depth
130 meters. Heavy cement was poured on the plug with a channel for the
radiation to escape. The entry opening was sealed to keep reaction gas
from escaping outside during the explosion. The nuclear device was guarded
by Russian Interior Ministry forces until 12/93, when the test site's military
unit was disbanded by a decree of the Russian Minister of Defense.[4,5]
4/94: RUSSIAN SCIENTISTS LEAVING SEMIPALATINSK
All Russian scientists are expected to be out of Semipalatinsk by 7/94,
according to a report on the Russian Television Network. At the time of
this report, it is said that only 20% of the original staff are still in
place, a number considered insufficient to maintain security at the site.
3/30/94: NAZARBAYEV RULES OUT RESUMING TESTS IN SEMIPALATINSK
President Nazarbayev ruled out any possibility of resuming testing at the
Semipalatinsk range, when he spoke at a press conference in Moscow. He
did suggest ways in which Moscow and Almaty might cooperate to use the
research facilities at the site, such as for civilian nuclear reactor safety
or as a space training center. He also called for an international commission
to help with assessment of the damage caused by testing in the region.
12/27/93: HEAD OF THE SEMIPALATINSK TEST SITE DISMISSED
AFP, citing ITAR-TASS, reported that the head of the Semipalatinsk test
range had been dismissed from his post on charges of selling equipment
from the facilities located on the site. The report said that Kazakhstani
authorities were conducting an investigation.[1] Contrary to some reports,
Lieutenant General Yuriy Konovalenko was not arrested, but was "on leave"
from his duties. Because Konovalenko is a Russian citizen, Kazakhstani
officials have no jurisdiction in his case, which will probably be handled
by Russian authorities. He is suspected of embezzling and reselling some
nonferrous metals, as well as particularly valuable equipment.[2]
1/13/94: RUSSIA-KAZAKHSTAN AGREEMENT ON SEMIPALATINSK TEST SITE CRITICIZED
V. Vasilenko, chief of the council of experts for issues of social ecology,
Nevada-Semipalatinsk International Antinuclear Movement, attacked the draft
agreement reached by Moscow and Almaty on the future use of test sites,
including the Semipalatinsk nuclear test range. Dr. Vasilenko claimed that
the agreements were made without any public review of the various proposals,
and without an independent ecological review by Nevada-Semipalatinsk's
experts. According to Dr. Vasilenko, Articles 40, 42, 48, 55, 59, 61, and
62 of the Law of the Republic of Kazakhstan guarantee these rights.
Page last updated 23 October 2003
Comments or questions? Contact Kenley Butler at MIIS CNS: Kenley.Butler@miis.edu
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