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Muslim clerics say Indonesia nuclear plans 'sinful'

by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Sept 3, 2007
An influential group of Muslim clerics from Indonesia's largest Islamic movement has declared the government's nuclear plans for earthquake-prone Java as sinful under Islam, a cleric said Monday.

Some 150 clerics from Central Java, where the government plans to build its first nuclear power plant, met over the weekend, said Nuruddin Amin.

"The meeting concluded that a nuclear power plant would create danger for the local population outweighing the benefits it would bring, and therefore the meeting agreed to declare it as 'haram,'" Amin told AFP.

The Islamic term refers to something unacceptable, forbidden or sinful.

He said that the district level decision would now be recommended to the regional chapter and then national headquarters of their clerical group.

"We hope that eventually a recommendation could be passed on to the government," Amin added.

The government, pressed to boost energy supplies to the world's fourth most populous nation, plans to build its first plant on the foothills of Mount Muria, a dormant volcano.

Jakarta shelved plans to develop atomic energy in 1997 in the face of mounting public opposition, the discovery of a large gas field and a shortage of funds.

But the idea resurfaced in 2005 amid increasing power shortages and a government drive to develop and diversify energy resources.

The International Atomic Energy Agency has backed Indonesia's plans to build nuclear plants despite strident opposition from environmentalists. Thousands of residents have also already held several protests.

The government is expecting to put the 4,000 megawatt project out to tender next year with construction slated to begin in 2010 and the plant to open by 2016, the Jakarta Post reported Monday.

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Thailand seeks 200 experts for first nuclear plant
Bangkok (AFP) Sept 3, 2007
Thailand is seeking some 200 nuclear experts as the kingdom aims to build its first atomic power plant over the next decade in a bid to cope with a looming power shortage, the prime minister said Monday.







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