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Seoul nuclear summit to focus on safety after Fukushima
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 5, 2012


South Korea's foreign minister said Monday that the question of how to strengthen global atomic safety following Japan's nuclear disaster would be a key topic at an upcoming summit in Seoul.

Kim Sung-Hwan said the Fukushima disaster highlighted the vulnerability of nuclear power plants and the extent of damage that could be caused by a terrorist attack against a nuclear plant.

The Fukushima nuclear crisis was sparked by a huge earthquake and tsunami on March 11 last year, that devastated Japan's northeast coast and left more than 19,000 people dead.

"As seen in the Fukushima nuclear accident, public fear of radiation exposure causes significant and lasting social and cultural concern," he told reporters.

"A similar impact could be seen if terrorists attack a nuclear facility," he said, adding the March 26-27 Nuclear Security Summit would help world leaders work out measures to prevent such disasters.

The summit will be the largest ever staged by South Korea in terms of the number of global leaders expected. Organisers say about 40 heads of state or government including US President Barack Obama will take part in the summit.

The summit, a follow-up to one in Washington in 2010, will focus on ways to safeguard atomic material worldwide and prevent acts of nuclear terrorism.

Kim said North Korea's nuclear programme would not be on the agenda but the summit may build momentum towards denuclearisation as it deals with highly enriched uranium and plutonium.

The North -- which last week agreed to a nuclear halt in exchange for food aid from the United States -- has blasted the summit as an "unsavoury burlesque" intended to justify an atomic attack.

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One year after Fukushima, IAEA says nuclear power safer
Vienna (AFP) March 5, 2012 - Nuclear power is safer around the world than it was a year ago at the time of the Fukushima disaster in Japan, the head of the UN atomic agency said Monday, while warning against complacency.

"Next Sunday it will be exactly one year since this very serious accident. We have come a long way in that time," International Atomic Energy Agency head Yukiya Amano told a news conference at its Vienna headquarters.

"Nuclear power is now safer than it was one year ago. But nuclear safety is something that must be well kept every day and we must never become complacent," Amano, himself Japanese, said during a quarterly IAEA board meeting.

He said that the Fukushima nuclear crisis, the world's worst in 25 years, was sparked by a huge earthquake and tsunami on March 11 last year, but that there were also "human and managerial failings."

Amano said that "good progress" has been made implementing the IAEA's nuclear safety action plan, involving "stress tests" on nuclear power plants, peer reviews and the strengthening of defences against natural disasters.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
One year after Fukushima, IAEA says nuclear power safer
Vienna (AFP) March 5, 2012
Nuclear power is safer around the world than it was a year ago at the time of the Fukushima disaster in Japan, the head of the UN atomic agency said Monday, while warning against complacency. "Next Sunday it will be exactly one year since this very serious accident. We have come a long way in that time," International Atomic Energy Agency head Yukiya Amano told a news conference at its Vienn ... read more


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