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Ankara 'adds' uranium clause in nuclear deal with Tokyo

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  • Ankara 'adds' uranium clause in nuclear deal with Tokyo

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/nuclear-deal-with-turkey-stirs-concerns-in-japan.aspx?pageID=238&nID=60729&NewsCatID=348

    Ankara 'adds' uranium clause in nuclear deal with Tokyo
    Jan. 8, 2014

    Ankara demanded allowance for uranium enrichment and plutonium
    extraction in a nuclear export deal inked with Tokyo, a Japanese daily
    quoted as a Japanese Foreign Ministry official as saying.

    A clause, which was added in the nuclear agreement signed by the two
    nations, upon Turkey's demand prompted concerns over a possible
    proliferation of nuclear weapons.

    The clause at issue allows Turkey to enrich uranium and extract
    plutonium, potentially creating nuclear material for weapons, Japanese
    daily Asahi Shimbun reported on Jan. 8.

    A senior Japanese Foreign Ministry official claimed the clause was
    added at the request of Turkey, the daily also reported.

    A joint venture involving Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has won
    an order to construct Turkey's second nuclear plant in the Black Sea
    province of Sinop.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was in Japan since
    Jan. 5, and his Japanese counterpart, Shinzo Abe, had signed a $22
    billion deal on the nuclear plant project.

    Safety issues

    The pact paves the way for exporting Japan's enrichment and spent
    nuclear fuel reprocessing technologies and is expected to be discussed
    at the Japanese Parliament soon before voting on its approval.

    The deal was on the agenda during a meeting between the Turkish and
    Japanese prime ministers on Jan. 7 in Tokyo, as they have agreed to
    accelerate the process.

    Japanese exports and anti-nuclear opposition members voice concerns
    over Japan's first nuclear export after the Fukushima disaster,
    claiming allowing Turkey's enrichment and extraction activities would
    contradict Japan's stance against nuclear weapons.

    Moreover, Turkey's earthquake-prone geographical condition stirs
    safety debates in the country that became over-sensitive about the
    issue after experiencing the Fukushima disaster of 2011 that killed
    around 20,000 people.

    Yuki Tanabe of the Japan Center for a Sustainable Environment and
    Society, a nonprofit organization, pointed out a seismic risk in
    Turkey, where more than 17,000 people died in a major earthquake in
    1999, the daily reported. "Even if Japanese nuclear reactors are
    highly resistant to earthquakes, an accident could occur when
    facilities around them are damaged," Tanabe told Asahi Shimbun.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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