IAEA
faces nuclear dilemma as it celebrates 50th anniversary
By
Jean-Michel Stoullig
AFP
VIENNA
Petroleumworld.com
07 30 07
The International Atomic Energy Agency celebrated
its 50th anniversary Sunday as it continues to face the dilemma of preventing
the spread of nuclear technology for military purposes while condoning it for
civilian purposes.
In a congratulatory note to IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei posted on
the agency's website, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said: "the IAEA has
strived to accelerate and expand its contributions to security and development.
I applaud the ceaseless efforts made by the IAEA towards this end."
Pope Benedict XVI also praised the UN watchdog's work Sunday in Rome: "now
more than ever, (it is) current and urgent to encourage the non-proliferation
of nuclear weapons, to promote progressive and negotiated nuclear disarmament
and to favour the peaceful and secure use of nuclear technology" for the
good of people and the environment.
The Vienna-based IAEA, which counts 144 member states, was set up in 1957 to
ensure the peaceful use of nuclear energy.
It monitors compliance with the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and has
carried out verification missions in over 70 countries.
In 2005, ElBaradei and the IAEA received a Nobel Peace Prize for their work.
But the agency faces a fundamental dilemma as voiced by IAEA Deputy Director
General David Waller in a recent speech: "On the one hand to develop and
facilitate the application of those promising beneficial applications of nuclear
technology, and, on the other, to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons."
The West, especially the United States, suspects Iran for instance of seeking
nuclear bombs under the cover of a civilian nuclear power program and the UN
Security Council has already imposed two rounds of sanctions on Tehran to get
it to suspend enrichment of uranium, a potential material for atom bombs.
Iraq, an NPT signatory state, also developed a secret nuclear weapons programme
under Saddam Hussein, Waller pointed out in his speech.
But the IAEA scored some successes in 2003 when Libya decided to abandon its
nuclear weapons programme and this month when North Korea welcomed agency inspectors
back into the country for the first time since December 2002 to monitor the shutdown
of its main nuclear reactor at Yongbyon.
Besides the five acknowledged nuclear powers -- Britain, China, France, Russia
and the United States -- four other countries have or are believed to have nuclear
weapons: India, Israel and Pakistan, which have not signed the NPT, and North
Korea.
ElBaradei was keen to point out at a conference in South Korea earlier this month
however that the IAEA also carries out work in other areas, such as in agriculture
and health, using radiation to develop new crop varieties and eliminate insect
pests like the tse-tse fly.
The agency also monitors some 437 nuclear power reactors in 30 countries, which
supply about 15.2 percent of the world's electricity, he said.
Special events and exhibits were organised in the run-up to the anniversary but
the day itself was celebrated without pomp and circumstance Sunday.
AFP 291340 GMT 07 07
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