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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Improved security urged at Swedish nuclear plant

by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) July 2, 2010
Swedish authorities on Friday called for tighter security at a nuclear plant that was broken into by Greenpeace activists in June.

The Swedish Radiation Safety Authority called on the Forsmark nuclear plant, near Uppsala, north of Stockholm, "to investigate... which measures would eventually be needed to strengthen physical protection" of the plant.

It noted in a statement that the trespassing by activists -- who got over the plant's fence using a fire truck's ladder -- "did not have any consequences from a radiation safety perspective."

However it added, "the event shows a need for permit holders to nuclear installations to carry out additional analysis of the possibility for, and consequences of, trespassing into secure areas."

Around 50 activists were arrested on June 14 for taking part in Greenpeace's action at Forsmark. Some were later released and 29 were fined by an Uppsala court on Thursday.

In their protest, the activists, who dressed up as renewable energy sources such as wind, water and sun, demanded Swedish parliamentarians reject a government proposal on replacing Sweden's 10 existing nuclear reactors at the end of their lifespans.

Three days later, on June 17, the parliament approved the proposal.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Greenpeace activists fined for Sweden nuclear protest
Stockholm (AFP) July 1, 2010
A court in central Sweden on Thursday handed out fines to 29 Greenpeace activists who broke into a nuclear power plant earlier this month, according to judicial sources. The activists - 13 Germans, eight Poles, four Danes, a Frenchman, a Finn, a Swede and a Briton - were given fines ranging from 190 to 1,600 euros (230-2,000 dollars) for trespassing, according to a copy of the judgment by ... read more







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