Arab News

Israeli nuclear whistleblo­wer gets offer to live with wife in Oslo

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OSLO: Norway has offered to let Israeli nuclear whistleblo­wer Mordechai Vanunu live in Oslo with his Norwegian wife, but she said it was unclear if Israel will allow him to travel.

Vanunu, 62, married theology professor Kristin Joachimsen in Jerusalem in 2015 after first meeting in Israel almost a decade earlier.

She applied for him to be allowed to come to Norway under rules for family reunificat­ion and a spokesman for the Norwegian Directorat­e of Immigratio­n said permission had been granted.

Vanunu was jailed and served an 18-year sentence after discussing his work at Israel’s Dimona nuclear reactor with a British newspaper in 1986.

The interview led experts to conclude the facility had produced fissile material for as many as 200 atomic warheads.

After his release from jail in 2004, Israeli defense authoritie­s imposed strict conditions on Vanunu, including from traveling abroad, alleging he was a security risk and might have new secrets to tell.

Joachimsen said the Israeli restrictio­ns were up for review in November and expressed hopes they would be lifted. “We have waited long enough for the case to be solved on Israel’s side,” she said.

The restrictio­ns, upheld by Israel’s Supreme Court, have been condemned by internatio­nal human rights groups.

 ??  ?? Israeli nuclear whistleblo­wer Mordechai Vanunu sits between two prison guards at a courtroom in Jerusalem in this file photo of Dec. 29, 2009. (AP)
Israeli nuclear whistleblo­wer Mordechai Vanunu sits between two prison guards at a courtroom in Jerusalem in this file photo of Dec. 29, 2009. (AP)

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