Times of Oman

Lost radioactiv­e capsule found in Western Australia

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SYDNEY: The Emergency Services Ministry said on Wednesday that they had found a radioactiv­e capsule in rural Western Australia after days of searching along a 1,400-kilometre (870mile) stretch of road.

The tiny but extremely dangerous capsule, used for mining operations, was lost during transport over two weeks ago.

“It’s a good result, as I’ve said it’s certainly a needle in a haystack that has been found, and I think West Australian­s can sleep better tonight,” West Australian emergencie­s chief Stephen Dawson said.

Dawson also praised emergency workers for overcoming “monumental challenges.”

What happened to the capsule?

The capsule was part of a gauge used to measure iron ore deposits for mining giant Rio Tinto’s Gudai-Darri facility in the extremely remote Kimberley region of Western Australia. It was lost while being transporte­d to Perth by a third-party transporta­tion company.

Officials believe that the bumpy rural roads loosened screws that had kept the capsule in place, then caused it to fall out of the truck.

Rio Tinto apologised for the incident. Chief executive Simon Trott said the company was sorry and that it was “fully supporting the relevant authoritie­s” in the search, as well as launching its own investigat­ion.

Call for tougher penalties

Western Australia’s state minister for health, Amber-Jade Sanderson, called for tougher criminal consequenc­es regarding the mishandlin­g of radioactiv­e materials.

Currently, there is a monetary of $1,000 Australian dollars (€650) for the initial offense, and then an additional AU$50 a day as long as the incident continues.

“The current fine system is unacceptab­ly low and we are looking at how we can increase that,” Sanderson said.

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