The Independent

Radioactiv­e material stolen in Mexico truck hijacking

- CHRIS HAVLER-BARRETT

The Mexican government has warned inhabitant­s of the densely populated central states that a truck carrying highly radioactiv­e material was stolen from the town of Teoloyucan during an armed heist in the early hours of Sunday.

National security agencies warned that the stolen equipment – a QSA Delta 800 gamma ray projector – is extremely dangerous, and could deliver a fatal dose of radiation to anyone who comes into direct contact with it.

Teoloyucan, the district in which the incident occurred, is a satellite town in the Estado de Mexico, the region which surrounds Mexico City. The vehicle, a Toyota Hilux, was carrying industrial inspection equipment containing the radioactiv­e elements iridium-192, selenium-75 and ytterbium-169 when it was hijacked.

A warning to the public about the severity of the danger posed by these elements was issued by the National Commission for Nuclear Security and Safeguardi­ng, along with the Commission for National Civil Protection (CNPC), the civil defence wing of the Mexican government.

“At 10am today, there was a robbery of radiograph­ic equipment reported,” it said. “If the radioactiv­e material is extracted from the container, is moved, or makes direct contact with any persons handling it, permanent injury can occur in minutes. In case of making direct contact with the source over the course of hours or days, the effects can prove fatal.”

CNPC teams have been deployed across almost the entirety of the central region of Mexico, with the missing truck believed to be in any one of nine states – a number which includes the capital Mexico City. The region is the most densely populated area of the country, with more than 46.5 million inhabitant­s, and includes the major regions of Puebla, Guerrero and Queretaro.

The public have been asked to remain vigilant and, in the event of discoverin­g the radioactiv­e material, to contact the CNPC and to stay away from both the machinery and the material contained within. Anyone who comes within 30 metres of the device was asked to notify the CNPC, as they may be at risk of radiation poisoning.

The commission has mobilised regional and federal forces in an attempt to locate the vehicle, but there are currently no leads as to the whereabout­s of either the hijackers or the stolen materials.

It remains unclear if Sunday’s robbery was directly related to the cargo, but with the long-term economic effects of Covid-19 causing increasing hardship in a country unable to provide a social safety net to those most in need, incidents such as these are on the rise. Last month, canisters of chlorine gas were stolen in another hijacking in the Estado de Mexico and throughout the pandemic, medical oxygen supplies have been routinely waylaid by criminals looking to sell them on the black market.

This is not the first time that radioactiv­e materials have been hijacked in Mexico, where the long-running war between the drug cartels and the government has seen the armed robbery of trucks become the norm. In 2013, a truck carrying radioactiv­e medical waste was hijacked in Tepojaco, some 40km away from Teoloyucan. Authoritie­s at the time feared that the radioactiv­e material stolen may have been intended to form part of a dirty bomb. In that instance, the truck and the materials on board were safely recovered by authoritie­s.

The Ministry of Public Security could not be reached for comment and the office had yet to issue a public statement on the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the robbery.

 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Law enforcemen­t have been searching for the ‘extremely dangerous’ equipment
(AFP/Getty) Law enforcemen­t have been searching for the ‘extremely dangerous’ equipment

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