No evidence found, says lab chief

Published January 25, 2003

VIENNA, Jan 24: A UN laboratory analysing samples gathered by arms inspectors in Iraq has found no evidence yet of a nuclear weapons programme, the lab’s director said on Friday.

Scientists at a UN laboratory in Seibersdorf, Austria, have tested 16 of 20 swabs taken by inspectors from air filters, metal pipes and the environment for traces of nuclear materials used in weapons.

“Until now there is practically nothing detectable which would conclude (there is) a nuclear weapons programme,” Gabriele Voigt told Reuters. Voigt is director of one of five laboratories worldwide that are testing samples for nuclear material.

“You always detect something,” Voigt said, referring to background radiation, but added there was “nothing which would really allow conclusions that something illegal is going on.”

In Bulgaria on Friday, International Atomic Energy Agency Director Mohamed ElBaradei said in a statement that more time was needed to complete the inspectors’ work.

“I cannot rule out the existence of such weapons simply because I have no proof,” ElBaradei said.—Reuters

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