*       three armed men gained entry to the national key point in the early
hours of Thursday morning. 

*       once inside the facility, the three used a ladder stolen from the
nuclear facility's fire department to scale a wall and so get into the
control room. 

*       two of the gunmen forced their way into the control room and ran
straight for the control panel


  _____  

Attack on SA Nuke Facility
 PretNukeAttack.jpg
<http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas//PretNukeAttack.jpg> 

Just a quick reminder that governmental neglect of critical infrastructure
is epidemic on a global scale (including the US) and that black swans can
originate from small, relatively obscure, incidents.

According to the
<http://www.pretorianews.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20071109061218448C5
28585> Pretoria News: 

"A brazen attack by four gunmen on the Pelindaba nuclear facility has left a
senior emergency officer seriously injured." 

Here's where it gets interesting: 

"Gerber [the senior official] attacked two of the gunmen as they forced
their way into the control room and ran straight for the control panel....
Necsa spokesperson Chantal Janneker confirmed the attack. She declined to
say how the gunmen had gained access to the facility or whether they had
stolen anything."

By the way,  <http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm>
Pelindaba has a long and interesting history. 
  _____  


Attack at Pelindaba nuclear facility

9 November 2007, 07:17

 


*       http://www.pretorianews.co.za/?fSectionId=
<http://www.pretorianews.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20071109061218448C5
28585> &fArticleId=vn20071109061218448C528585

A brazen attack by four gunmen on the Pelindaba nuclear facility has left a
senior emergency officer seriously injured.

Anton Gerber, Necsa emergency services operational officer spoke to the
Pretoria News from his hospital bed hours after the attack.

He was shot in the chest when the gunmen stormed the facility's emergency
response control room in the early hours of Thursday morning.

The shooting comes four months after Necsa's newly appointed services
general manager Eric Lerata, 43, was gunned down in front of his Montana
home after returning from a business trip in France.

Pelindaba is regarded as one of the country's most secure national key
points. 

It is surrounded by electric fencing, has 24-hour CCTV surveillance,
security guards and security controls and checkpoints.

The attack comes as the country prepares to preside over an International
Atomic Energy Agency convention on nuclear safety.

The convention is aimed at achieving a high level of global nuclear safety
via safety related technical co-operation; establishing and maintaining
effective defences in nuclear installations against potential radiological
hazards and preventing accidents with radiological consequences.

A visibly shaken Gerber, who was rushed to Eugene Marais hospital, on
Thursday said that he was sitting in the control room with his fiancée Ria
Meiring when he heard a loud bang.

Meiring, who was working nightshift, is the supervisor of the control room.

Gerber said he kept Meiring company. "I do not like it when she is at work
at night and I go with her to keep her company and ensure that she is safe,"
he said.

Describing the attack Gerber said they were inside the electronically sealed
control room when they heard a loud bang.

They then spotted the gunmen coming into the facility's eastern block.

It is believed that the attackers gained access to the building by using a
ladder from Pelindaba's fire brigade and scaling a wall. 

The men are thought to have forced open a window by pulling out several
louvers.

Pushing Meiring underneath a desk, Gerber attacked two of the gunmen as they
forced their way into the control room and ran straight for the control
panel.

"I did not know what they were going to do. I just kept on hitting them even
when one of them attacked me with a screwdriver. 

"I knew that if I stopped they would attack Ria or do something to the
panel.

"I could not let anything like that happen," he said.

Unbeknownst to Gerber one of the robbers had shot him in the chest as he
fought them off.

The bullet narrowly missed his heart breaking a rib before puncturing his
lung. Doctors said the bullet missed his spine by 2cm.

Gerber, who at one stage thought he was going to die, said he had been very
scared.

"The facility is meant to be safe. There are security guards, electric
fences and security control points. These things are not meant to happen,"
he said.

Necsa spokesperson Chantal Janneker confirmed the attack.

She declined to say how the gunmen had gained access to the facility or
whether they had stolen anything.

Janneker said Necsa was conducting an internal investigation into the
attack. 

Once the police investigation was complete Necsa would divulge what
happened, she said.

Later in the afternoon, Pretoria News was phoned by a man identifying
himself as a Necsa legal adviser, saying the newspaper will be breaching the
National Keypoints Act by publishing the story. 

He said that Necsa may seek a court order preventing dissemination of the
story.

He claimed that the interview with Gerber was "unethical" as "he was under
sedation and thus incoherent" when it was conducted.

Pretoria News sought and was granted permission to interview Gerber, by
hospital management, and Gerber himself. While he was obviously in pain, he
appeared coherent and made sense throughout the interview. 

His recall of the events was sequential and to the point. He also agreed to
have his picture taken in his hospital bed.

North West police spokesperson Superintendent Louis Jacobs said that no
arrests had been made.

"A case of armed robbery and attempted murder are being investigated," he
said.

  _____  


Nuke ops man shot during gang raid

8 November 2007, 15:56
http://www.pretorianews.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=
<http://www.pretorianews.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn2007110811
5931633C145340> &fArticleId=vn20071108115931633C145340
A senior Nuclear Energy Corporation of South Africa (Necsa) employee was
shot during an attack at Pelindaba.

It remains unknown how exactly three armed men gained entry to the national
key point in the early hours of Thursday morning.

It is believed that the three, once inside the facility, used a ladder
stolen from the nuclear facility's fire department to scale a wall and so
get into the control room.

It is suspected that Necsa Emergency Services operational officer Anton
Gerber was shot when he surprised the men.

Gerber was rushed to Eugene Marais Hospital where he is reported to be in a
serious but stable condition.

The shooting of Gerber comes four months after Necsa's newly appointed
services general manager, Eric Lerata, 43, was gunned down in cold blood in
outside his Montana home after returning from a week-long business trip in
France.

In a bizarre twist, two of Lerata's alleged killers, who were out on bail at
the time of his killing, were arrested on murder charges on Wednesday while
appearing at the Kempton magistrate's court in connection with a case of
theft.

Necsa spokesperson Chantal Janneker confirmed the attack on Gerber but
declined to say where in the facility the shooting took place or if the
gunmen had taken anything.

She said that no one else was injured in the attack.

"Once we have a report, we will reveal exactly what happened," said
Janneker.
 
  _____  


Pelindaba Nuclear Research Center 
25°48'S 27°54'E



        Church Street Extension West 

P.O.Box 582 

PRETORIA 0001 

Republic of South Africa
        http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm



The Atomic Energy Board was founded in 1948, and in 1961 the board moved
from Pretoria to its existing site at Pelindaba near Hartbeespoort Dam
approximately 30-35 km West of Pretoria. In the mid-1960s the South African
nuclear weapons program
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  moved from
downtown Pretoria to the Pelindaba Nuclear Research Center. "Pelindaba" is
derived from the words pelile meaning "finished." and 'indaba' meaning
"discussion". The Pelindaba site consists of 2300 hectares of which around
54 hectares are building space. 


This AEC site includes the Safari-1 research reactor, a hot cell complex, a
waste disposal site, and conversion and fuel fabrication facilities.
Facilities at Pelindaba include: 


*       Safari-1 - 20MW swimming pool research reactor which has been under
IAEA safeguards since its commissioning in 1965. 

*       Safari-2 / Pelinduna -- Critical assembly; closed and dismantled in
1970. 


        

*       Hot Cell Complex - The modern hot-cell complex is equipped to handle
high levels of radioactivity. Dedicated in 1998 to commercial production of
Molybdenum99, used for diagnostic treatment world-wide, from the Safari-1
reactor. Molybdenum-99 is produced in a number of other countries, but
production capabilities are generally small and sporadically run. 


        

*       Z-plant - Semi-commercial, Helikon aerodynamic process enrichment
plant produced 3.25 % enriched LEU for the Koeberg power station. This large
(300 000 SWU/a) semi-commercial enrichment plant was constructed in the
later 1970's and early 1980's, and commissioning commenced in 1984 and full
production in 1988. Closed in 1995, the enrichment technology
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  was less than
novel and hopelessly uneconomic. The cavernous production hall with its
countless vortex separators, more than any other AEC venture, embodied a
"can do" rather than "should do" operation, driven by a government political
mandate. 


        

*       UF6 Conversion Plant - The Conversion Plant started operation in
1986 and produced distilled uranium hexafluoride as from 1987/8. It was
built to supply the AEC’s Z-Plant enrichment facility, which became
operational in 1988. The conversion plant’s capacity exceeded the feed rate
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  required for
the Z-Plant, and conversion services have also been exported. Since 1995/96
this plant had undergone successful upgrading to solve certain bottle-necks
towards achieving its full throughput of 1200 tpa and later expansion to
1500 tpa of uranium (U) as uranium hexafluoride (UF6). However, faced with a
rapidly deteriorating market environment, this plant was closed in 1998.
During almost two decades of operation, the UF6 Conversion Plant had served
as a springboard for a wide array of fluorine and fluoride-based industrial
projects within the AEC. 

*       BEVA Plant - The equipment was used in the pelletising and assembly
sections of the process for the manufacturing of pressurised water reactor
(PWR) LEU fuel elements for the Koeberg nuclear power reactor. BEVA
production started in 1988 and average production has been about 25 tonnes
of contained uranium per annum. Despite the AEC’s mandate to secure an
indigenous nuclear fuel source for Koeberg, it supplied less than half of
the plant’s requirements; Eskom was always able to secure fuel from abroad
at lower costs. The plant was closed in 1995, and in August 1998 the Atomic
Energy Corporation announced that it was seeking offers to purchase the
redundant nuclear fuel fabrication equipment. The existing buildings and
infrastructure housing the equipment were said to be potentially suitable
for pebble-bed reactor fuel manufacture by Eskom, the national electricity
supplier of South Africa. Eskom's new pebble-bed reactor project will use
fuel of an entirely different type from that of the Koeberg PWRs and will
consequently require completely new equipment in the manufacturing process. 

*       Zirconium Tubing Plant - Produced cladding for fuel assemblies used
in Koeberg reactors. Closed in 1993, the plant's equipment was sold to the
People's Republic of China in 1997. The plant, which had cost about R200
million to build, was sold for about R20 million. 

*       HEU-UF6 Production Plant 


        

*       Thabana Hill / Radiation Hill - Storage
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  of spent fuel
from Safari-1 and other radioactive waste. 


        

*       Building 1200 - Medical unit, converted to the Wildlife Breeding
Research Centre (WBRC) headquarters and laboratory in March 1996. 

*       Building 1600 - Radioanalysis - A center of excellence for the
measurement of nuclear radiation, with a staff of more than thirty
scientists and analysts. 

*       Building 1900 - Reactor Theory -- comprehensive Pressurized Water
Reactor (PWR) and Materials Testing Reactor (MTR) core analysis. 

*       Building 5000 - Criticality experiments in the late 1970s; closed in
the early 1980s. 


        

*       Calibration Laboratory - Inspection, repair, maintenance and
calibration of instrumentation use for monitoring radiation and
contamination. 

*       Isotope Centre - Provides products and services which rely on
radiopharmaceuticals to improve the diagnosis and treatment of illness. The
Isotope Centre also offers support services
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  which include
the disposal of waste, specialist advice and assistance in the design of hot
laboratories. 

*       Flosep - Gas/solid vortex tube separation systems are one of the
AEC's foremost technologies, arising originally from the uranium enrichment
program. Flosep specialises in the design, including fluid dynamic studies,
and manufacture of air filtration and dust control systems. Applications
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  range from the
reduction of stack emissions and other dust suppression projects to the
recovery of fine product and filtration of ventilation air. Industrial
applications include systems for compressors, winder motor cooling,
substations and general ventilation. 

*       Fabritech - This specialised fabrication facility produces complex
plant components in sophisticated materials for demanding service
environments, including pressure vessels, heat exchangers and associated
plant equipment in Aluminium, Stainless Steels, Duplex steels, Monel,
Inconel, Titanium and other high alloys. Total area under cover is 7 700m2,
with a total clean area under cover of 1,350m2. 

*       Pelchem - The chemical division of Pelindaba Technology was
established in April 1999 to commercialise the technologies and products
developed in the past for the nuclear fuel cycle. Initial products included
hydrogen fluoride (HF), fluorine (F2), UF4 and UF6. Two new chemical plants
are situated at Pelindaba, which provide tungsten hexafluoride (WF6) and
chlorine trifluoride (CIF3) specifically for use in the semiconductor
industry. 

*       Special Alloys Division - The Division renders metallurgical
services, produces special alloys, undertakes heat treatment, welding,
brazing and casting of materials with surface properties such as corrosion,
wear and erosion resistance, or low friction. 

*       Specialised Plating Technology Division - Comprehensive cleaning and
surface finishing services include surface treatment consulting, general
plating, plating of noble metals and specialised plating. 

*       FTP Toolcoat Division - Modification of polymer surfaces using
fluorine or fluorine gas mixtures. 

*       Vacuum Service Division - Maintenance on a variety of vacuum
equipment including vane, piston, diffusion, turbo and roots vacuum pumps
and helium detectors. 

The AEC designed and produced the initial nuclear device at Pelindaba. A
second device in late 1979 at Pelindaba but it was suitable only for use in
a test. The only criticality test for the HEU core was conducted at
Pelindaba. Facilities at the Pelindaba complex also included facilities for
machining high explosives (HE) for implosion weapons and for related testing
and firing. AEC personnel continued advanced weapons design research at this
facility for the remainder of the duration of the nuclear weapons program. 


 <http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/images/safari.jpg> The AEC
continues to operate the SAFARI-1 research reactor within the confines of a
nuclear license by the Council for Nuclear Safety and with a mainly
commercially directed focus. SAFARI-1 is a 20MW Materials Test Reactor of
the tank-in-pool type (Oak Ridge design). It is currently being utilised
mainly for commercially oriented projects. Institutional cooperation is low
but steadily increasing following a decision to actively enhance this aspect
of the reactor’s role in South Africa. This latter role of SAFARI-1 is
receiving particular attention while the former serves to offset the costs
involved in running the facility. 


The SAFARI-1 reactor is supported by a comprehensive infrastructure,
including - 


*       a large inventory of highly enriched uranium 

*       an MTR fuel manufacturing plant 

*       extensive hot cell facilities 

*       an Isotope Centre 

*       a pipe storage facility for interim storage of spent fuel 

*       two disposal sites for low and medium-level radioactive waste 

*       theoretical reactor physics support 

*       radiochemistry, including radiopharmaceutical research 

*       radioanalysis 

The two most important commercial products produced by SAFARI-1 are fission
Mo-99 and the transmutation doping of silicon. The former application is
rapidly growing and will contribute significantly to covering the running
costs of SAFARI-1 in the future. In the mid-1990s the Atomic Energy
Corporation of South Africa expanded its Mo-99 production capacity at its
Safari-1 research reactor to 1000 curies per week. Other commercial
applications relate to isotope production, materials modification, neutron
activation analysis and the provision of general irradiation services. 


In the late 1990s. to carry out its regulatory control
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/pelindaba.htm#>  function on
safeguards of nuclear materials more cost-effectively, the AEC's vault of
highly enriched uranium for the SAFARI-1 reactor, together with a number of
other locations elsewhere in the world, were fitted with Remote Monitoring
Systems by the IAEA. These systems allow the IAEA to carry out direct
surveillance of any nuclear material store through encrypted direct signals
to Vienna. 


In 1998 the AEC commissioned its interim retrievable dry store at Pelindaba
for spent fuel from SAFARI-1 after receiving the necessary safety and
safeguards approvals from the Council for Nuclear Safety and the
International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, respectively. As a result, 120
spent fuel elements were transported from the spent fuel racks in the pool
of SAFARI-1 research reactor to the retrievable dry store on Thabana. 

 <http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/images/pelindaba-west.jpg>
<http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/images/aecor4.jpg>  
  <http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/rsa/images/pretoria.gif> 




 
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