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RE: Radioactive package seized
Barb,
As per the article "The regional emergencies ministry said the package, discovered
Tuesday, was emitting radiation at a rate thousands of times higher
than the norm in Kiev of 0.05 milliroentgens an hour." it seems they haven't hammered down a real number for the dose rate. "thousands of times the norm......0.05 milliroentgens an hour" .....1000x.05=50milliroentgens/hr.......2000x.05=100milliroentgens/hr......etc. Depending on just how many "thousands of times" they are talking about, they could be talking about a considerable dose rate.
Just a thought.
Floyd W. Flanigan B.S.Nuc.H.P.
-----Original Message-----
From: BLHamrick@AOL.COM [mailto:BLHamrick@AOL.COM]
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2003 7:39 PM
To: Radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu
Subject: Radioactive package seized
I picked this up from one of Sandy's news distributions (I hope Sandy doesn't mind the re-post here). Maybe someone needs to tell the Ukraine government that the excepted package limit for external radiation at the surface is ten times the level of this package they're concerned about, and that there are probably thousands criss-crossing around the world everyday.
Radioactive Parcel Bound for U.S. Seized in Ukraine
KIEV (Reuters) - A radioactive package addressed to the United States
has been seized at Ukraine's main airport in the capital Kiev,
Ukrainian officials said Wednesday.
The regional emergencies ministry said the package, discovered
Tuesday, was emitting radiation at a rate thousands of times higher
than the norm in Kiev of 0.05 milliroentgens an hour.
"This material is being investigated," said Mykola Karabet, duty
officer for the emergencies ministry in the Borispyl region of Kiev.
"We do not know what it is.
"It was a parcel in some luggage to be sent by air transport... There
is no threat to human health or life."
The United States has been on alert for suspect packages since
Washington was all but shut down by letters containing anthrax powder
in 2001.
In Ukraine, metal scrap and other objects from the Chernobyl region
are often stopped at the borders of the former Soviet state for
higher than normal radiation levels.
Large swathes of the country were left with high levels of
radioactivity after Chernobyl's reactor number four exploded in 1986,
in the world's worst civil nuclear disaster.
Health officials have blamed that accident for thousands of deaths
from radiation-linked illnesses and an increase in thyroid cancer.