Australia: Missing radioactive capsule: mining giant apologizes

As Australia searches for a tiny radioactive capsule, British-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto has apologized for the incident.

Australia: Missing radioactive capsule: mining giant apologizes

As Australia searches for a tiny radioactive capsule, British-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto has apologized for the incident. The millimeter-sized capsule had apparently fallen from a truck while being transported from a mine north of the mining town of Newman to a depot near the city of Perth - according to the latest information, sometime after January 12 and somewhere on the 1400-kilometer route. The fact that the capsule was missing was only noticed on January 25th when the truck was unloaded.

"We take this incident very seriously," Australian broadcaster ABC quoted Simon Trott, head of Rio Tinto's iron ore division, as saying on Monday. The corporation operates the Gudai Darri mine, from where the capsule was transported. "We recognize that this is clearly a matter of great concern and we apologize for the alarm it has raised among the people of Western Australia." to prepare them for transport. The company also launched its own investigation to find out how she could have disappeared.

The loss of the capsule containing the highly radioactive cesium-137, measuring just six by eight millimetres, had caused great concern among the authorities in Western Australia given the very dangerous material. Anyone who discovers something that looks like a tiny capsule should keep a distance of at least five meters, they said. The Western Australia Department of Health informed the public about the incident late on Friday (local time). Meanwhile, teams from the fire brigade and rescue services searched the busy freight route with portable radiation and metal detectors.

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