Reuters, 30/03 17:29 CET
By Geert De Clercq and Christoph Steitz
PARIS/FRANKFURT (Reuters) –
Metre-thick concrete walls and 1950s-style analog control rooms help
protect nuclear plants from bomb attacks and computer hackers, but
Islamist militants are turning their attention to the atomic industry’s
weak spots, security experts say.
Concerns about nuclear terrorism rose after Belgian media
reported that suicide bombers who killed 32 people in Brussels on March
22 originally looked into attacking a nuclear installation before
police raids that netted a number of suspected associates forced them to
switch targets.
Security experts say that blowing up a nuclear reactor is
beyond the skills of militant groups, but that the nuclear industry has
some vulnerabilities that could be exploited.
“The insider threat is one of the most difficult to deal
with, as this hinges on the ability to screen employees and figure out
the nature of their intentions,” said Page Stoutland at the U.S.-based
Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI), citing recent reported incidents in Belgium.
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Source: Euronews
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