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'Nuclear spy' arrested in Egypt | 'Nuclear spy' arrested in Egypt |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The Egyptian authorities have arrested an engineer who works at the country's nuclear energy agency for spying for Israel, state prosecutors said. | The Egyptian authorities have arrested an engineer who works at the country's nuclear energy agency for spying for Israel, state prosecutors said. |
Prosecutor Hisham Badawi told a news conference the Egyptian national had taken reports from his workplace with the aim of exchanging them for money. | |
Two foreign nationals are also wanted by the authorities, prosecutors said. | |
Egypt has a small atomic reactor for research purposes but recently unveiled plans for a civilian nuclear programme. | |
The Egyptian engineer was arrested on 18 February, but news of his detention was withheld until the investigation was completed, prosecutors said. | |
A government statement named him as Muhammad Sayed Saber Ali, 35. The foreign nationals were named as Irishman Brian Peter and Shiro Izo of Japan. | |
Strained ties | |
Egypt is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which allows countries to build nuclear power stations under international supervision. | |
Israel is not a signatory and is believed to be the only state in the region with a nuclear arsenal, though it maintains a position of "ambiguity" on its nuclear weapons. | |
The two countries ended decades of hostility with the Camp David accords in the late 1970s, but ties have been put under strain over a string of espionage cases. | |
Last September, Egypt said it wanted to revive its nuclear power programme, which was frozen 20 years ago following the Chernobyl disaster in the Soviet Union. | |
Demand for electricity has been growing in Egypt at an average rate of 7% a year and the country faces worsening power shortages. |
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