CIVIL NUCLEAR
Greenpeace protesters jailed for French nuclear stunt
by Staff Writers
Thionville, France (AFP) Feb 27, 2018

A French court on Tuesday sentenced two Greenpeace activists to a minimum of two months in jail for breaking into a nuclear power plant and setting off fireworks last year.

Six other protesters were handed five-month suspended sentences for the October stunt at the plant in Cattenom, near the border with Luxembourg, which was intended to show the facility's vulnerability to attack.

Greenpeace France, represented by local head Jean-Francois Julliard, was also fined 20,000 euros ($24,500) by the court in the northeastern town of Thionville.

"Greenpeace crossed a red line," said prosecutor Christelle Dumont, adding that any debate about nuclear safety "must be in accordance with the law".

Greenpeace lawyer Alexandre Faro said the protesters were fighting for ideals and "they do not deserve hard time in prison".

The prosecution had requested six-month suspended sentences for six of the activists, including Greenpeace France's chief anti-nuclear campaigner Yannick Rousselet.

Non-suspended six-month sentences were requested for the two other activists, who had previously been convicted of breaking into two other French nuclear sites.

The eight activists broke into Cattenom before dawn on October 12, and the state-owned EDF energy company that operates the plant said the protesters were detained before they reached the nuclear zone, and that the plant's safety was not threatened.

Greenpeace said the fireworks were set off at the foot of a spent fuel pool -- where nuclear plants store highly radioactive fuel rods that are removed from reactors after their use.

After Greenpeace activists broke into another nuclear plant in November, the French government opened a parliamentary inquiry into nuclear safety and security.

mk/ha/lp/dl/bp

EDF - ELECTRICITE DE FRANCE


Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Austria sues over EU approval of Hungary nuclear plant
Vienna (AFP) Feb 22, 2018
Staunchly anti-nuclear Austria lodged a legal complaint with the European Court of Justice on Thursday against the EU's approval of the expansion of a nuclear plant in neighbouring Hungary. The approval, granted by the European Commission in March, would allow the expansion of the Paks nuclear plant outside the Hungarian capital Budapest with a 10 billion euro ($12.4 billion) Russian loan. The plant is Hungary's only nuclear facility and supplies around 40 percent of its electricity needs. " ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

CIVIL NUCLEAR
U.S., Israel test Arrow 3 missile system

Israel, US Successfully Test Hetz 3 Exoatmospheric Anti-Missile System

China to Develop Sea-Based Missile Interceptors

Lockheed awarded $523M for Patriot missiles for Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Romania

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Raytheon, Lockheed to sell Javelins to multiple foreign customers

State Department approves potential $3.2B missile sale to Sweden

Pentagon looks to counter rivals' hypersonic missiles

Navy turns to General Dynamics for anti-missile protection

CIVIL NUCLEAR
TEOCO launches UAV Service Enablement Platform for Drones

Lockheed Martin Launches software to simultaneously control multiple UAV types anywhere on Earth

Orbital ATK contracted for testing of drone missile targets

General Atomics enlists Boeing for its MQ-25 Stingray proposal

CIVIL NUCLEAR
British astronaut hails 'groundbreaking' Airbus satellite

Northrop Grumman gets production, support contracts for E-2D Hawkeye

Studies prove superior performance of HTS for Government customers

SatCom options meet demanding connectivity requirements for helicopters

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Russia tested 'over 200 new weapons' in Syria: MP

Capco, Design West awarded $38M for M205 tripods

GenDym awarded contract for Army's Stryker vehicles

Marines drink cobra blood in US-Thai war drills

CIVIL NUCLEAR
BAE profits fall, counts on government defence spend

Russia's Kalashnikov becomes majority private-owned

Airbus to pay 81 mn euros to end German corruption probe

US budget outline calls for huge Pentagon increase, cuts to State

CIVIL NUCLEAR
'Emperor Xi'? -- China gambles on return to lifetime rule

EU's Tusk warns Poland against 'anti-semitic excesses'

Baltic presidents to visit Trump on April 3

Merkel warns against China's influence in Balkans

CIVIL NUCLEAR
UT Dallas team's microscopic solution may save researchers big time

Researchers invent light-emitting nanoantennas

Nanomushroom sensors: One material, many applications

USTC realizes strong indirect coupling in distant nanomechanical resonators