Alwaght – The Zionists are engrossed in their nuclear activities in Dimona nunlear Reactor, indifferent to the whole world. This nuclear reactor, which was established in 1958, enabled the Israeli regime to producing massive quantities of plutonium sufficient to manufacture up to two hundred nuclear warheads. Dimona Reactor has exceeded thirty years of age, and has become a serious threat to all of the countries in the region.
Radioactive contamination and severe diseases:
Dimona Reactor is considered an important symbol for the Zionists. They view the possession of nuclear weapons as a guarantee for their "existence" in the region, a deterring factor that would break the will of the Arab states, and a vow by the Western countries to protect and support the Zionists. Until this day, the real intent of establishing Dimona Reactor is unknown, although, Tel Aviv claims that the construction of the reactor was aimed at developing the Negev Desert, south of Palestine. However, several reports were leaked on the regime's nuclear activities in Dimona Reactor, among which is the confession of a Moroccan Israeli nuclear technician, Mordechai Vanunu. He was the first to reveal details of the Zionist's nuclear weapon program in 1986, which resulted in his jail sentence for eighteen years, including more than eleven years in solitary confinement.
Vanunu said, "Dimona Reactor has been worn out, it is more than fifty years of age; usually, when the reactors exceed thirty years, they must be closed. If Dimona Reactor continue to operat under the current circumstances, it would pose a threat to the lives of millions throughout the Middle East." Saying that Jordan should be prepared for possible Dimona leaks he added "I see that Jordan has the right to question Israel about what is going on there since it is close to the country's borders."
Vanunu's claims of Dimona's senescence and its threat to the Palestinian and Jordanian inhabitants in particular, and the West Asian nations in general, were confirmed by several Egyptian and Jordanian reports about nuclear leaks from Dimona Reactor.
In the same context, Amjad Shammout, the leader of Civil Alliance of the Dimona Nuclear Reactor Victims in Jordan, the former attorney general and the Head of the Arab Bridge Center for Human Rights, said in an interview with the Qatari Al-Raya newspaper "We found out, irrevocably, that when they assembled the nuclear stacks, they directed them toward the southern Jordanian area, specifically, Araba valley, Shobak, Petra, Ma'an, Karak, Tafila, and Aghwar, which are adjacent to the reactor. When the wind blows, it would carry the radiations and the toxic emissions toward the southern Jordan. This means that there has been a deliberate criminal intent since its establishment."
According to recent report by the Jordanian Ministry of Health, there are twelve thousand cancer cases in the South, from 1996 to 2004. These cases varied between nausea, hair loss, eye diseases, skin ulcers, and chronic diseases of the nervous system. birth defects were also reported.
The Israeli regime civilians are also at stake:
The regime's Channel ten in a report acknowledged death of hundreds of workers in Dimona Nuclear Reactor due to various types of cancers. The report revealed the statements of some of the relatives of the victims of Dimona's toxic emissions. Their statements confirmed that the Tel Aviv officials try to conceal the perilous facts of the reactors.
The Israeli television network conveyed the statement of Daniel Shrodcker, son of a janitor at Dimona Nuclear Reactor for twenty eight years. His father died shortly after being diagnosed with cancer. Shrodcker said, "My father was not the only one, many of his colleagues lost their lives after being diagnosed with cancer; however, the fear of being legally persecuted made the families of those victims to remain silent."
The report unveiled the death of approximately a quarter of Dimona's employees due to cancer. Cancer symptoms were also discovered in more than seventy percent of Negev inhabitants. On the other hand, the Israeli regime officials are trying to conceal the hideous truth around the deterioration of Dimona's infrastructure.
Persian Gulf taciturn, Egypt and Jordan slight objections:
The Dimona Nuclear Reactor is located in Negev Desert, approximately twenty five kilometers from the western Jordanian borders, seventy five kilometers from the west of Egypt, and eighty five kilometers from the south of Al-Quds. This makes Dimona Nuclear Reactor as a serious danger for the present and the future of Palestine and the surrounding countries, particularly Jordan and Egypt. The reports revealed that the Dimona's nuclear leaks have reached several areas in Jordan, Egypt, the West Bank, and groundwater of the city of Tabuk, in Saudi Arabia.
However all abovementioned threats did not provoked international organizations and superpowers to worry about Israeli regime's nuclear program, or to oblige the Tel Aviv leaders to curb their hostile nuclear activities.
Meanwhile, Israeli regime still refuses to sign the NPT as well as to subject its nuclear activities to international surveillance. However, it is heard from time to time that Egypt and Jordan criticize this issue with abashment, where the Persian Gulf Arab States have closed their eyes on the fate of their people and the magnitude of the upcoming disaster.
Radioactive contamination and severe diseases:
Dimona Reactor is considered an important symbol for the Zionists. They view the possession of nuclear weapons as a guarantee for their "existence" in the region, a deterring factor that would break the will of the Arab states, and a vow by the Western countries to protect and support the Zionists. Until this day, the real intent of establishing Dimona Reactor is unknown, although, Tel Aviv claims that the construction of the reactor was aimed at developing the Negev Desert, south of Palestine. However, several reports were leaked on the regime's nuclear activities in Dimona Reactor, among which is the confession of a Moroccan Israeli nuclear technician, Mordechai Vanunu. He was the first to reveal details of the Zionist's nuclear weapon program in 1986, which resulted in his jail sentence for eighteen years, including more than eleven years in solitary confinement.
Vanunu said, "Dimona Reactor has been worn out, it is more than fifty years of age; usually, when the reactors exceed thirty years, they must be closed. If Dimona Reactor continue to operat under the current circumstances, it would pose a threat to the lives of millions throughout the Middle East." Saying that Jordan should be prepared for possible Dimona leaks he added "I see that Jordan has the right to question Israel about what is going on there since it is close to the country's borders."
Vanunu's claims of Dimona's senescence and its threat to the Palestinian and Jordanian inhabitants in particular, and the West Asian nations in general, were confirmed by several Egyptian and Jordanian reports about nuclear leaks from Dimona Reactor.
In the same context, Amjad Shammout, the leader of Civil Alliance of the Dimona Nuclear Reactor Victims in Jordan, the former attorney general and the Head of the Arab Bridge Center for Human Rights, said in an interview with the Qatari Al-Raya newspaper "We found out, irrevocably, that when they assembled the nuclear stacks, they directed them toward the southern Jordanian area, specifically, Araba valley, Shobak, Petra, Ma'an, Karak, Tafila, and Aghwar, which are adjacent to the reactor. When the wind blows, it would carry the radiations and the toxic emissions toward the southern Jordan. This means that there has been a deliberate criminal intent since its establishment."
According to recent report by the Jordanian Ministry of Health, there are twelve thousand cancer cases in the South, from 1996 to 2004. These cases varied between nausea, hair loss, eye diseases, skin ulcers, and chronic diseases of the nervous system. birth defects were also reported.
The Israeli regime civilians are also at stake:
The regime's Channel ten in a report acknowledged death of hundreds of workers in Dimona Nuclear Reactor due to various types of cancers. The report revealed the statements of some of the relatives of the victims of Dimona's toxic emissions. Their statements confirmed that the Tel Aviv officials try to conceal the perilous facts of the reactors.
The Israeli television network conveyed the statement of Daniel Shrodcker, son of a janitor at Dimona Nuclear Reactor for twenty eight years. His father died shortly after being diagnosed with cancer. Shrodcker said, "My father was not the only one, many of his colleagues lost their lives after being diagnosed with cancer; however, the fear of being legally persecuted made the families of those victims to remain silent."
The report unveiled the death of approximately a quarter of Dimona's employees due to cancer. Cancer symptoms were also discovered in more than seventy percent of Negev inhabitants. On the other hand, the Israeli regime officials are trying to conceal the hideous truth around the deterioration of Dimona's infrastructure.
Persian Gulf taciturn, Egypt and Jordan slight objections:
The Dimona Nuclear Reactor is located in Negev Desert, approximately twenty five kilometers from the western Jordanian borders, seventy five kilometers from the west of Egypt, and eighty five kilometers from the south of Al-Quds. This makes Dimona Nuclear Reactor as a serious danger for the present and the future of Palestine and the surrounding countries, particularly Jordan and Egypt. The reports revealed that the Dimona's nuclear leaks have reached several areas in Jordan, Egypt, the West Bank, and groundwater of the city of Tabuk, in Saudi Arabia.
However all abovementioned threats did not provoked international organizations and superpowers to worry about Israeli regime's nuclear program, or to oblige the Tel Aviv leaders to curb their hostile nuclear activities.
Meanwhile, Israeli regime still refuses to sign the NPT as well as to subject its nuclear activities to international surveillance. However, it is heard from time to time that Egypt and Jordan criticize this issue with abashment, where the Persian Gulf Arab States have closed their eyes on the fate of their people and the magnitude of the upcoming disaster.