Delhi's Mayapuri Safe, Radioactive Substances Retrieved, Sealed And Taken Out, Says BARC
Delhi's busy Mayapuri Industrial area is now safe, after two teams from Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and Nuclear Power Corporation's Narora Nuclear Power Plant came to the area and “retrieved and
PTI
April 09, 2010 13:50 IST
Delhi's busy Mayapuri Industrial area is now safe, after two teams from Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and Nuclear Power Corporation's Narora Nuclear Power Plant came to the area and “retrieved and sealed” eight bunches of radioactive material which were later transported out in an NPC truck on Friday, said a BARC spokesman.
Swapnesh Kumar Malhotra, spokesman of BARC and Head, Public Awareness Division, told media in Mayapuri that three different teams had been scouring the area for the last two days. On Wednesday, two officers from AERB came and covered some radioactive substances with other scrap, he said.
On Thursday around 12.30 after midnight, two teams, one from AERB and BARC and the other from NPC's Narora Plant began the work of retrieving and sealing the radioactive substances in eight bunches. This work ended today around noon after 12 hours, said Malhotra.
“Our experts used sophisticated instruments to measure radiation. The radioactive substance Cobalt-60 isotope was found in wires and pellets of an equipment.
“Cobalt-60 is normally used in industrial radiography, cancer treatment and food irradiation. Since the equipment was broken, it is now upon the probe team of BARC and police to establish the source of the radioactive material. However, the entire area now is fully safe. We have checked the entire locality and the local people co-operated with us,” the spokesman added.
The radioactive substances were found from two shops belonging to Deepak Jain, the first victim, at D-2/32 and WZ160/D-31 in Mayapuri, Malhotra said.
The threat to physical health depends on the level of exposure to radiation based on distance, time and individual capacity, he said. Symptoms of radiation are vomiting, nausea, skin allergy, blackened skin and hair loss, he added.
Meanwhile, a local trader revealed that another relative of Deepak , Himanshu Jain has been taken to AIIMS for radiation symptoms. This takes the present number of victims to six.
Panic was triggered in the locality last night after the news of a radiation leak broke out with five persons falling ill after coming in contact with a "mysterious shining object" in a scrap shop.
"The experts have identified the material as Cobalt-60. They have identified six sources of Cobalt-60 from the scrap shop," B B Bhattacharya, member of National Disaster Management Authority and former Director of BARC, told PTI.
Cobalt-60 is a radioactive isotope of cobalt, which is a hard, lustrous, grey metal. Cobalt-based colours and pigments have been used since ancient times for jewellery and paints, and miners have long used the name kobold ore for some minerals.
Bhattacharjee said Cobalt-60 is used in fabrication work, specially for welding steel. It is also used in radiotherapy for treating cancer.
The experts, who first collected and isolated the mysterious shining object from the scrap shop in Mayapuri Industrial area in a sophisticated lid, had sent it for further investigations.
After the news came to light last night, police cordoned off the area upto one km and did not allow people to enter the locality.
There are around 200 scrap shops in the market. Scientists from the Crisis Management Group of Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and Atomic Energy Regulation Board had last night carried out the survey of the extent of radiation in the area.
The incident came to light yesterday when Jain, the scrap dealer who suffered serious burn injuries, was yesterday rushed to Apollo Hospital which informed the government that he had suffered radiation, officials said.
Jain fell unconscious and his hands had turned black after coming into contact with the object, part of medical waste which was bought from a city hospital.
Four workers employed by him also suffered injuries in the incident. Soon after the radiation, safety officer of Apollo Hospital informed the authorities that Jain has been exposed to radiation.
A team from NDMA's Emergency Response Centre then rushed to the spot in the afternoon. They were joined by a six member team, including a doctor, from BARC later last evening besides ten scientists from Narora Atomic Power Plant.
According to a senior official, the radioactive substances were put in an almirah by the scrap dealer who was unaware of its radio-activity. Bhattacharya said they were looking for more sources of radiation in the market.
"It is a very congested area. We feel that more people were exposed to radiation as the material was there for about a week," he said.
"We have asked the authorities to properly examine the locality as well as people in the area," Bhattacharya said.
Asked how the material made it to scrap, he said, the scrap dealers do not have requisite instruments to check whether any material they collect is radioactive or not.
"We do not know the source from where it came from. Whether it came from abroad or not, we do not know. Hopefully, we will be able to ascertain the facts soon," he said.
"We are yet to get details. We do not know whether the operator hid the source. Such material sometimes come to the public domain," he said.
Jain's relative Rajesh said that there were small black patches on the scrap dealer's body and they kept getting worse. Locals said there was a peculiar smell in the area. Ajay, a resident of Mayapuri said, the scrap was brought to the shop about a week ago.
"They were cleaning the object when one of the labourers started losing hair. His finger nails also broke. Others also then fell ill," Ajay said.
Though police suspect that the dealer bought the material from a city hospital, they are also investigating reports whether he got it from Faridabad.
"We are also probing whether the scrap material originated from abroad," a senior police official said. PTI
Swapnesh Kumar Malhotra, spokesman of BARC and Head, Public Awareness Division, told media in Mayapuri that three different teams had been scouring the area for the last two days. On Wednesday, two officers from AERB came and covered some radioactive substances with other scrap, he said.
On Thursday around 12.30 after midnight, two teams, one from AERB and BARC and the other from NPC's Narora Plant began the work of retrieving and sealing the radioactive substances in eight bunches. This work ended today around noon after 12 hours, said Malhotra.
“Our experts used sophisticated instruments to measure radiation. The radioactive substance Cobalt-60 isotope was found in wires and pellets of an equipment.
“Cobalt-60 is normally used in industrial radiography, cancer treatment and food irradiation. Since the equipment was broken, it is now upon the probe team of BARC and police to establish the source of the radioactive material. However, the entire area now is fully safe. We have checked the entire locality and the local people co-operated with us,” the spokesman added.
The radioactive substances were found from two shops belonging to Deepak Jain, the first victim, at D-2/32 and WZ160/D-31 in Mayapuri, Malhotra said.
The threat to physical health depends on the level of exposure to radiation based on distance, time and individual capacity, he said. Symptoms of radiation are vomiting, nausea, skin allergy, blackened skin and hair loss, he added.
Meanwhile, a local trader revealed that another relative of Deepak , Himanshu Jain has been taken to AIIMS for radiation symptoms. This takes the present number of victims to six.
Panic was triggered in the locality last night after the news of a radiation leak broke out with five persons falling ill after coming in contact with a "mysterious shining object" in a scrap shop.
"The experts have identified the material as Cobalt-60. They have identified six sources of Cobalt-60 from the scrap shop," B B Bhattacharya, member of National Disaster Management Authority and former Director of BARC, told PTI.
Cobalt-60 is a radioactive isotope of cobalt, which is a hard, lustrous, grey metal. Cobalt-based colours and pigments have been used since ancient times for jewellery and paints, and miners have long used the name kobold ore for some minerals.
Bhattacharjee said Cobalt-60 is used in fabrication work, specially for welding steel. It is also used in radiotherapy for treating cancer.
The experts, who first collected and isolated the mysterious shining object from the scrap shop in Mayapuri Industrial area in a sophisticated lid, had sent it for further investigations.
After the news came to light last night, police cordoned off the area upto one km and did not allow people to enter the locality.
There are around 200 scrap shops in the market. Scientists from the Crisis Management Group of Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and Atomic Energy Regulation Board had last night carried out the survey of the extent of radiation in the area.
The incident came to light yesterday when Jain, the scrap dealer who suffered serious burn injuries, was yesterday rushed to Apollo Hospital which informed the government that he had suffered radiation, officials said.
Jain fell unconscious and his hands had turned black after coming into contact with the object, part of medical waste which was bought from a city hospital.
Four workers employed by him also suffered injuries in the incident. Soon after the radiation, safety officer of Apollo Hospital informed the authorities that Jain has been exposed to radiation.
A team from NDMA's Emergency Response Centre then rushed to the spot in the afternoon. They were joined by a six member team, including a doctor, from BARC later last evening besides ten scientists from Narora Atomic Power Plant.
According to a senior official, the radioactive substances were put in an almirah by the scrap dealer who was unaware of its radio-activity. Bhattacharya said they were looking for more sources of radiation in the market.
"It is a very congested area. We feel that more people were exposed to radiation as the material was there for about a week," he said.
"We have asked the authorities to properly examine the locality as well as people in the area," Bhattacharya said.
Asked how the material made it to scrap, he said, the scrap dealers do not have requisite instruments to check whether any material they collect is radioactive or not.
"We do not know the source from where it came from. Whether it came from abroad or not, we do not know. Hopefully, we will be able to ascertain the facts soon," he said.
"We are yet to get details. We do not know whether the operator hid the source. Such material sometimes come to the public domain," he said.
Jain's relative Rajesh said that there were small black patches on the scrap dealer's body and they kept getting worse. Locals said there was a peculiar smell in the area. Ajay, a resident of Mayapuri said, the scrap was brought to the shop about a week ago.
"They were cleaning the object when one of the labourers started losing hair. His finger nails also broke. Others also then fell ill," Ajay said.
Though police suspect that the dealer bought the material from a city hospital, they are also investigating reports whether he got it from Faridabad.
"We are also probing whether the scrap material originated from abroad," a senior police official said. PTI