Man in his 60s arrested over uranium found at Heathrow Airport

Authored by news.sky.com and submitted by Rossrox

A man in his 60s has been arrested under terrorism laws after traces of uranium were found in a cargo package at Heathrow Airport.

Police said the man was arrested in Cheshire on Saturday and later released on bail.

Border Force officers found a small amount of uranium with a shipment of scrap metal following a routine screening at Heathrow Airport on 29 December.

Commander Richard Smith, who leads the Metropolitan Police's counter-terrorism command, said: "I want to be clear that despite making this arrest, and based on what we currently know, this incident still does not appear to be linked to any direct threat to the public.

"However, detectives are continuing with their inquiries to ensure this is definitely the case."

The man has been released on bail until a date in April, the force said in a statement.

Officers said they did not find any other dangerous material at the address in Cheshire but the offence the man has been accused of relates to the making or possession of radioactive material.

The uranium had arrived on a flight from Oman after originating in Pakistan, Sky sources have said.

Uranium can be used for civilian power generation and scientific purposes and is a key ingredient in nuclear weapons.

Certain isotopes emit radiation that can be harmful to humans, and the metal itself is toxic if ingested or inhaled.

aTinyFart on January 16th, 2023 at 00:24 UTC »

I worked at a recycling centre in Canada, our garbage bales get scanned at the dump, we had one trailer that had radiation traces in it... They shut us down for a week until they found out where it was coming from...

Ended up being medical waste

MalevolntCatastrophe on January 15th, 2023 at 19:03 UTC »

You can buy Uranium on Amazon. All these articles are leaving out what type of Uranium was found, the most important detail.

Captain__Spiff on January 15th, 2023 at 18:51 UTC »

A small amount of the radioactive material was found with a shipment of scrap metal following a routine screening on 29 December.

Police said on Sunday that the man was arrested on suspicion of a terror offence on Saturday and was released on bail as part of their investigation.

He [Commander Richard Smith, who leads the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command] added that despite the arrest, the incident does "not appear to be linked to any direct threat to the public", but detectives are continuing inquiries to ensure this is "definitely the case".