Tajikistan never hosted Soviet weapons on its territory. Today, its
leadership expresses commitment to disarmament and prevention of WMD
proliferation, stating that both are a fundamental foreign policy tenet.[1]
Dushanbe acceded to the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) in 1994 and has been a member state of the International Atomic Energy Agency since 2001.
Tajikistan has a Small
Quantities Protocol, last amended in March 2006, on file with the IAEA, and
its Additional
Protocol entered into force in 2004.
Starting in 1945, and until the 1990s, uranium ore from deposits in
Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan was milled into yellowcake at a uranium
production facility in Chkalovsk, known as Leninabad Mining and Chemical Combine
(Leninabad Mill). The facility was most recently operated by Vostochnyy Rare
Metal Industrial Association, and is usually referred to as Vostokredmet
for short. The uranium for the first Soviet nuclear bomb tested at Semipalatinsk
in August 1949 came from the facility at Chkalovsk. Vostokredmet
reportedly continues to process small amounts of uranium, though its main focus
is on the processing of gold, silver, and other precious metals. According to
the 2001 IAEA/OECD Red Book, Tajikistan has no reported mineable uranium
resources. [2]
The Argus nuclear reactor, a research reactor designed to run on 21%
enriched uranium, was completed in 1991 in Dushanbe, but was never loaded with
fuel. While government officials initially expressed interest in obtaining fuel
and operating the reactor, in 2007 Tajikistan reportedly contacted the IAEA to
request assistance in dismantling the reactor and replace it with a particle
accelerator.[3]
The Nuclear and Radiation Safety Agency
(NRSA) at the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Tajikistan, established
on 22 December 2002, is the state regulatory authority on ensuring radiation
safety and radionuclide monitoring. Aside from regulatory functions, the NRSA's
mission includes "accounting, control, and search of radioactive sources,
regulation of the use of radioactive sources in peaceful purposes, radiation
monitoring, investigations and research in the field of nuclear and hydrogen
power engineering, and cooperation with international organizations and
foundations."
While Tajikistan has no operational nuclear reactors, there are strong
radiation sources on Tajikistani territory that were used for industrial
applications in the Soviet era. Moreover, due to the country's extensive
role in the Soviet uranium production complex, Tajikistan has 10 waste sites
with uranium tailings. According to estimates by the IAEA, these sites have millions of tons of
process residue tailings, which present a great health hazard to the population
and the environment. While the IAEA has promised to provide the necessary
technical assistance to secure the tailings sites, Tajikistan has been looking
for donor funding in order to carry out the necessary operations. [4] Meanwhile,
the U.S. has provided training and equipment in order to assist the Tajikistani
government with development of WMD-response capabilities.
Tajikistan joined four other Central Asian States--Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan--in signing a treaty creating a Central
Asia Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (CANWFZ) on 8 September 2006. On 12 November
2008, Tajikistan's parliament ratified the CANWFZ Treaty. [5] Dushanbe has
been a party to the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) since 1998. Moreover, Dushanbe is a partner nation in
the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism, a participant in the
Proliferation Security Initiative, and a signatory of the Convention
for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism. For more information on
Tajikistan's nonproliferation policies, see the Other Resources section in
the right-hand column.
Key Sources:
[1] Letter dated 11 January
2005 from the Permanent Representative of Tajikistan to the United Nations
addressed to the Chairman of the Committee (pursuant to Resolution 1540), 12
January, 2005, S/AC.44/2004, disarmament2.un.org/ Committee1540. [2] "Uranium
2001: Resources, Production, and Demand," (Red Book) IAEA/OECD, 2002. [3]
"Tadzhikistan za nedeliu," IA Volgainform, 16 August, 2007; in Integrum Techno,
www.integrum.com. [4] "Central Asian Countries Face Radiological Legacy,"
IAEA Staff Report, 28 June, 2007, www.iaea.org/ NewsCenter/ News/ 2007/
tajikistansites.html. [5] "Parliament Ratifies CANWFZ Treaty, Endorse
External Borrowing Program," Asia-plus news agency, 12 November 2008,
www.asiaplus.tj/ en/ news/ 16/ 41976.html.
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Updated November 2008 |
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