2012年2月4日土曜日

The ruler of Almeria town welcomes the announcement of Margallo, the U.S. removed soil contaminated with plutonium

JESÚS CAICEDO / ALCALDE DE PALOMARES

"Que se acabe ya este mal sueño"

El regidor del pueblo almeriense celebra el anuncio de Margallo

 
 
JESUS ​​CAICEDO / MAYOR PALOMARES


"That is over and this bad dream"


The ruler of Almeria town welcomes the announcement of Margallo



Rafael Mendez Madrid 3 FEB 2012 - 16:55 CET
 
Jesus Caicedo sounds happy to hear the news that, as Foreign Minister, the U.S. removed soil contaminated with plutonium. Caicedo is the mayor of Cuevas del Almanzora, the municipality where Palomares (1,500 inhabitants) and PP deputy. "That is over and this bad dream," he explains. Caicedo came to travel to Washington and was received by the U.S. ambassador in Madrid, Alan Solomont, in 2011.

Caicedo is confident that soon runs out the stigma of Palomares. "Most people do not say it to his face, but we would always wondered and doubted whether it was safe." He explained that many residents had the issue with concern, but other "thought that if nothing had happened over the years is that there is no problem, but that is because plutonium decays," he says by phone.

The mayor says that the abandonment was incomprehensible, "It fills the mouth talking about environmental issues, but nobody seemed to care that we had a town contaminated with 50,000 cubic meters of radioactive soil."

The councilman said he has not banished the idea of ​​building a museum of the pump, a center of civilization and energy that devised the CIEMAT. "That sounds good, but the priority is to be left clean, carried earth and Palomares remains as it always should be."

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