ADVERTISEMENT

U.N. Supplied Qatar With Tech to ‘Prevent Nuclear Security Incident’ at 2022 World Cup

FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Preview, Doha, Qatar - November 18, 2022 The countdown clock to the start of the World Cup is pictured on the Corniche Promenade ahead of the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch
November 21, 2022

The United Nations provided Qatar with equipment and training to prevent "a nuclear security incident" from occurring during the 2022 World Cup, according to the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog group.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which works on proliferation issues across the globe, says it has worked with Qatar’s National Committee for the Prohibition of Weapons for the past year "to thwart any attack involving nuclear or other radioactive material." The announcement comes as jihadist groups like al Qaeda urge its militant followers "wage jihad" against the tournament as Westerners pour into the country.

The threat of a terrorist attack has cast a shadow over the games, as regional jihadist groups rebel against Qatar’s decision to host the international event. Qatar, which is allied with the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism, Iran, has a checkered past when it comes to confronting jihadist groups. The small, Middle Eastern nation is known as a chief terrorism financing hub but is also closely allied with the West in its battle against terrorist groups.

The IAEA says that in the lead up to the games, the organization helped Qatar integrate its nuclear security measures into larger plans that could help disrupt a nuclear or radiological attack. This included providing "comprehensive training to national counterparts on developing and implementing nuclear security measures and on responding to nuclear security events and related emergencies."

The nuclear watchdog lent Qatar more than 120 radiation detecting devices, including personal radiation detectors, portable backpack detectors, and other instruments that can spot things like a dirty bomb, a crude explosive device that includes radioactive materials.

This is "the first time" the IAEA’s Malaysia-based security center provided such equipment to a country hosting a major public event, according to the IAEA.

"The Agency’s experience in supporting nuclear security measures at major public events was adapted to the Qatari needs," Elena Buglova, director of the IAEA Division of Nuclear Security, said in a statement. "The deployment of the equipment loaned to Qatar was done in the most cost-effective and timely manner by the use of the regional loaner pool."

IAEA director general Rafael Mariano Grossi said that "fans attending the games in Qatar deserve to do so without concerns about nuclear security."