Politiforbund forventer 4.500 betjente til Castor-transporter

Politiforbundet GdP forventer op til 4.500 betjente til transporten af atomaffald fra Jülich til Ahaus i Nordrhein-Westfalen. Landeschef Patrick Schlüter sammenlignede indsatsen med fodboldderbyer. Indenrigsminister Herbert Reul ville foretrække at springe transporterne over, hvis det var muligt.

Transporten af atomaffald fra forsøgsreaktoren i Jülich, der blev lukket ned i 1988, til mellemlageret i Ahaus kræver omfattende polititilstedeværelse. Patrick Schlüter, leder af GdP i Nordrhein-Westfalen, sagde til "Rheinische Post", at der vil være brug for op til 4.500 betjente. "Til sammenligning: Et derby mellem Dortmund og Schalke eller Mönchengladbach og Köln involverer normalt 2.500 til 3.000 betjente," sagde han. GdP anser opstillingen for unødvendig, men er tilfreds med strålingsbeskyttelsen og arbejdssikkerhedskonceptet, der overgår de lovmæssige krav. Atomaffaldet består af omkring 300.000 brændselselementer i 152 Castor-beholdere. Ruten er ca. 170 km lang, og konvojerne forventes at bestå af op til fire tunge transportvogne. Indenrigsminister Herbert Reul (CDU) udtalte: "Hvis det stod til mig, kunne jeg godt undvære de kommende Castor-transporter. Men politiarbejde er ikke en ønskeseddel." Han fremhævede politiets erfaring med at håndtere sådanne udfordringer. Det høje antal ansatte er en forudsætning for potentielle demonstrationer. Schlüter advarede: "Det ville være det værst tænkelige scenarie, hvis det lykkedes modstandere at stoppe transporten undervejs." Politiet overvåger nøje aktivisterne fra Lützerath, da de hurtigt kan mobilisere sig. Tyskland har ingen slutdepoter, kun mellemlagre som Ahaus.

Relaterede artikler

Police-escorted heavy truck carrying nuclear waste Castor container on closed German motorway at dusk.
Billede genereret af AI

First nuclear waste transport from Jülich to Ahaus underway

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

The first transport of highly radioactive nuclear waste from Jülich to the interim storage facility in Ahaus began on Tuesday evening. A heavy goods vehicle carrying a Castor container is escorted by around 2,400 police officers. Motorway sections in North Rhine-Westphalia are temporarily closed.

Protests against the logistics center under construction in Lübeck's Karlshof district persist, now with parents from Israelsdorf highlighting risks to children from rising truck traffic. This follows a January petition with 1,374 signatures submitted by the Round Table Karlshof Israelsdorf. The city administration maintains its calm stance amid the ongoing controversy.

Rapporteret af AI

Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania's state audit office has sharply criticized the rising number of civil servants, financial burdens, and deficiencies in police storage of seized drugs in its recently published 2026 annual report. President Martina Johannsen calls for a review of beaming practices. Interior Minister Christian Pegel (SPD) plans to supplement the rules.

A World War II bomb at Duisburg's main railway station has been safely detonated, lifting the station's closure. The bomb, a 500 kg American device, was found during construction work. Approximately 6,600 residents and travelers were affected by the evacuation.

Rapporteret af AI

The union ver.di and the Municipal Employers' Association have reached an agreement on a new framework tariff contract for employees of municipal bus companies in Schleswig-Holstein. The deal includes improvements such as a higher annual bonus payment and a new substitute premium. No further strikes are threatened at present.

A major fire erupted in a truck trailer loaded with gasoline on the E4 between Knivsta and Uppsala late Thursday evening. Traffic came to a complete halt on Friday until firefighting efforts concluded around 14:30. No one was injured, and police suspect no crime.

Rapporteret af AI

Amid the ongoing Strait of Hormuz crisis, Germany's navy has taken concrete steps following earlier planning: the minehunter “Fulda” departed Kiel-Wik for the Mediterranean, and supply ship “Mosel” is being pulled from a NATO Aegean mission to support it. Both will join NATO Mine Countermeasures Group 2, ready for potential strait deployment pending Bundestag approval.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis