The Undisclosed
Use attributes for filter ! | |
First episode date | April 3, 2006 |
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Final episode date | April 28, 2006 |
Networks | Mediacorp |
Number of episodes | 20 |
Genres | Crime Fiction |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3047758 |
About The Undisclosed
The Undisclosed is an action-thriller suspense drama produced by Mediacorp TV Channel 8. The drama made its debut on 3 April 2006 in Singapore, and ended its run on 28 April 2006. This is the first drama Li Nanxing acted in after his divorce with ex-actress Yang Libing.
RTÉ: Your questions on the Irish broadcaster's payment scandal answered
... But what we do know is that some of The Undisclosed payments were made using a barter account...
Libya uranium: Tonnes gone missing, UN says
... The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) sounded the alarm after a visit by its inspectors to The Undisclosed site earlier this week...
Brittney Griner: Jailed US basketball star moved to Russian penal colony
... Speaking after Griner s transfer to The Undisclosed penal colony, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that the US was " unwavering" in attempts to free her and other detained Americans...
Libya uranium: Tonnes gone missing, UN says
By Bethany BellBBC News, Vienna
Two and a half tonnes of uranium have Gone Missing from a site in Libya, the UN's nuclear watchdog has said.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) sounded The Alarm after a visit by its inspectors to The Undisclosed site earlier This Week .
They found that 10 drums containing uranium ore had disappeared, the IAEA said.
There are fears the uranium could pose a radiological risk as well as nuclear security concerns.
The IAEA said that The Site where the uranium was stored was not in government-controlled territory.
In a statement, the organisation said it would conduct further activities " to clarify the circumstances of the removal of the nuclear material and its current location".
It is unclear when the uranium went missing or who could have taken it.
But it was removed from a " very remote location in southern Libya, " according to Scott Roecker from the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a global security organisation working on nuclear issues.
" If you're removing this material from this location you must really Want It , " he told The Bbc 's Newsday programme, adding that the quantity that appears to have been taken is " approximately one tenth of the amount of material" stored at the facility " so you would absolutely see it missing".
The IAEA told The Bbc it was working to clarify What Happened , how the nuclear material was removed and where it was now.
But, at this stage inspectors fear The Loss of knowledge about where the nuclear material is could pose a radiological risk as well as nuclear security concerns.
However, The Material " in its current form [known as yellow cake] cannot be made into a Nuclear Weapon , So There 's no concern that there's enough material that could be used in a Nuclear Weapon right now" Mr Roecker said.
Also, there " are very little radiation concerns with The Material as it is today" he added.
The IAEA explained reaching The Site has been complicated in recent times.
Inspectors had wanted to visit the location Last Year , but The Trip had to be postponed because of fighting between different Libyan militias.
In December 2003, and agreed to restrict itself to the.
But, since Libya's former leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi was deposed in 2011, the country has been divided into competing political and military factions.
It is now split between an interim government in the capital Tripoli and Another One in The East led by Gen Khalifa Haftar .
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com