Sweden raises nuclear alert levels after truck carrying explosives found on nuclear plant premises
 (NaturalNews) Sweden's three operating nuclear power plants have raised  their security alert levels to stage two after a recent security breach  took place at the Ringhals Nuclear Power Plant in the country's  southwest region. According to reports, a forklift truck carrying a  fist-sized explosive device was recently discovered on the facility's  premises by sniffer dogs as part of a routine security screening at the  plant.
The small, clay-like explosive device was found attached  to a fire extinguisher in the forklift, which was apparently owned by  the plant. The device did not have an actual detonation piece attached  to it, and authorities say it was too small to cause significant damage  anyway. But the device was clearly intended to breach plant security for  some unknown reason, which has investigators puzzled.
So far,  officials have been unable to figure out who might have been responsible  for getting the explosives on the Ringhals premises, or how they even  got there in the first place. After reviewing security footage,  interviewing witnesses, and combing the entire plant's property for  evidence, investigators are at a loss for how the explosives even made  it inside the facility.
"We don't know what the idea behind this  was, what was the plan?" said local police spokesman Ingmar Nilja to the  WSJ about the case. At this point, the truck's driver has been ruled  out as a potential suspect because he apparently had no idea that the  explosives were on his truck. "These are some of the questions we will  try to answer with our investigation."
The Wall Street Journal  (WSJ) reports that Ringhals had already been under special surveillance  since 2009 when a vacuum cleaner that was left in a facility hallway  caught fire suddenly. That bizarre incident left the reactor out of  commission for eight months, during which time improved security  measures were supposedly put in place to prevent future inexplicable  problems. But these measures are apparently still inadequate, as is  evidenced by the recent explosives breach.
In what is now being  dubbed an attempted sabotage situation, authorities have erected a  barrier around the forklift as they proceed with their investigation.  Meanwhile, nuclear critics are decrying the lack of security at nuclear  plants not only in Sweden, but also around the world. And on an  unrelated, but similarly strange, note, one of Ringhals' four reactors  experienced an unexpected oil leak which led to a stoppage just days  before the explosive was discovered.
Sources for this article include:
http://online.wsj.com
http://www.ajc.com
http://www.trust.org
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