Radioactive cylinder found on Lebanon coast

The Lebanese Atomic Energy Commission said none of the substance escaped from the object

In this June 22, 2017, photo, bulldozers remove waste from a landfill to be moved to a new land reclamation site in Bourj Hammoud east of Beirut, Lebanon. Environmentalists say a winter storm has pushed a wave of trash onto the Lebanese shore outside Beirut, stirring outrage over a waste management crisis that has choked the country since 2015. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
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A metal cylinder containing a "radioactive substance" has been found next to a beach on Beirut's outskirts, Lebanese authorities said on Wednesday, ruling out any danger to the public.

The Lebanese Atomic Energy Commission (LAEC) said the cylinder was discovered on Tuesday at Ouzai just south of the capital, adding none of the substance escaped from the object.

"Tests conducted in the field showed the radioactive substance was still isolated in the cylinder and did not cause any radioactive pollution in the area it was found," the LAEC said in a statement.

The cylinder bore the inscription "USA DOT 7A TYPE A RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL".

It was transported by the LAEC and the Lebanese army before being stored according to international safety standards, the organisation said.

"Currently we do not have any information on the origin of this cylinder," said Lebanese environment minister Tarek El Khatib.

"I asked the prosecutor yesterday to open an investigation about this which will be conducted by the military police," he said.

"If this container has come from the sea, we will have to make sure there are no other similar cylinders."

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Lebanon has struggled with a waste crisis that saw mountains of garbage pile up on streets in and around the capital in 2015.

The country has more than 150 illegal dump sites where waste is burnt, according to Human Rights Watch.

"Lebanon's ongoing waste management crisis poses serious health risks for the country's residents," the New York-based HRW has said.

The waste crisis triggered mass protests, with many taking aim at politicians in a country that has suffered endemic corruption since the end of the 1975-1990 civil war.