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Referring to a meltdown at the tsunami-damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Japan this year, Majnoni d'Intignano said France's nuclear sites face less of a threat of natural disaster than of terrorism. "The government is going to conclude in several months that our nuclear plants are very, very safe because it's believed that they could withstand a flood or an earthquake," she told i-Tele television, referring to a government report on plant safety expected in coming months. "But those aren't the real risks for our nuclear industry. It's the risk of external, non-natural attack
-- like the risk of terrorism." Henri Guaino, a special adviser to conservative French President Nicolas Sarkozy, called the intrusion "irresponsible," but acknowledged "it still makes you think about the security of access to nuclear plants." "So yeah, I think we'll have to learn some lessons."
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