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Bond - and a long way beyond

01:00 Thu 04th Jan 2001 |

East German secret police used radiation sprays to track dissidents behind the Berlin Wall.

It sounds like a movie fantasy, but a detailled report has revealed how secret agents "with vibrating armpits" could track their human quarries by following a radioactive trail the target left behind.

In the 1970s and 1980s, the German Democratic Republic's secret police - the Stasi - secretly dissidents were sprayed with radioactive substances.

And if they couldn't get surreptitously get close enought to the target, they would spray their cars, documents or paper money.

Then, with a Geiger counter strapped under their armpits (to conceal the tell-tale bleeping of the machine) they simply followed the radio active trail to keep in touch with their target without even keeping them in sight.

The discovery was made by Klaus Becker, a leading radiation protection expert. "It is a remarkable story. It's the first well-documented case of such a thing," he told the Magazine New Scientist.

Becker, who left East Germany in 1951, became head of radiation dosimetry at the J�lich Nuclear Research Establishment in West Germany.

Large doses of X-rays are thought to be behind the deaths from cancer of a number of prominent dissidents. Sometimes doses were so high that having radio active money in your pocket would have an effect on a man's fertitility tantamount to castration.

When the secret police uncovered where dissident groups met, they sprayed the floors, so that everyone attending a meeting could be tracked. And they designed an airgun that could fire radio-labelled silver wire into a car tyre from 25 metres away.

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