With eight members on board, SESAME is now an official project of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. SESAME (Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East) is the planned 2–2.5 GeV reincarnation of BESSY I, a decommissioned synchrotron donated by Germany (see Physics Today, August 2002, page 27). In addition to SESAME’s host, Jordan, the founding members are Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Pakistan, the Palestinian Authority, and Turkey.
At the groundbreaking in Allaan, Jordan, on 6 January, UNESCO Director General Koïchiro Matsuura said, “For a change, science in countries in the region will be on a par with western science, enabling their scientists to become partners and not merely customers of science institutions in the industrialized world.” Attracting more young people to become scientists and creating an environment conducive to open discussion, he said, “are unifying factors and a means of building up...