The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Crews continue to battle forest fire near Chernobyl

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Emergency teams in Ukraine on Monday continued battling a forest fire in the contaminat­ed area around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant that has raised radiation fears.

Police said they tracked down a person suspected of starting the blaze by setting dry grass on fire in the area. The 27-yearold man said he burned grass “for fun” and then failed to extinguish the fire when the wind caused it to expand quickly.

Two blazes erupted Saturday in the zone around Chernobyl that was sealed after the 1986 explosion at the plant.

Firefighte­rs said they managed Monday to put out the smaller of the two fires, which engulfed about five hectares (12 acres), but the second one continued burning, covering about 50 acres. They said they were using aircraft to extinguish the blaze.

The authoritie­s said that radiation levels in the area engulfed by fires substantia­lly exceeded normal levels, but the emergencie­s service said radiation levels in the capital, Kyiv, about 60 miles south, were within norms.

The 1,000-square-mile Chernobyl Exclusion Zone was establishe­d after the April 1986 disaster at the plant that sent a cloud of radioactiv­e fallout over much of Europe. The zone is largely unpopulate­d, although about 200 people have remained despite orders to leave.

Blazes in the area have been a regular occurrence. Some of them start when residents set dry grass on fire in the early spring - a widespread practice in Ukraine, Russia and some other ex-Soviet nations that often leads to devastatin­g forest fires.

Ukrainian police said that they beefed up patrols in the area around the Chernobyl zone to prevent new fires.

— Associated Press

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