Irish Daily Star

Russians flee ‘Red Forest...’

‘INVISIBLE DAMAGE CAN’T BE UNDONE’

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Technician­s attempted a poorly designed experiment which involved shutting down the regulating and emergency safety systems.

It resulted in an explosion and fire at Reactor 4, which killed two people and led shortly after to the deaths of another 28 of Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARD), also known as radiation sickness.

It spread radioactiv­e cloud over swathes of the Soviet Union, exposing 8.4million people to radiation.

It sent 400 times more radioactiv­e material into the Earth’s atmosphere than the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

Located 30 kilometres from Kyiv and about 20km from the Belarus border, the disaster mostly affected Ukraine, Belarus and the Russian Federation.

Wind

It resulted in the immediate evacuation of those 135,000 living within its 30km exclusion zone.

But due to rain and wind its effects went much further afield, making its way across northern Europe and even travelled as far as Ireland.

In May 1986, an occurrence of radioactiv­ity was recorded here, from a radiation plume over the country, particular­ly in the areas of Sligo, Donegal and Roscommon.

Chernobyl’s legacy is still felt today, environmen­tally and on the population, both physically and mentally.

Mutations occurred in plants and animals, with leaves changing shape and animals born with deformitie­s.

Cancer

Toxic elements dispersed included plutonium, which causes lung disease and cancer; iodine, which causes thyroid cancers, strontium; linked with leukaemia, and caesium which causes damage to the liver and spleen.

Caesium is now understood to remain in the atmosphere for up to 320 years.

There has been an increase in thyroid cancers in those who were children at the time of the disaster and the fallout is still causing birth defects and deformitie­s.

Psychologi­cal affects include a rise in suicide, depression and alcoholism in the population­s worst affected.

The catastroph­e caused social and economic disruption and led to the resettleme­nt of hundreds of thousands of people.

It also led to major safety changes in the industry and increased co-operation between east and west, before the Soviet Union fell in 1991.

Russian president Mikhail Gorbachev said Chernobyl was a key factor in the Soviet fall.

The city of Pripyat, just 3km from the power plant, with a population of 50,000 was evacuated and now remains a concrete graveyard.

Chernobyl itself was closed as a power plant in 2000.

On the anniversar­y today of the disaster, campaigner Adi Roche — who founded the Chernobyl Children’s Project to help kids living in its aftermath — said: “Remember the victims and survivors of Chernobyl, the worst nuclear accident of the nuclear age.”

“This Friday April 26 marks United Nations Chernobyl Disaster Remembranc­e Day, ratified by the UN.

“On that fateful day in 1986, a new word ‘Chernobyl’ entered the history of language, the history of world disasters and of the world itself.

“Unfortunat­ely, like many disasters, they pass quickly out of sight and out of mind, Chernobyl is like ancient history. But not for the victims.

RUSSIAN forces occupying the Chernobyl nuclear power plant fled the site earlier this month after receiving high doses of radiation from digging into contaminat­ed soil.

Ukrainian state power company Energoatom said that Vladimir Putin’s troops had withdrawn from the territory of the defunct plant after “panicking at the first sign of illness”.

The firm said that Russian soldiers had dug trenches in the highly toxic “Red Forest” – which contains the area’s highest radiation levels.

Mr Putin’s troops became unwell “very quickly” and immediatel­y prepared to leave, Energoatom said.

“The informatio­n is confirmed that the occupiers, who seized the

Chernobyl nuclear power plant and other facilities in the exclusion zone, have set off in two columns towards the Ukrainian border with the Republic of Belarus,” they added.

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said it would seek an independen­t assessment in the coming days and would send its first “assistance and support mission” to the site.

Two Ukrainian employees at the site said that

Russian soldiers had driven their armoured vehicles through the Red Forest without using anti-radiation gear. One employee said the move was “suicidal” because the radioactiv­e dust inhaled could cause internal radiation.

“While it happened almost 40 years ago, its impact continues to stalk generation­s. It remains locked in the land, water, air and DNA of all life.

“Chernobyl isn’t something from the past, Chernobyl was forever, is forever.

“The impact of this single, shocking nuclear accident launched an invisible war that can never be undone.

“Research has shown almost one million people died worldwide in the toxic aftermath.

“Any dose of ionised radiation is an overdose and often puts the burden of proof on the victims.”

 ?? ?? HORROR: Damage to power plant in aftermath following explosion in Chernobyl; (left) site covered by giant protective dome
HORROR: Damage to power plant in aftermath following explosion in Chernobyl; (left) site covered by giant protective dome
 ?? ?? WAR: Putin
WAR: Putin
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 ?? ?? EERIE: An abandoned funfair in Chernobyl
EERIE: An abandoned funfair in Chernobyl
 ?? ?? IMPACT: Pripyat, in Kyiv area
IMPACT: Pripyat, in Kyiv area
 ?? ?? PRES: Mikhail Gorbachev
PRES: Mikhail Gorbachev
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