The Borneo Post

Ukraine, Belarus leaders visit Chernobyl to mark anniversar­y

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KIEV: The presidents of Ukraine and Belarus toured yesterday the site of the Chernobyl plant to mark 31 years since the world’s worst civil nuclear accident spewed radiation across Europe.

The plant in the north of former Soviet Ukraine exploded in 1986 after a safety test went horribly wrong at 1.23am on April 26.

Around 30 people were killed on site and several thousand more are feared to have died in the years that followed from radiation poisoning across Ukraine as well as its northern neighbour Belarus and Russia to the east.

The exact number of victims remains a subject of intense debate because the Soviet authoritie­s kept most of the informatio­n about the disaster hidden.

Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated from the area around the disaster site and an exclusion zone was set up that has now become a ghostly uninhabite­d region.

Last year, Ukraine placed a mammoth 2.1- billion- euro ( US$ 2.3-billion) metal dome over the remnants of the Chernobyl plant in a bid to stop future leaks and ensure the safety of Europeans for future generation­s.

More than 200 tonnes of uranium remain inside the crippled reactor that leaked radiation across three quarters of Europe.

“Thirty- one years ago, the worst ecological catastroph­e in human history struck the Chernobyl nuclear power plant,” Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman wrote on Facebook.

“Thank you to the heroes who,

Thirty-one years ago, the worst ecological catastroph­e in human history struck the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Volodymyr Groysman, Ukrainian Prime Minister

at the expense of their own lives and health, protected us from the horrible consequenc­es of this tragedy.”

About 600,000 people who became known as ‘ liquidator­s’ — mostly emergency workers and state employees — were dispatched with little or no protective gear to help clean up the aftermath of the disaster.

A 2005 United Nations report estimated that ‘up to 4,000’ people could eventually perish from the invisible poison in Ukraine and neighbouri­ng Russia and Belarus.

The Greenpeace environmen­tal group the following year issued its own study estimating that 100,000 had already lost their lives.

Fears that a structure hastily built over the stricken reactor was cracking saw more than 40 countries pitch in for the creation of the new 25,000-tonne protective steel barrier. — AFP

 ??  ?? Men light candles and lay flowers at the monument to Chernobyl victims in Slavutich, the city of the power station’s personnel live, some 50 kilometres from the accident site, during a memorial ceremony. — AFP photo
Men light candles and lay flowers at the monument to Chernobyl victims in Slavutich, the city of the power station’s personnel live, some 50 kilometres from the accident site, during a memorial ceremony. — AFP photo

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