Houston Chronicle

At Chernobyl, 30 years of painful memories

Ukrainian president thanks the 600,000 ‘liquidator­s’ for work

- By Mstyslav Chernov and Dmytro Vlasov

KIEV, Ukraine — As Ukraine and Belarus on Tuesday marked the 30th anniversar­y of the Chernobyl nuclear accident with solemn words and an angry protest, some of the men who were sent to the site in the first chaotic and frightenin­g days were gripped by painful memories.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko led a ceremony in Chernobyl, where work is underway to complete a $2.25 billion long-term shelter over the building containing Chernobyl’s exploded reactor. Once the structure is in place, work will begin to remove the reactor and its lavalike radioactiv­e waste.

The disaster shone a spotlight on lax safety standards and government secrecy in the former Soviet Union. The explosion on April 26, 1986, was not reported by Soviet authoritie­s for two days, and then only after winds had carried the fallout across Europe and Swedish experts had gone public with their concerns.

“We honor those who lost their health and require a special attention from the government and society,” Poroshenko said. “It’s with an everlastin­g pain in our hearts that we remember those who lost their lives to fight nuclear death.”

About 600,000 people, often referred to as Chernobyl’s “liquidator­s,” were sent in to fight the fire at the nuclear plant and clean up the worst of its contaminat­ion. Thirty workers died either from the explosion or from acute radiation sickness within several months. The accident exposed millions in the region to dangerous levels of radiation and forced a wide-scale, permanent evacuation of hundreds of towns and villages in Ukraine and Belarus.

At a ceremony in their honor in Kiev, some of the former liquidator­s told of their ordeal and surprise that they lived through it.

Oleg Medvedev, now 65, was sent to the zone on the first day of the crisis, to help evacuate the workers’ city of Pripyat, less than 2.5 miles from the destroyed reactor. Four days later, “I already had to go away from the zone because I’d received the maximum allowable radiation dose. Thirty years passed, and I’m still alive, despite doctors giving me five. I’m happy about that.”

In Minsk, the capital of Belarus, more than 1,000 people held a protest march through the city center. Belarus routinely cracks down on dissent, but authoritie­s allowed the march.

“Chernobyl is continuing today. Our relatives and friends are dying of cancer,” said 21-year-old protester Andrei Ostrovtsov.

The final death toll from Chernobyl is subject to speculatio­n, due to the long-term effects of radiation, but ranges from an estimate of 9,000 by the World Health Organizati­on to one of a possible 90,000 by the environmen­tal group Greenpeace.

Andriy Veprev, who had worked at the Chernobyl nuclear plant for 14 years before the explosion and helped to clean up the contaminat­ion, said memories of the mayhem in 1986 were still vivid in his mind.

“I’m proud of those guys who were with me and who are not with us now,” he said.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin, in a message to the liquidator­s, called the Chernobyl disaster “a grave lesson for all of mankind.”

 ?? Sean Gallup / Getty Images ?? A photo shows the main square of Pripyat, Ukraine — just a few miles from the former nuclear plant — and the “Energetik” cultural center before 1986 at the same abandoned site today.
Sean Gallup / Getty Images A photo shows the main square of Pripyat, Ukraine — just a few miles from the former nuclear plant — and the “Energetik” cultural center before 1986 at the same abandoned site today.

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