No
one tells us the truth’: Locals near Chernobyl fear radiation, Kiev
says fire put out
RT,
2
May, 2015
Ukrainian
firefighters have said flames in the forests around Chernobyl’s
exclusion zone have been put out and there is no radiation threat.
However, locals recall the 1986 catastrophe and fear that just as
then officials are concealing the truth.
“No
one tells us the truth,” a
local woman, Olga, told RT’s Paula Slier. “Nobody
told us when there was a disaster in 1986. We will never hear the
truth from the government.”
On
Saturday, Ukrainian emergency services said that firefighters have
managed to extinguish the fire that has been raging through forests
in the Chernobyl exclusion zone since Tuesday.
“The
fire was localized at 10:30 April 29. The fire was extinguished at
9:00 May 2,” said
a statement from the emergency service.
The
forest blaze that came within 30 kilometers of the abandoned
Chernobyl power plant, triggered an emergency operation, with police
and National Guard mobilized to bring the flames under control.
RT video screenshot
The
level of background radiation where the fire was reported has been
registered to stand at 21 microroentgen per hour, with the safe level
up to 50 microroentgen per our.
However,
people in the area are concerned that the fumes from the fire are
radioactive.
“Nobody
has warned of anything. Everybody is working, children are on the
streets. There have been no warnings at all,” a
local man from the village near the Chernobyl exclusion zone told RT.
“We
have no information. We don't know how dangerous it is. We have two
kids, they are 6 and 10 years old. We don't know if it's dangerous or
if we have to run...” another
local dded.
While
officials assured the villagers that there is no radiation threat in
the area, an expert has confirmed to RT that such fears are
justifiable.
The fires in the exclusion zone are dangerous and everyone understands this, Yury Bandazhevsky, a scientist working on sanitary consequences of the Chernobyl disaster, said.
“The
territory is contaminated, the soil is contaminated by radioactive
elements. And not only soil, but plants, trees.”
If
the trees, which have been absorbing radioactivity for almost 30
years, are on fire, then radioactive elements “may
spread with wind over long distances,” he
said.
Chernobyl
Nuclear Power Plant’s reactor exploded on April 26, 1986. As a
result of the explosion and fire, a huge radioactive cloud spread
into the atmosphere, covering thousands of miles of Soviet and
European territories.
Not
only was Ukraine affected, but also adjoining areas in Russia and
Belarus. Radiation spikes were recorded in Sweden, Norway, Austria
and Finland. Approximately 100,000 square kilometers of land was
significantly contaminated.
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