I am sorry to say that I have not been following this
Five
scientists killed in Russian radiation explosion were blasted into
the air by mystery detonation beneath their boat and suffered
'dreadful injuries', military officer reveals
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Five Russians killed in suspected nuclear blast died when sea pontoon they were on was thrown into the air, covert recording of military official has revealed
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Dead suffered 'dreadful injuries', though nature of wounds was not made clear
-
Villagers living near the blast have also been warned to keep their doors shut
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They have also been banned from visiting stretch of coast close to the explosion
20
August, 2019
Five
weapons scientists who died in a suspected Russian nuclear missile
explosion were blasted high into the air on a sea pontoon and
suffered 'dreadful injuries', it has been revealed.
People
living in the village of Nyonoksa, the closest settlement to the
blast, have also been warned to keep their doors closed and not visit
a piece of coastline close to the explosion, in case radioactive
waste washes ashore.
The
new details were revealed in a covert recording of a Russian military
officer who was sent to reassure villagers that they are not living
through a new Chernobyl.
In
the footage, which was leaked to Russian media, he can be heard
saying: 'On 8 August people went out to the pontoon and it exploded
from underneath…
'They
were killed because the pontoon was lifted up into the air. Those on
the pontoon got dreadful injuries,' he added, without giving details
of the injuries.
This
description, though brief, is the most detailed account yet of the
blast - which Moscow has only described as involving an 'isotope
power source'.
It
was previously known that some victims had been blown into the sea,
but little else has been revealed.
During
the Nyonoksa meeting, the officer also admitted villagers are at risk
of radiation poisoning if they try to visit a stretch of coastline
near the explosion
Locals
were also warned to keep their doors shut.
He
continued: 'Works had been carried out in order to test one of the
engines for a missile. This missile engine is fed by radioactive
isotopes… they are its power source.
'An
extraordinary situation took place and as a result of it, there was
an explosion.
'But
it was not a nuclear explosion, it was an explosion of an explosive
substance.'
Pollution
from the radioactive isotopes had been released, he conceded, and
further contamination was possible because victims from the blast
were brought to Nyonoksa before being transported to hospitals
elsewhere.
The
officer said: 'I am telling you now why to close your doors.
'These
men and any object that contacted with radioactive elements, all
those are considered to be dirty. It has to be deactivated.'
He
also explained the threat in an area of nearby seashore, saying:
'Those (radioactive) elements may still be there, in the sea.
'The
sea may throw out on the shore those things on the pontoons that were
destroyed… Some people are already planning to visit this place, to
share all this.
'So
I would like to warn you – you should not do this, because it can
lead to problems that you are afraid of… horrors would follow.
'This
is what I am warning you about. This is why area is being guarded –
to stop you going there.'
Among
dangerous items with a high risk of radiation are a 'kettle' used by
the team involved in the missile test, along with plastic, fabric and
polystyrene - all of which are highly contaminated.
He
added that the timing of the missile test was set to coincide with a
moment when Russia believed there would be no spy satellites overhead
to photograph it.
The
officer also acknowledged that locals are fearful of radiation risks,
but sought to reassure them, saying: 'Not a single adverse factor of
a nuclear explosion and nuclear weapons were registered here - and
are not present here.
'Nobody
is going to carry out experiments involving you….'
To
doubters in the public meeting, he asked: 'Did anybody here see a
flash that blinded anybody? No!
'What
about a mushroom rising up and floating somewhere? No!
'Did
anybody here in the settlement experience a TV failure or the failure
of any other, even simplest electronic device? No!
'Was
there any kind of a cloud going somewhere and leaving some traces?'
A
woman is heard replying 'Yes'.
The
officer replies: 'What yes? What was it?'
Then
he dismisses her concerns saying he had 'already explained the
difference between penetrating radiation and radioactive poisoning…'
He
told residents: 'Everyone is trying to compare Nyonoksa to Chernobyl.
I went to Chernobyl in 1986, it was a huge powerful explosion, some
people were dissolved to molecules, it was radioactive poisoning.'
The
video's disclosure comes after it was revealed that two major
radiation research stations mysteriously went 'silent' after the
radiation incident.
Two
more further from the blast site also stopped transmitting data.
Experts
have accused the Russian state of deliberately stopping the
transmissions in order to cover-up the extent of the disaster.
Officials
at the research stations have blamed connectivity issues.
Vyasheslav
Yanovsky, 71, one of Russia's most senior nuclear scientists, was
among those killed in the blast alongside Vyacheslav Lipshev, 40,
director of a secret research institute.
Also
killed were Evgeny Korotaev, 50, a leading electronics engineer,
Alexey Vyushin, 43, who had developed a high-energy photon
spectrometer, and Sergey Pichugin, 45, a testing engineer.
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