Relatives mourn for victims of Chernobyl
UKRAINE held memorial services yesterday to mark the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster which permanently poisoned swathes of eastern Europe and highlighted shortcomings of the Soviet system.
In the early hours of April 26, 1986, a botched test at the nuclear plant in then-Soviet Ukraine triggered a meltdown that spewed deadly clouds of atomic material into the atmosphere, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes.
Relatives of those who died as a result of the world’s worst nuclear accident attended a candle-lit vigil in a Kiev church, built in their memory.
“We did not think that this accident would change all our lives, dividing them into ‘before the war’ and ‘after the war’ as we called it. It was silent nuclear war for us,” said Lyudmila Kamkina, a former worker at the plant.
Others gathered for a service in Slavutych, a town 50 kilometers from Chernobyl that was established to house many of those who had to leave their homes forever.
More than half a million civilian and military personnel were drafted in from across the former Soviet Union as so-called liquidators to clean up and contain the nuclear fallout, according to the World Health Organization.
Thirty-one plant workers and firemen died in the immediate aftermath of the accident, most from acute radiation sickness.
Over the past three decades, thousands more have succumbed to radiation-related illnesses such as cancer, although the total death toll and long-term health effects remain a subject of intense debate.
Nikolay Chernyavskiy, 65, who worked at Chernobyl and later volunteered as a liquidator, recalls climbing to the roof of his apartment block in the nearby town of Prypyat to get a look at the plant after the accident.
“My son said ‘Papa, Papa, I want to look too.’ He’s got to wear glasses now and I feel like it’s my fault for letting him look,” Chernyavskiy said.
The anniversary has garnered extra attention due to the imminent completion of a giant 1.5 billion euros (US$1.7 billion) steel-clad arch that will enclose the stricken site and prevent further leaks for 100 years.
Even with the new structure, the surrounding exclusion zone — 2,600 square kilometers of forest and marshland on the border of Ukraine and Belarus — will remain uninhabitable.
The disaster and the government’s reaction highlighted flaws in the Soviet system with its unaccountable bureaucrats and entrenched culture of secrecy. For example, the evacuation order came 36 hours after the accident.
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