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April 27, 2012

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Ukraine remembers Chernobyl nuke disaster on 26th anniversary

URGING all nations to be extremely cautious with nuclear energy, Ukraine's president thanked donors for financing the construction of a new, safer shelter over the damaged Chernobyl reactor on the 26th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear disaster.

President Viktor Yanukovych spoke during a ceremony yesterday inaugurating the initial assembly of a gigantic arch-shaped steel containment building to cover the remnants of the exploded reactor. The structure - weighing 20,000 tons and big enough to house New York's Statue of Liberty - is due to be completed in 2015, allowing the delicate and dangerous job of dismantling the reactor and cleaning vast amounts of radioactive waste still around it to begin.

"The Chernobyl disaster underscored that mankind must be extra careful in using nuclear technologies," Yanukovych said. "Nuclear accidents lead to global consequences. They are not a problem of just one country, they affect the life of entire regions."

The April 26, 1986, explosion spewed a cloud of radiation over much of the northern hemisphere, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes in heavily hit areas of Ukraine, Belarus and western Russia. The Soviet government initially tried to hush up the explosion and resisted immediately evacuating nearby residents. It also failed to tell the public what happened or instruct residents and cleanup workers on how to protect themselves against radiation, which significantly increased the health damage from the disaster.

A shelter called the "sarcophagus" was hastily erected over the damaged reactor, but it has been crumbling and leaking radiation in recent years and a new confinement structure is necessary.

Yanukovych said 2 million people have been hurt by the tragedy and it was the state's obligation to protect and treat them. But his reassurances fell flat with some Chernobyl cleanup workers and victims. About 2,000 protesters staged an angry rally yesterday outside parliament in Kiev, demanding an increase in compensations and pensions.

Yanukovych also thanked international donors for pledging 740 million euros (US$980 million) to build the new shelter and a nuclear fuel waste facility. The biggest donors are the Group of Eight nations, including Japan, which itself is still recovering from last year's horrific Fukushima nuclear disaster.

Preparatory work for the new building has been under way since 2008. That included cleaning up the assembly site, replacing contaminated soil, and then putting it in concrete.




 

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