April 20, 2006
Chornobyl 20 Years After: What Lessons Have Been Learned?
by Robert Parsons
The Chornobyl nuclear plant today (epa)
Twenty years ago in the early morning of April 26, while most of Europe lay oblivious and asleep, a chain of events had begun in Soviet Ukraine that was to unleash a catastrophe of unprecedented scale. At 1:23 a.m., a massive surge of power in the fourth reactor at the huge Chornobyl (Chernobyl) power station triggered an explosion that lifted the 1,000-ton lid off the reactor's core. Within hours a column of radioactive material some 1 kilometer high was drifting northwest across Europe. As panic gripped the continent, hundreds of thousands of people, many of them volunteers, fought with astonishing courage to control the accident. Twenty years on, what are the lessons of Chornobyl and what are its consequences? RFE/RL traveled to the nearby town of Slavutych to find the answer.
SLAVUTYCH, Ukraine; April 20, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- There is an unnatural stillness to Slavutych, a town constructed 50 kilometers from Chornobyl with the specific purpose of housing staff evacuated from nuclear plant.
Even at midday, the town is nearly silent, with the occasional shopper or group of schoolchildren only emphasizing the lonely atmosphere.
This town was built as a showcase and a demonstration of the indomitable human spirit, but in its own way, it too has become a testimony to tragedy.
Chornobyl No Longer Source Of Support
Its energetic mayor, Volodymyr Udovychenko, who is himself a former employee of the nuclear power station, is a tireless advocate of the Slavutych cause. He argues that the Ukrainian government undertook to guarantee jobs for the workers laid off by the closure of Chornobyl.
"The main problem today is the budget problem of Slavutych -- and that's not even addressing the issues of medical care," Udovychenko says. "It's not right to apply the same standards for the workforce of the Chornobyl atomic station as we have in the rest of Ukraine. Here in Slavutych there are 8,000 people who took part, one way or another, in the containment of the explosion and the cleanup. We can say that the government of Ukraine is not fulfilling its commitments made when closing the Chornobyl nuclear power station."
Udovychenko is talking about unemployment. Built as a model town, the continued dependence of Slavutych on the station threatens it with ruin.
"In 1999 we still had 10,000 jobs here at the power station," he says. "Today, we're down to 3,620. In other words, we've been through a huge transformation. But if we lose those jobs as well, it will be a catastrophe for Slavutych."
UN Report Says Threat ExaggeratedIn September 2005, the UN-sponsored Chernobyl Forum presented the conclusions of its digest report on Chornobyl's legacy, a massive 600-page analysis incorporating the work of hundreds of scientists and experts. It is the most thorough examination yet made of the health, sociological, environmental, and economic consequences of the accident.
A 12-year-old leukemia patient at a Donetsk, Ukraine, hospital this month (epa)
It argues that so far fewer than 50 people have died of causes directly attributable to radiation from the disaster but that, ultimately, several thousand could die from fatal cancers, in addition to the 100,000 cancer deaths expected in the region from other causes.The UN suggests that many of the contaminated areas are ready for rehabitation (UkrInform)
But it's not just more information that's needed. Knape argues that you need greater popular involvement in government as well. "When you have a catastrophe like this, in the beginning you have a lot of resources and a lot of focus coming from national government and from all over the world," he says.