KIEV, Ukraine -- As Ukraine prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of the  Chernobyl disaster next month, its legacy remains as divisive as ever.
Sitting in his run-down office in the Ukrainian capital Kiev, Yuri  Andreyev recalls the events of 25 years ago as if they were yesterday.
As  a survivor of the world's worst nuclear accident, he is also surprised  that he is still around to tell the tale.
"I absorbed a dose of  radiation that should have killed me," says the former Chernobyl  engineer, his eyes welling up with tears. "I thought afterwards that it  would only be a matter of time before my family had to fend for  themselves."
Now 60 and the head of an organisation representing  450,000 people affected by the tragedy, Mr Andreyev's pessimism is  understandable.
Many of his co-workers have since died from  radiation-related illnesses, and he himself very nearly perished in the  explosion itself.
He clocked off his shift at the plant a mere  one hour and 23 minutes before a huge blast ripped through its fourth  reactor, and was less than two miles away as lethal radioactive matter  began to pour out of the stricken building's roof.
Hours later,  though, he and three colleagues were back at the plant trying to stop  its second reactor blowing up too, water pouring into the control rooms  and the alarm system flashing red as they struggled to shut it down.
Thankfully,  for the world and for Mr Andreyev, they succeeded.
As Ukraine  prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster next  month, its legacy remains as divisive as ever, however.
Opponents  of nuclear power insist that Chernobyl proved once and for all that the  technology is unsafe. They argue that no more nuclear power stations  should be built – ever.
"Chernobyl was a warning for the future,"  said Valery Makarenko, the first Soviet TV reporter on the scene. "It  was not just a banal disaster, it was a message that nuclear power is  not safe. It is time to think, consider alternatives, and bring the  industry under tight international control. Otherwise, humankind will  destroy itself."
Proponents of nuclear energy, however, claim the  fallout from Chernobyl was actually not as bad as first thought and pin  the blame on shoddy Soviet management practices.
Safety  standards are much higher now, they point out, and nuclear power is  cheap and clean compared to fossil fuels.
As evidence that the  effects of radiation are not as bad as critics contend, they cite how  wildlife has staged a remarkable comeback in the area around Chernobyl.
Audits  in the past have shown that the 18-mile exclusion area or "dead zone"  around the plant is now home to 66 different species of mammals,  including wild boar, wolves, deer, beavers, foxes, lynx and thousands of  elk.
Moreover, with oil supplies finite and coal viewed by many  as unacceptably polluting, many developing countries, including India  and Iran, are pressing ahead with new nuclear facilities.
Ironically,  it is Russia's atomic energy agency, the successor to the Soviet atomic  energy agency that built Chernobyl, that is winning many of the  contracts to build these new plants.
Conceived as the largest  such plant in the world, the Soviets originally planned to build 12 such  reactors at Chernobyl, a peaceful wooded spot that lies 70 miles north  of the modern-day capital of Ukraine.
A model Soviet town called  Pripyat, built in 1970 to house almost 50,000 plant workers and their  families, lay less than two miles from the sprawling power station and  completed the Kremlin's nuclear-powered master plan.
That plan  ended in the small hours of April 26, 1986, when a "routine experiment"  went badly wrong and Chernobyl's fourth reactor exploded, sending a  plume of radiation equivalent to 400 Hiroshimas into the night sky.
Many  of the 176 staff on duty that night were killed instantly; others would  die later in hospital. The reactor core burned for 10 days, and the  resultant pollutants - including plutonium isotopes with a half-life of  24,360 years - drifted around the world, raining toxicity down on  faraway places such as the lakes of Japan and the glens of Scotland.
The  Soviets tried to hush the disaster up and waited almost three days -  until the drifting radioactive fallout triggered alarms in Sweden -  before publicly acknowledging that an accident had occurred.
The  reactor-core eventually had to be sealed with a cement mixture, dropped  from the air, and a giant steel and concrete sarcophagus erected over it  to contain the radiation.
The Soviet Union's mania for secrecy  and its desire to save face mean that it is still not known precisely  how many people died as a result of the tragedy.
Estimates of  human fatalities, both direct and indirect, vary wildly, from less than a  hundred in the immediate aftermath to tens of thousands in the years  that followed.
More widely, an estimated five million people were  exposed to potentially hazardous levels of radiation in Ukraine,  Belarus and Russia.
Doctors claim that cancer rates are far  higher than they were before 1986, and that tens of thousands of  Ukrainians and people in neighbouring Belarus (worse affected than  Ukraine because of the wind direction at the time) may have died  prematurely as a result.
"I now understand that health is the  main thing in life," laments Ilya Bosakovsky, 72, a former Chernobyl  worker, who recalls how soldiers drafted in to help with the clean-up  operation refused to do some jobs because they feared being irradiated.
"I  was really healthy when I started working at the plant but by the time I  had finished my health was shot to pieces. I started getting really bad  headaches and my blood pressure rose. "
In the meantime  Chernobyl itself and Pripyat, the Soviet model town that has now become a  ghostly monument to humankind's incompetence, have become ghoulish  tourist attractions open to anyone ready to spend the equivalent of  about £100 ($163) for a day trip.
The Ukrainian government  legalised such tours for the first time in January, and is now  developing plans to attract more tourists to the area ahead of the 2012  European football championship in Ukraine.
Ukraine's emergency  situations ministry claims that radiation levels in parts of the "dead  zone" around Chernobyl are now returning to normal levels, paving the  way for the area to be marketed as a tourism destination more widely.
"The  Chernobyl zone is not as scary as the whole world thinks," said  spokeswoman Yulia Yurshova. "We want to work with big tour operators and  attract Western tourists, from whom there is great demand."
The  tours are not for the faint-hearted.
Visitors have to sign a  waiver, exempting the tour operator from all responsibility in the event  that they later suffer radiation-related health problems.
Driven  round at breakneck speed, and told not to touch any of the irradiated  vegetation or metal structures, "tourists" are invited to briefly  inspect the stricken number four reactor from a short distance as the  geiger counter guides carry clicks ever higher.
"Let's leave now,  it is very dangerous to be here," Vita Polyakova, a tour guide, told a  group including The Sunday Telegraph last week. "There are huge holes in  the sarcophagus covering the reactor," she added, in a tone that  suggested she was not joking.
The most arresting "attraction" is  not the ruined plant, however, but the ghost town of Pripyat nearby.
Visitors  get to walk through the debris-strewn corridors of its Palace of  Culture, admire its crumbling Olympic-sized swimming pool, and wander  through the eerily empty classrooms of one of its biggest schools.
Hundreds  of discarded gas masks litter the floor of the school canteen.
Soviet  propaganda continues to hang on classroom walls, and children's dolls  are scattered about, left where their young owners dropped them in a  hurry a quarter of a century ago.
Mr Andreyev, who lived with his  family in Pripyat, said it broke his heart to return there a few years  ago.
"When I went to have a look at my old flat in the 1990s my  heart almost stopped," he remembered. "When I looked at everything that  was once so familiar to me I realised how much we had lost."
Alexander  Sirota, who now runs an organisation trying to keep the disaster's  memory alive, was a 9-year-old school boy in Pripyat at the time. Like  most youngsters, he was kept unaware of the true nature of the  explosion, and initially had happy memories of being evacuated.
"For  us it was an exciting game," he said. "There were soldiers, military  helicopters, and firefighters and plenty of time off school."
But  with adulthood came knowledge of what had really happened - and the  horrifying legacy.
"When people I knew started to die around me, a  proper understanding of what it was all about came to me," he said.
He  believes that any tours to Chernobyl should be more educational than  entertainment-focused, and wants the government to recognise the town of  Pripyat as a monument so that it can be preserved.
"If people do  not know anything about it history could repeat itself," he warned. "It  is impossible to leave Pripyat without being changed."
For Mr  Andreyev, however, the real lesson to be had about Chernobyl is not  about the future, but about the past. During the Soviet era, he was  taught that "Soviet reactors do not explode", especially not ones like  Chernobyl, which was originally named in honour of Communist  revolutionary Vladimir Lenin.
"I was a Communist and of course an  atheist back then," he said, as he downed a tumbler of cognac in one  go.
"But later, I understood that God had helped us cope with  Chernobyl."
 
1 comment:
interesting publication date...
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