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Why care about Chernobyl?
On the 26th
of April, 1986, Block IV of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded
and began a process of death, suffering and disease for hundreds of
thousands of people. As medical students and doctors, it is our
responsibility to research the health effects of this accident, inform
the public about the dangers to their health and prevent such a
catastrophe from ever happening again. This website was designed in
order to give you an overview over the current status of research on
the Chernobyl disaster, explain why certain representatives of the
nuclear industry, including the IAEA, are interested in misinforming
the public and euphemizing the catastrophe into "just another power
plant accident" and offer concrete possibilities for getting involved. It
seeks to provide valuable and reliable background
information to interested medical students, the media and the public
and contribute to promoting the truth about the catastrophe of
Chernobyl. If you have any questions or comments, please don't hesitate
to contact alexro80@web.de. But
first, it has to be understood that 20 years
after the horrible catastrophe of Chernobyl, the magnitude of the
health effects caused by the nuclear meltdown and the ensuing radiation
are still not completely understood. Three things are certain however:
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Nuclear Power is not safe
The
Chernobyl Disaster showed the world the ugly face of nuclear
power - the one the nuclear industry is trying to hide and the one
opponents have been warning about for many years before the meltdown.
Chernobyl should have been the turning point of the world's nuclear
policy, yet it appears it was only the first major nuclear accident.
Since then, several others have occured in Great Britain, Germany, the
US and Japan. None were of the magnitude of Chernobyl, yet according to
scientists, the next accident is only a question of time.
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Block IV of the Chernobyl Power Plant
after
the explosion
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Families remembering the victims of
Chernobyl
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The health effects of Chernobyl continue to
kill and maim
The
health effects of Chernobyl were not only limited to the
immediate radiation of the local population, which was forcibly
evacuated from the region within a matter of days or the poulation of
up to 1.000.000 so called liquidators, young men ordered to clean up
the nuclear rubble and risk their lives for the creation of a
sarcophagus. The environmental destruction, the damage to the
ecosystem, the effects of low-level radiation and the social and
psychoogical impact of Chernobyl are not to be underestimated. Even
today, low level radiation, ingested by the general population in form
of food and milk, is causing malformation,
mutations and cancer daths, as well as countless non-cancer diseases in
the affected populations. Due to genomic instabilities caused by
radiation, the full effects of the accident will only develop within
the next six generations, showing that Chernobyl is more than just a
temporary accident. It continues to kill - every year.
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The case on
Chernobyl is not yet closed
The
"official" numbers of the IAEA do not reflect the real situation. The
International Atomic Energy Agency, responsible for "the
worldwide promotion of the peaceful use of nuclear technology"
(IAEA Charter) and composed mainly of scientists from
nuclear energy states has no inherent interest in addressing the true
casualties
and health effects of the Chernobyl disaster. Instead, it propagates
the myth of a
benign and managable nuclear accident. According to IAEA numbers, only
50 people died as a result of Chernobyl, while the total number of
deaths may rise to 4.000. Plausible and scientific evidence from all
effected regions, compiled by national cancer registries and supported
by western scientists show numbers that greatly exceed these obviously
downplayed statistics - more than 500,000 invalids, more than 50,000
deaths amongst the liquidators, thousands of childhoohd deaths and
malformations all over Europe, countless cases of thyroid cancers, all
not counting the psychologic and social impact of the catastrophe and
the subsequent resettlement and stigmatization ... And the risk of another accident like Chernobyl is
still out there...
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Fish, killed by
radiation, showing immense
levels of radioactivity
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Most of the pictures on these pages are photos
taken by Igor Kostin,
the photo journalist who took many of the most famous photos of
Chernobyl |
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