published by WISE/NIRS Nuclear Monitor on January 27, 2006

CHORNOBYL* HEALTH IMPACT

Fact sheet by Alex Kuzma, Children of Chornobyl Relief Fund , December 2005

On April 26, 1986, at 1:23 a.m., reactor number 4 at the Chornobyl Atomic Energy Station exploded. Subsequent investigations revealed that tests that were being conducted on the operating and backup systems were mismanaged. The plant was immediately shut down. Nonetheless, a large amount of radioactive steam was released into the atmosphere during the explosion. The highest amount of radioactive fallout was registered in the vicinity immediately surrounding Chornobyl.

The atomic energy station and the nearby town of Prypiat are located in northern Ukraine, 90 kilometres north of Kyiv (Kiev), the capital of Ukraine, a city with a population of 2.8 million. At the time, the prevailing winds were directed north to northwest, so that Belarus received the most widespread deposit of radioactive fallout. With subsequent shifts in the direction of the wind, as well as rainfall, northern regions of Ukraine, as well as the southern border of European Russia received radioactive fallout. Soviet authorities neither officially acknowledged the explosion, nor warned their citizens until May 2, 1986.

NOTE: For the above information, if a source is not provided, then the information can be confirmed with the Ministries of Health of Chornobyl or of Environment Protection and Nuclear Safety of Ukraine.

*Chornobyl is the Ukrainian spelling

Contact: Alex Kuzma, Office Children of Chornobyl Relief Fund USA, 272 Old Short Hills Road, Short Hills, NJ 07078, USA
Tel: +1 973 376-5140
Fax: +1 973 376-4988
E-mail: info@childrenofchornobyl.org
Web: www.childrenofchornobyl.org




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