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

HOW MUCH RADIATION WAS RELEASED BY CHERNOBYL?

The Chernobyl reactor exploded April 26, 1986, and burned uncontrolled for two weeks spreading deadly, long-lived radioactive isotopes around the northern hemisphere. Piecing together the truth about how much radioactivity was spewed into the environment is a difficult job of ferreting out bias and vested interest.

As the 20th anniversary of the disaster approaches, the nuclear industry and its proponents in government have been trying to minimize and trivialize the pollution and its consequences. Do not be fooled.

Sources:
1. Time, November 13, 1989
2. The Chicago Tribune, June 22, 1986
3. “The Truth About Chernobyl”, Critical Mass: Voices for a Nuclear-Free Future, Ruggiero and Sahulka, Eds., 1996, by Open Media, p. 127
4. Not Man Apart, the journal of Friends of the Earth, March 1987
5. The Minneapolis Star Tribune, May 19, 1986
6. St. Louis Post Dispatch, April 24, 1987
7. The New York Times, November 20, 1987
8. Richard Mould, “Chernobyl: The Real Story” (1988), p. 77
9. Alina Tugend, "Victims of Silence," Portland Oregonian, June 21, 1993, p. A3; Murray Feshbach, "A Nuclear Eco-Crisis," Sacramento Bee, July 18, 1993, p. F1

Contact: John LaForge, Nukewatch, P.O. Box 649, Luck, WI 54853 USA
Tel: +1 715-472-4185 Cell: +1 715-491-3813
Fax: +1 715-472-4184
E-mail: nukewatch@lakeland.ws
Web: www.nukewatch.com




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