Wildfires ‘edge closer to Chernobyl nuclear plant’

Wildfires ‘edge closer to Chernobyl nuclear plant’
Kindly Share This Story

p089dm7s

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionFootage shows wildfires near the nuclear disaster site

Forest fires that have been burning for several days in northern Ukraine are now no more than a few kilometres from the abandoned Chernobyl nuclear plant, reports say.

Tour operator Yaroslav Emelianenko said one had reached the abandoned town of Pripyat, which used to serve the plant.

He said it was now just 2km (1.24 miles) from where the most dangerous waste from the plant was stored.

READ MORE:  ECOWAS holds 34th summit, Sall nominated as union chairman

Greenpeace said the fires were much bigger than the authorities realised.

The NGO’s Russia branch, quoted by Reuters, said the largest fire covered 34,000 hectares, while a second fire just a kilometre from the former plant was 12,000 hectares in area.

Mr Emelianenko also said that if the fire engulfed Pripyat it would be an economic disaster, as supervised tourist visits provided valuable revenue.

In 2018 more than 70,000 people visited the town. Last year that figure was even higher, after the success of an HBO mini-series about the disaster.

READ MORE:  NFL issues fashion code for virtual draft

Firebreaks around the plant

Police said the fire had been burning since the weekend of 4 April, after a man set fire to dry grass near the exclusion zone. It has since moved closer to the nuclear plant.

More than 300 firefighters with dozens of pieces of special hardware are reportedly working at the site, while six helicopters and planes are attempting to extinguish the fire from above.

Image copyright
EPA

Image caption

Officials say radiation in the area is at “normal” levels

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

The fire is now 5km (three miles) from the nuclear site

Kateryna Pavlova, acting head of the State Agency of Ukraine on Exclusion Zone Management, told the Associated Press news agency that they “cannot say the fire is contained”.

“We have been working all night, digging firebreaks around the plant to protect it from fire,” she said.

On 5 April Yegor Firsov, acting head of Ukraine’s state ecological inspection service, said in a Facebook post that radiation levels in the area had risen substantially above normal.

Government officials later rejected this finding, and said the levels in the area were “within normal limits”. Mr Firsov also withdrew his remarks.

p07yqw5r

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionThe ‘real’ Lyudmila from Chernobyl speaks for first time

Smoke from the fire is now blowing towards Kyiv.

Chernobyl nuclear power station and the nearby town of Pripyat have been abandoned since 1986, when the plant’s No. 4 reactor blew up.

The explosion sent a cloud of radioactive fallout across much of Europe, with the area immediately around the plant worst affected.

People are forbidden from living within 18 miles (30km) of the power station.

Chernobyl continued to generate power until the plant’s last operational reactor was finally closed in 2000.

Read More

By Famous Reporters

2 Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

No widgets found. Go to Widget page and add the widget in Offcanvas Sidebar Widget Area.