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A hydrosyhalic child surrounded by the chaos of the asylum © Paul Fusco, courtesy MagnumAlong with Fusco, Gueorgui Pinkhassov and Jean Gaumy also visited the abandoned area to reflect on the conditions of the people who now try to carve a life out in what is called “The zone”.The disaster is considered to be the worst nuclear accident in history, with the effects still being felt today.“Thirteen years after the explosive catastrophe the awful legacy can still be seen not only in the surviving immediate victims, but also in thousands more who were born with radiation caused deformities and diseases and forever more those who have dangerous buildup of radiation in their bodies from the food they eat and the water they drink everyday.
"The Chernobyl catastrophe is depicted in a very powerful way, as a global catastrophe that absorbed huge numbers of people. Whereas the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki claimed close to 200,000 immediate victims — more than 100,000 killed and the rest injured — the Chernobyl explosion caused 2 …
That’s 5200 PBq, for the scientists out there. The memories of those who survived Chernobyl were collected in the book Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of the Nuclear Disaster by Svetlana Alexievich. / Updated April 26, 2016 / 3:53 PM UTC 10 PHOTOS Within a few weeks, 28 more people died due to acute radiation poisoning.
"I barely found my apartment, I mean it's a forest now - trees growing through the pavement, on the roofs. They were told to leave everything behind, to carry with them only their identity papers and bare amounts of food and clothing. "It's very painful that so many people's (lives) were destroyed, that such a beautiful, new town was abandoned. He had received a fatal dose of radiation that had burnt the skin on his face bright red. At birth many of these children are so horrifying a revelation to the parents that they are immediately abandoned to the state and within days are sent to Novinki. 1997. Many live solitary lives – frozen in time and space, reacting in secret with the phantoms that inhabit them.The story of Chernobyl is, in some respects, a tale of twin cities: Pripyat, the abandoned city purposefully built to house Chernobyl workers. And Slavutych, the city built after the disaster to replace Pripyat, and to provide a home for those that left.“The photographs are from daily life, hospitals, and institutions that are caring for thousands of young victims.
Chernobyl, Ukraine was the site of a terrible nuclear accident on April 26, 1986 when a reactor meltdown spewed radioactive material all over Europe.
On the night of the explosion, two workers inside the power plant died. Survivors of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, come back to their birth place of Pripyat and look into old memories of the abandoned town. It's hard on the soul," she said.For residents of Chernobyl, a three-day evacuation turned into a thirty-year exile. When Chernobyl melted down, at least 5 percent of the reactor core was released into the atmosphere. Now Perevozchenko and her two young daughters live in Kiev, where they moved since the explosion.Perevozchenko, 66, only realized something might be wrong that day 30 years before when her husband, Valeriy, didn't come back from his night shift as a foreman at the stricken reactor.Above: Perevozchenko poses in her old apartment (left) and as old photo (right) shows her with her late husband, Valeriy, in Pripyat before the disaster.A doll sits among beds at a kindergarten in Pripyat on March 28.A combo image shows Oleksiy Yermakov, 41, in his old apartment and an undated photograph of Yermakov before the disaster.Survivors of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, come back to their birth place of Pripyat and look into old memories of the abandoned town. They carry the malevolent seeds of Chernobyl that will be passed on to the next generation and again to the next, and the next, and the next.This month marks the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, which took the lives of more than 50 reactor and emergency workers on the 26th April 1986, and has had untold consequences on countless lives ever since.The reality of Slavutych turned out, in many respect, to be as tragic as Pripyat.