Il blog "Le Russie di Cernobyl", seguendo una tradizione di cooperazione partecipata dal basso, vuole essere uno spazio in cui: sviluppare progetti di cooperazione e scambio culturale; raccogliere materiali, documenti, articoli, informazioni, news, fotografie, filmati; monitorare l'allarmante situazione di rilancio del nucleare sia in Italia che nei paesi di Cernobyl.

Il blog, e il relativo coordinamento progettuale, è aperto ai circoli Legambiente e a tutti gli altri soggetti che ne condividono il percorso e le finalità.

"Le Russie di Cernobyl" per sostenere, oltre i confini statali, le terre e le popolazioni vittime della stessa sventura nucleare: la Bielorussia (Russia bianca), paese in proporzione più colpito; la Russia, con varie regioni rimaste contaminate da Cernobyl, Brjansk in testa, e altre zone con inquinamento radioattivo sparse sul suo immenso territorio; l'Ucraina, culla storica della Rus' di Kiev (da cui si sono sviluppate tutte le successive formazioni statali slavo-orientali) e della catastrofe stessa.

13/04/16

CHERNOBYL IMPACT STUDY SUGGESTS CZECH REPUBLIC WAS WORSE HIT BY NUCLEAR DISASTER

Chernobyl impact study suggests Czech Republic was worse hit by nuclear disaster

 

The worst industrial accident the world has ever known – that is one description of the Chernobyl disaster of 1986. And it was with the looming 30th anniversary of the nuclear reactor explosion in the former Soviet Union in mind that a conference was called in Prague this week to examine the ongoing health risks from the incident.

The Nuclear Energy Conference was organized in Prague by Green and anti-nuclear groups to highlight the health legacy of the Chernobyl accident 30 years on and what organisers say are the often played down dangers in Western Europe of keeping aged nuclear reactors operating and building new ones.

As well as the upcoming April 26 anniversary of Chernobyl, the conference was given extra relevance by last week’s decision of the Czech nuclear safety watchdog to give an unlimited permit for the Czech Dukovany reactor to continue operation. The 1986 reactor is the oldest in the country and the decision sparked condemnation in next door Austria.
One of the main speakers at the conference was British radiologist Ian Fairlie who has just completed Torch 2016, an update of a 2006 study mapping the affects and likely health impact of the Chernobyl disaster. One of the innovations has been charting levels of Iodine 131, a significant cause of thyroid cancers, levels in Europe after the disaster. This is what Dr. Fairlie had to say

“This is a world first for you people, nobody else knows this. These maps are new, hardly anyone else knows about them. Caesium maps, they’re old, iodine maps, they’re new.” 


Data: 07.04.2016
Fonte: www.radio.cz

 

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