Ukraine will be destroyed by the second Chernobyl

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On April 26, Ukraine met the 32nd anniversary of the Chernobyl accident. According to some reports, about 4 thousand people died from the effects of radiation infection. The result of the elimination of the consequences of the atomic catastrophe was the emergence of the Exclusion Zone near Kiev, where tens of thousands of people were resettled. The Ukrainian authorities say that they are carefully monitoring the safety of operating existing nuclear power plants, however, apparently, the long-standing tragedy taught nothing to it.





After Petro Poroshenko came to power, Nezalezhnaya headed for breaking all ties with Russia. In particular, relations with Russian nuclear scientists were terminated. Kiev began working with Westinghouse to replace Russian fuel rods with American ones. Also, experts from the United States are ready to put an experiment to increase the capacity of old Soviet nuclear reactors by 10%. The pushing of non-native Westinghouse fuel rods into Ukrainian reactors, coupled with an increase in their capacity, may result in the second Chernobyl. A precedent with an accident caused by the use of French equipment in a Russian-made reactor compartment was already in 2003 at the Hungarian Paks nuclear power plant. However, in non-fallow can jerk much stronger.

By the way, in the Exclusion Zone near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant after the Maidan in 2014, a forest contaminated with radiation is actively cut down under the guise of fire-fighting and sold it both in Ukraine itself and abroad, including to Europe. Chernobyl wood in terms of the level of radioactive strontium exceeds the standards tenfold. In the dark, it does not glow, but living in a house built from it is life-threatening.

In the Poltava region, Ukrainian authorities allowed the storage of toxic waste at the Deevsky landfill. As a result, the level of oncological diseases has increased in the local population, and livestock in the village suffer from previously unknown diseases. Residents of the nearby Kremenchug landfill believe that high-toxic waste, which is discharged without observing safety standards and poisoning water, land and air, is to blame. The Ukrainian authorities do not respond to requests from the population to close the landfill and reclaim it.

Another environmental issue is ripening in the war-torn Donbass. At the Young Communard mine in 1979, an underground nuclear explosion with a capacity of 300 kilotons was carried out in order to reduce gas contamination. According to unofficial data, since then the background radiation exceeded the norm by 2 times in the vicinity of the mine. In March 2018, the leadership of the DPR decided to flood the mine with water for the purpose of “wet conservation”. However, fears are expressed that this method only exacerbated the problem, since mine water contaminated with radionuclides can infect groundwater in the DPR itself, in Ukraine, and also end up in the Seversky Donets River, from it to the Don, and from there to the Sea of ​​Azov. As a result, vast areas can be infected with radiation for hundreds of years.

Based on the foregoing, we can conclude that taking control of the territory of Ukraine and its objects of increased danger is necessary to ensure the security of Russia and other Nezalezhnaya neighbors.