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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: World Perspectives <worldpnews@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: Nukes in ex-Soviet Union-Part 1
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.001120.25590@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
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- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 00:11:20 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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-
- /* Written 4:10 pm Nov 16, 1992 by worldpnews@igc.apc.org in igc:worldp.samples */
- /* ---------- "Nukes in ex-Soviet Union-Part 1" ---------- */
- From WORLD PERSPECTIVES. Box 3074, Madison, WI 53704
-
-
- THE EFFECTS OF NUKES ON THE FORMER SOVIET UNION'S ECOLOGY
- The following comes from R. Australia:
-
- The former Soviet Union is seeing pollution-related diseases,
- soaring infant mortality rates and sickness related to pollution in
- rivers and water supplies. According to the Guardian newspaper, for
- the first time it is being admitted that whole areas of the former
- Soviet Union have been devastated by the nuclear testing program.
- Civilian casualties affected by radiation resulting from the
- testing amount to millions.
-
- Prof. David Marple(?), Professor of Soviet history at the
- University of Alberta, Canada and the author of three books on the
- Ukraine and Chernobyl, recently returned from the beleaguered
- Russian federation. According to him, more and more information is
- now surfacing about the Russian nuclear testing program and the
- effects of the Chernobyl accident:
-
- "When the Cold War was at its peak in the 1960's, in areas of
- Kazakhstan the generals decided that the mock battle that was
- taking place between the various sectors of the Red Army would be
- much more realistic if you could actually detonate a real nuclear
- device in between the two sets of soldiers. And they proceeded to
- do this. They detonated an actual device in the middle of a mock
- war game.
-
- "When you read things like this you begin to wonder just how high
- the casualties have been in the past. We've known about the
- accident in the 50's, for example, in the Urals, which completely
- eliminated several villages.
-
- "Chernobyl is an accident with some precedents. This is not the
- first major nuclear disaster to take place in the USSR. It just
- happened to be the first one that we know something about."
-
- The Chernobyl accident happened in 1986. For most people, it is
- just a dim memory. But for the researchers who work in the area,
- and for the victims, the full extent of the impact of this disaster
- is still unfolding.
-
- Says Prof. Marple: "In its more international aspect, it is being
- left to small groups of scientists now. The effects of Chernobyl
- today are explored less than six years ago. It's a mistake to think
- otherwise, but I think the general conception is that the disaster
- happened and the radio-active fallout occurred, and so gradually
- the situation will improve. That fact is that many of the radio-
- active particles that were released in Chernobyl have a certain
- half-life and then they decompose into other substances. These
- other substances are sometimes much more toxic than the original
- ones. So in fact the situation will get worse rather than better.
-