Photo EXCLUSIVE

Ukraine marks 34th anniversary of Chornobyl nuclear disaster

Chornobyl plant workers wearing face masks light candles at the monument to Chornobyl victims in Slavutych, the city where the power station's personnel lived, some 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the accident site on April 25, 2020 during a memorial ceremony amid the COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronavirus. Ukraine on April 26 marks the 34th anniversary of the Chornobyl disaster which was the world's worst nuclear accident.
Photo by AFP
read description Prev 01 16 Next
Chornobyl plant workers wearing face masks light candles at the monument to Chornobyl victims in Slavutych, the city where the power station's personnel lived, some 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the accident site on April 25, 2020 during a memorial ceremony amid the COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronavirus. Ukraine on April 26 marks the 34th anniversary of the Chornobyl disaster which was the world's worst nuclear accident.
Photo by AFP

On April 26, 2020, Ukraine marks the 34th anniversary of the Chornobyl disaster – the world’s worst nuclear accident.

After more than three decades in the shadow of the Chornobyl catastrophe Ukrainians continue to live with nuclear power plants as part of their country’s landscape.

A whopping 15 reactors power their towns and cities, while Ukraine’s total installed capacity makes it the seventh-largest nuclear nation in the world today.

At the same time, experts are still studying the cancerous, continent-spanning impact of the 1986 meltdown, which took place just outside the small town of Prypyat, some 150 kilometers north of Kyiv, and belched billions of radioactive particles into the wind.

In Ukraine alone, nearly two million people are estimated to have been victims in some way of the disaster, caused by cost-cutting and negligence. The Ukrainian government pays the price today: in compensation to the families of at least 35,000 people who died of Chornobyl related cancers.

Only two nuclear energy-related disasters have been rated at the maximum severity available on the International Nuclear Event Scale: the Chornobyl explosion, and the meltdowns that shook Japan and the world during the 2011 Fukushima disaster. There, some 170,000 evacuees still cannot return to their irradiated homes in the exclusion zone.

Today in Ukraine, difficult questions linger. Have the painful lessons of Chornobyl and Fukushima been learned, and can a country struggling with war, corruption and political turmoil guarantee the safety of its nuclear infrastructure?

Photos by Volodymyr Petrov. Jack Laurenson contributed to this story.