Chernobyl Disaster in the Soviet Union

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Revision as of 11:41, 28 September 2019 by ATOMI (talk | contribs) (updated)
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UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Picture of the exploded Chernobyl reactor unit 4 after the accident of INES level 7 on April 26, 1986
Action in front of a market hall in Minsk for Chernobyl Day 2011
The protests in Minsk reminded that constructing an NPP in the most Chernobyl affected country is no good idea
Action on April 27, 2010 in front of the Parliament building in Helsinki
Poster announcing the Chernobyl theatre piece in Belarus 2014
Demonstration outside Ålands Lagting on Chernobyl Day 2009
Chalk slogans on the road connecting French EPR project and Chernobyl experiences (Network meeting in Bure, 2008)

Actions and events


Materials

  • lecture "The Reactor Catastrophe in Chernobyl"
    • Information about the Chernobyl site, basic facts of the accidents, rescue measurements, radiation doses, consequences of the catastrophe, lies of authorities and politicians, Chernobyl as a political symbol and conclusions. 62 slides with images of the accident and from Belarus (victims of the accident, liquidators, "empty villages", actions).
    • The slides are currently provided in German (smaller file)only, but the presentation can be held in English, too.
    • duration: some 2 hours
    • technical requirements: digital projector & screen, computer/laptop
    • contact: Falk Beyer, Falk AT nuclear-heritage DOT net[1]
  • theater group: Theatre Kryly Halopa
    • Since 2013 the theatre “Kryly Halopa” has started work on a documentary theatre project “Stories of Belarus”. The documentary theatre Chernobyl based on the authentic texts and documents, interviews and the fates of real people, technology verbatim and the most actual and contemporary topics of reality, is a genre that exists on the border of art and social analysis.


Irresponsible

Guided tours to the nuclear exclusion zone of the catastrophe - caution! This article downplays the risks of radiation while scientific sounding data is mentioned without telling that any additional radiation dose is to be avoided. They don't speak about the alpha and beta radiation regular Geiger counters can't detect. Don't trust travel agencies promoting adventure trips to atomic disaster zones - there safety measures and advice will probably again underestimate the actual threats.


Media releases


Tools


Further information


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