
#14
Christian Science Monitor
April 25, 2003
Russia and Ukraine bicker over Chernobyl
Days before the disaster's 17th anniversary, Kiev reveals KGB documents that
warned Moscow of dangers.
By Fred Weir | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
MOSCOW - Seventeen years after Chernobyl exploded, its victims are receiving
less and less government assistance, and Russia and Ukraine are trading
accusations in a seeming effort to shift responsibility.
This week, Ukraine's SBU, the successor to the KGB, declassified 121
documents in an apparent campaign to show that the Ukrainian KGB had warned
Moscow of the dangers at Chernobyl from the plant's initial construction phase
in 1976 - but their alarms went unheeded.
In an apparent riposte, Russia's minister of atomic power, Alexander
Rumyantsev, held a press conference to claim that post-Soviet Ukraine had
bungled the Chernobyl cleanup so badly that a disaster might occur "at any
time."
The Chernobyl disaster - whose anniversary is Saturday - "is being
covered with a thick layer of rhetoric and distortions from which it is almost
impossible to dig out the truth," says Yury Andreyev, head of the Ukrainian
Chernobyl Union, a public association that speaks for many of the 3.5 million
Ukrainians who were exposed to large doses of radiation.
Last weekend about 5,000 Chernobyl victims marched in downtown Kiev, some
carrying sick children or photos of loved ones who died as a result of the
accident. "What we want is for the (post-Soviet) governments of Russia,
Ukraine, and Belarus to work together in dealing with the legacy of
Chernobyl," says Mr. Andreyev. "But there is no sign of that
happening."
The USSR promised generous benefits to the millions of people affected by the
fallout that spread across the western USSR, including disability pensions,
lifetime medical care, and alternative housing for the 60,000 people evacuated
from the hardest-hit zones. Similar promises were made to the
"liquidators" who mopped up surface contaminants and built a concrete
sarcophagus over the remains of Unit No. 4, which blew up during a "safety
test." From the immediate effects of the accident, 31 people died, but no
reliable figures exist for long- term deaths from health complications caused by
the radiation exposure.
The United Nations estimates that 15,000 to 30,000 of the 6 million people
living in the contaminated zones have since died due to radiation exposure. But
survivors' groups claim the studies have been sketchy, and do not include the 1
million liquidators from all over the USSR. "Of the 600,000 Russian
liquidators at Chernobyl, about 100,000 have died and another 200,000 are
seriously ill," says Gen. Vadim Korostylev, who took part in the cleanup of
Chernobyl and now heads Chernobyl Shield, a group representing Russian victims.
"The situation for survivors is dire."
The USSR's collapse led cash-strapped successor states of Russia, Belarus and
Ukraine to slash benefits and curtail efforts to clean up contaminated areas.
Nearly two decades on, 25,000 of those evacuated from the immediate area of
Chernobyl are still without housing. And disability pensions for most victims
have been slashed - by about 80 percent for Ukrainian survivors, says Andreyev,
and by about half for Russian survivors, says General Korostylev. "The
government is forgetting about us," says General Korostylev. "They say
it happened long ago, and it's not their responsibility anymore."
The documents published by Ukraine's SBU this week on its website (www.sbu.gov.ua)
seem designed to make a similar point. They include a Ukrainian KGB report
listing dozens of cases of shoddy parts during the building of Chernobyl from
1976-1979, including 162 tons of defective piping from a Donetsk, Ukraine
factory. A secret 1982 memo to Moscow Center lists 29 minor accidents in the
plant's first four years, plus a serious "loss of control" that led to
the "significant release of radiation" four years before the major
disaster. A 1984 report warns of serious "deficiencies" in reactor No.
4.
"I believe these documents are genuine, and they provide a glimpse into
the culture of secrecy that pervaded the Soviet KGB," says Sergei Markov,
president of the Kremlin-tied Center for Policy Studies in Moscow. "But
their publication like this, on the eve of the Chernobyl anniversary can only be
seen as part of the propaganda effort to evade responsibility for the accident
and its consequences."
For his part, Rumyantsev, the Russian atomic minister, claims that Ukraine
has failed to maintain the concrete canopy over what was once reactor No. 4,
leaving holes through which radiation could leak. "Today it's hard to say
what's happening behind the walls of the sarcophagus," he said. "Who
is controlling the situation?"
The plant was completely shut down three years ago with Western financial
help. Ukrainian officials say they have raised almost $700 million from the
international community to build a new shelter over the plant, one they say will
contain the continuing radiation hazard for centuries. A statement by Ukraine's
official news agency Thursday said construction on the new shield could begin
this year, adding "By the way, Russia is not a donor, nor does it
participate in the shelter project."
But for many Chernobyl victims, all the charges flying back and forth add up
to governments shirking their responsibilities. "When we were cleaning up
the mess at Chernobyl, we didn't spare ourselves," says Gen. Korostylev.
"Now it's as if we don't exist. In retrospect, it seems that fighting
radiation was an easy thing to do compared with trying to force bureaucrats to
keep their promises."
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