Re: Chernobyl's Legacy of Radioactive Poisoning Passed On [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

2002-04-28 Thread Rolf Martens

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---

The below is a complete falsification, originating from the worst
reactionaries in the world, with some very bad intentions.

Not even an increase in thyroid cancers were caused by the (of course
nasty, and not accidential either) Chernobyl disaster, let alone genetic
mutations - not even after the Hirosima and Nagaski bombings in 1945
have any such whatsoever been discovered.

It's vital that nobody should be fooled by misinformation of this kind.
This is one part of a sneak "green" warfare by the reactionaries.

So I'm sending two earlier items of my "UNITE! Info" series:

#119en:  More Chernobyl horror hoaxes  (originally of 07.05.2000)
(2 parts)
and
#163en:  Chernobyl: No thyroid cancers (originally of 11.02.2002)

Rolf M.





At 17:45 2002-04-26 -0400, you wrote:


>HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
>---Published on Friday, April 26, 2002 by 
>Reuters
>16 Years Later
>Chernobyl's Legacy of Radioactive Poisoning Passed On
>by Elizabeth Piper
>
>KIEV - Ukrainian children born with genetic mutations or harmed by 
>radioactive food form a new generation of Chernobyl victims who could pass 
>the accident's tragic legacy on to the next, specialists warned yesterday.
>
>On the eve of Chernobyl's 16th anniversary, specialists who have worked in 
>the region since a reactor exploded and spewed clouds of radioactivity 
>over much of Europe said the fight against radiation-related illness was 
>far from won.
>
>''Today, 16 years after the accident, there remain some huge problems in 
>several regions ... especially in terms of children's health and in terms 
>of food,'' Olga Bobylova, deputy secretary of Ukraine's health service, 
>told a news conference.
>
>
>An aerial view of Ukraine's Chernobyl nucler power plant, the site of the 
>world's worst nuclear disaster, is seen in this May 1986 file photo made a 
>few days after the April 26 deadly explosion. In front of the chimney is 
>the destroyed 4th reactor. Ukraine commemorates victims of Chernobyl 
>catastrophe Thursday, April 25, 2002, on the eve of the 16th anniversary 
>of the tragedy when a nuclear explosion, many times bigger that Hiroshima 
>and Nagasaki combined, sent a radioactive cloud over parts of then-Soviet 
>Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and parts of Western Europe. The plant was closed 
>for good in 2000, but many environmental problems persist. (AP Photo/STR/FILE)
>''[In areas surrounding Chernobyl] meat and milk in the private sector 
>have high levels of radioactivity. ... There are also problems with the 
>mushrooms and berries in the forests. ... Such food can have a profound 
>effect on health.''
>
>Thousands of impoverished Ukrainians live in areas affected by radioactive 
>contamination from the plant, which exploded on April 26, 1986 in the 
>world's worst civil nuclear disaster.
>
>To boost their meager daily meals they gather berries and mushrooms from 
>fields and forests still contaminated by radioactive debris. Many are 
>unaware or reluctant to think that the food remains a health risk so long 
>after the accident.
>
>''The state tries to give children good, clean food, but it cannot because 
>of a lack of funds,'' Bobylova said.
>
>''We need this in the future.''
>
>The specialists urged Ukraine and the rest of the world not to allow 
>Chernobyl to become a forgotten crisis - a term used first by the United 
>Nations which hinted that funds could run out as interest in the disaster 
>waned.
>
>Evgeniya Stepanova, a specialist in radiation-linked illnesses, said 
>children were becoming sufferers years after the explosion, which killed 
>few people at the time.
>
>The true casualty toll in the years since is a matter of intense 
>controversy. Chernobyl has been blamed for thousands of deaths in Ukraine, 
>Belarus, and Russia and for a huge increase in thyroid cancer.
>
>''[Research] has shown genetic mutations in sufferers of Chernobyl, both 
>adults and children. ... Those children and adults are more likely to get 
>cancer and pass on mutations to their children.''
>
>Radiation is known to cause genetic mutation, and the rate of certain 
>cancers goes up in areas exposed to nuclear fallout, scientists say.
>
>Stepanova said it was time to turn the world's attention to those who had 
>no choice but to suffer the consequences and those who could unwittingly 
>become the next victims of Chernobyl.
>
>''We have not paid enough attention to those people who are suffering,'' 
>she said, almost shouting.
>
>''Among all the problems caused by Chernobyl, the genetic [mutation] 
>problem should come first. ... It is a huge problem.''
>
>Copyright 2002 Reuters Ltd
>
>
>---
>ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST
>

---
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Chernobyl's Legacy of Radioactive Poisoning Passed On [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

2002-04-26 Thread Miroslav Antic
Title: Message



HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---



  
  

  Published on Friday, April 26, 2002 by Reuters 
  

  16 Years 
  LaterChernobyl's Legacy of Radioactive Poisoning Passed On 
  

  by Elizabeth Piper
  
 
  
KIEV - Ukrainian children born with 
  genetic mutations or harmed by radioactive food form a new generation of 
  Chernobyl victims who could pass the accident's tragic legacy on to the 
  next, specialists warned yesterday. 
  On the eve of Chernobyl's 16th anniversary, specialists who have worked 
  in the region since a reactor exploded and spewed clouds of radioactivity 
  over much of Europe said the fight against radiation-related illness was 
  far from won.
  ''Today, 16 years after the accident, there remain some huge problems 
  in several regions ... especially in terms of children's health and in 
  terms of food,'' Olga Bobylova, deputy secretary of Ukraine's health 
  service, told a news conference.
  
  


  An aerial view of Ukraine's Chernobyl nucler power plant, 
the site of the world's worst nuclear disaster, is seen in this May 
1986 file photo made a few days after the April 26 deadly explosion. 
In front of the chimney is the destroyed 4th reactor. Ukraine 
commemorates victims of Chernobyl catastrophe Thursday, April 25, 
2002, on the eve of the 16th anniversary of the tragedy when a 
nuclear explosion, many times bigger that Hiroshima and Nagasaki 
combined, sent a radioactive cloud over parts of then-Soviet 
Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and parts of Western Europe. The plant was 
closed for good in 2000, but many environmental problems persist. 
(AP Photo/STR/FILE)''[In areas 
  surrounding Chernobyl] meat and milk in the private sector have high 
  levels of radioactivity. ... There are also problems with the mushrooms 
  and berries in the forests. ... Such food can have a profound effect on 
  health.'' 
  Thousands of impoverished Ukrainians live in areas affected by 
  radioactive contamination from the plant, which exploded on April 26, 1986 
  in the world's worst civil nuclear disaster.
  To boost their meager daily meals they gather berries and mushrooms 
  from fields and forests still contaminated by radioactive debris. Many are 
  unaware or reluctant to think that the food remains a health risk so long 
  after the accident.
  ''The state tries to give children good, clean food, but it cannot 
  because of a lack of funds,'' Bobylova said.
  ''We need this in the future.''
  The specialists urged Ukraine and the rest of the world not to allow 
  Chernobyl to become a forgotten crisis - a term used first by the United 
  Nations which hinted that funds could run out as interest in the disaster 
  waned.
  Evgeniya Stepanova, a specialist in radiation-linked illnesses, said 
  children were becoming sufferers years after the explosion, which killed 
  few people at the time.
  The true casualty toll in the years since is a matter of intense 
  controversy. Chernobyl has been blamed for thousands of deaths in Ukraine, 
  Belarus, and Russia and for a huge increase in thyroid cancer.
  ''[Research] has shown genetic mutations in sufferers of Chernobyl, 
  both adults and children. ... Those children and adults are more likely to 
  get cancer and pass on mutations to their children.''
  Radiation is known to cause genetic mutation, and the rate of certain 
  cancers goes up in areas exposed to nuclear fallout, scientists say.
  Stepanova said it was time to turn the world's attention to those who 
  had no choice but to suffer the consequences and those who could 
  unwittingly become the next victims of Chernobyl.
  ''We have not paid enough attention to those people who are 
  suffering,'' she said, almost shouting.
  ''Among all the problems caused by Chernobyl, the genetic [mutation] 
  problem should come first. ... It is a huge problem.''
  Copyright 2002 Reuters 
Ltd
---
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

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