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The legacy of the Chernobyl disaster is explored on FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT

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  Foreign Correspondent  Source: ABC
Foreign Correspondent Source: ABC

FALLOUT: THE LEGACY OF THE CHERNOBYL DISASTER

Once the site of the world’s worst nuclear accident, Chernobyl is now a major tourist destination, thanks to a wildly popular TV drama. We go beyond the crowds to reveal the secret life inside Chernobyl’s exclusion zone.

It’s byword for disaster and contamination. A lasting reminder of the devastation of nuclear meltdown, government-sanctioned cover-up and radiation sickness.

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Now, thanks to the wild success of the HBO series dramatising the world’s worst nuclear accident, the site of Chernobyl in Ukraine has become a global tourist hotspot.

Geiger-counter in hand, Europe correspondent Linton Besser explores the enduring impact of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

He joins the hordes of tourists who arrive each day to wander around the ghost towns and near the abandoned reactor. “I heard a lot of stories…there are mutants there, there are creatures inside,” says Australian tourist Nick, one of hundreds visiting the site from around the world.

Besser goes where tourists can’t, beyond the decaying town of Pripyat, into the contaminated exclusion zone where he meets the secret communities who have defied evacuation orders to return home.

The ‘babushkas’ – grandmothers – continue to grow their own food and drink water from their wells, despite the persistent presence of radiation.

“This is our motherland, it cannot be replaced,” says one babushka, sipping homemade vodka. “We want to die in our village. It’s our most cherished dream,” says another.

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Foreign Correspondent uncovers the strange sub-culture of Stalkers, young rebels attracted to the dangers of the zone – the threat of police, wild animals and radiation. “Life among death, is the main philosophy of Stalkers,” says one man who’s made a niche business smuggling thrill-seekers in by night.

And we meet the disaster’s youngest victims – the children from the fallout zone who are suffering from radiation-related illnesses. “The soil should have been removed from the contaminated area,” says one nurse at a children’s hospital. “But that wasn’t done. Everything was left as it was.”

Thirty years on, Ukraine still has 15 nuclear reactors providing the nation’s energy and many are operating despite reaching their designed lifespan. Local anti-nuclear campaigners say another disaster is a real possibility.

While some locals see this tourism boom as exploitative, many are glad their story is being told. “Everyone should know what had happened here,” says 73-year-old Sofia, standing barefoot in her garden. “It’s hard to remember. Very hard,”, she cries. “Radiation is an invisible enemy”.

Watch FALLOUT, Tuesday 3rd September on ABC TV at 8pm AEST & again on Friday 6th at 1.30pm. Also on ABC NEWS Channel on Wednesday 4th at 5.30am, Saturday 7th at 9.30pm & Sunday 8th at 5.30pm. Available anytime on iview.

 

Foreign Correspondent: Tuesday, September 3, 2019 at 8pm AEST

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Comments

1 COMMENT

  1. Horrific situation with brave people in the beginning and present day. As a Tarkovsky fan I loved that the illegal guides are called ‘stalkers’.

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