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Children of Chernobyl's fallout: sixteen years after the world's worst nuclear accident, Kenneth Noble visits the children who are still suffering as a result. (Lead Story).


I sit at lunch with three teachers and two scientists in the village school of Yurovichi in south-east Belarus. The teachers are all widows. One lost her husband, aged 46, to cancer. The other husbands died at 50. Nothing can be proved but the teachers feel that these and another such premature death Premature Death occurs when a living thing dies of a cause other than old age. A premature death can be the result of injury, illness, violence, suicide, poor nutrition (often stemming from low income), starvation, dehydration, or other factors.  in the school must be linked with the Chernobyl nuclear explosion of April 1986.

Yurovichi lies just 60 kilometres from Chernobyl in neighbouring Ukraine and is outside the most contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 area--the so-called `dead zone' which foreigners Foreigners

alienage

the condition of being an alien.

androlepsy

Law. the seizure of foreign subjects to enforce a claim for justice or other right against their nation.

gypsyologist, gipsyologist

Rare.
 are not allowed to visit. But tests carried out in 1999 in a similarly situated similarly situated adj. with the same problems and circumstances, referring to the people represented by a plaintiff in a "class action," brought for the benefit of the party filing the suit as well as all those "similarly situated.  school by the Institute of Radiation Safety, Belrad, showed that the average level of radiation in the pupils was some four to five times the safe level for children. Children are more vulnerable to radiation as their body cells are dividing rapidly.

My host, physicist Alexander Pinchook, says that some 370,000 children living in villages in Gomel province Gomel Province or Homiel Province may refer to one of the following:
  • Homiel Voblast of Belarus or Byelorussian SSR
  • Gomel Guberniya of Russian Empire and RSFSR
, as well as many more in neighbouring Mogilev province Mogilev Province or Mahiloŭ Province may refer to one of the following
  • Mahilyow Voblast of Belarus or Byelorussian SSR
  • Mogilev Guberniya of Russian Empire
, are at risk. The mission of CentreAction--the NGO NGO
abbr.
nongovernmental organization

Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government
nongovernmental organization
 which he, Sergei Shavrei and others set up in 1999--is to get to know the staff and pupils at schools in the contaminated area; to teach safety measures safety measures,
n.pl actions (e.g., use of glasses, face masks) taken to protect patients and office personnel from such known hazards as particles and aerosols from high-speed rotary instruments, mercury vapor, radiation exposure, anesthetic and
; and to combat the fatalism fa·tal·ism  
n.
1. The doctrine that all events are predetermined by fate and are therefore unalterable.

2. Acceptance of the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable.
 and depression that the disaster has engendered in many.

At a school in another village, Glinishcha (famous as the birth-place of the novelist Ivan Melezh), the children and teachers have been told to bring in food samples. Pinchook and Shavrei have brought their Becquerel Becquerel (bĕkərĕl`), family of French physicists.

Antoine César Becquerel, 1788–1878, was a pioneer in electrochemical science.
 monitor, an expensive piece of apparatus which measures radiation levels. It was donated by the Otto Hug Institute in Munich, Germany, in 1992, two years after Pinchook first started devoting his spare time to this work.

The teachers fill beakers with carrots, cabbage, wild mushrooms, milk, berries and other standard items of fare. As each sample is placed in the apparatus, numbers are illuminated on a small display screen. A boy, perhaps 11, peers at the monitor and relays the figures to his 45 schoolmates, jammed into desks behind him. They listen in silence as the verdict is passed on each sample. Most of the items are safe but the dried mushrooms, a popular food gathered from the forest which covers one third of the country, registers almost double the permitted level for adults. Some of the milk measures a safe 13 becquerels per kg but Pinchook recalls one sample that read 700 because the cows had been grazing grazing,
n See irregular feeding.


grazing

1. actions of herbivorous animals eating growing pasture or cereal crop.

2. area of pasture or cereal crop to be used as standing feed. See also pasture.
 in the forest, which is more contaminated than farmland.

The scientists finish their tests and then talk to the children about radiation. `We don't just give dry figures,' Pinchook tells me. `We explain what counter-measures can be taken--for example if milk is turned into cheese or butter most of the radiation goes in the water that is drained off.' Shavrei produces a small sample of radioactive strontium strontium (strŏn`shēəm) [from Strontian, a Scottish town], a metallic chemical element; symbol Sr; at. no. 38; at. wt. 87.62; m.p. 769°C;; b.p. 1,384°C;; sp. gr. 2.6 at 20°C;; valence +2.  from a lead container and holds a Geiger-counter above it. There is an audible clicking which rapidly increases in speed as he approaches the sample.

The point of this demonstration is that it gives the children something tangible to observe. The unnerving un·nerve  
tr.v. un·nerved, un·nerv·ing, un·nerves
1. To deprive of fortitude, strength, or firmness of purpose.

2. To make nervous or upset.
 thing about radioactivity radioactivity, spontaneous disintegration or decay of the nucleus of an atom by emission of particles, usually accompanied by electromagnetic radiation. The energy produced by radioactivity has important military and industrial applications.  is that no human senses can detect it. The surrounding fields and forests, the food and the village all look normal. Without expensive equipment it is impossible to tell where the danger lies. Yet the symptoms are there in the children, and the teachers are all too aware of them. CentreAction were asked to come to Glinishcha because the teachers were worried about their pupils. `Before Chernobyl there would be perhaps three children per class who were unfit to have PE (physical education) lessons; now the average class has only three who can do PE,' the school principal, Ol'ga Tsirulik, tells me. `Children often faint or have headaches, and many have had to have their thyroid thyroid /thy·roid/ (thi´roid)
1. the thyroid gland; see under gland.

2. pertaining to the thyroid gland.

3. scutiform.

4.
 glands removed.'

When the class has been dismissed we retire to the staff room for a discussion with the teachers. They ask me many questions about schools in the UK, and I want to know why there are hardly any men teachers. Apparently few are willing to work for the equivalent of 1,000 [pounds sterling] per year. The teachers' concern about their pupils is heartfelt. `Could you arrange for some of them to have holidays in Britain?' they plead. It has been proved that getting away from the contaminated area for even a couple of months markedly reduces the level of radiation in children. Formerly the government paid for such holidays but funding has now dried up.

Pinchook and Shavrei give the teachers a few precious copies of their booklet, Living with nuclear radiation: theory and practice. Produced in small numbers with funding from a Dutch voluntary organization, Milieukontakt Oost-Europa, it is full of advice on how to minimize the risks of nuclear contamination as well as explaining the physical processes. It shows, for instance, that the forest absorbed far more radiation than other ecosystems because the countless billions of pine needles pine needles pine nplKiefernnadeln pl

pine needles nplaghi mpl di pino 
 presented a huge area of exposure to the rain-borne radionuclides (radioactive atoms). As a result fruits of the forest--traditionally popular free food--are especially dangerous. The book also explains that clay particles will bond with nuclei of Ceasium-137 (the main contaminant contaminant /con·tam·i·nant/ (kon-tam´in-int) something that causes contamination.

contaminant

something that causes contamination.
 which will persist for another 600 years). This means that the contaminant stays in clay soil and does not enter the crops.

As we prepare to leave, Ol'ga Tsirulik tells me that her own son works at Chernobyl and she worries about him, though her grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16.  seem to be healthy. She feels that her 147 pupils, aged between six and 17, will be more aware of the dangers of radiation following CentreAction's visit but adds: `Officials assume that our area is relatively safe, and special measures Special measures is a status applied by Ofsted, the schools inspection agency, to schools in England when it considers that they fail to supply an acceptable level of education and appear to lack the leadership capacity necessary to secure improvements.  are no longer taken. Now, if parents want to send their children to clear areas, they have to pay.' The children's health Children's Health Definition

Children's health encompasses the physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being of children from infancy through adolescence.
 is her teachers' main worry, more so than the lack of books, computers and equipment.

These sentiments are echoed by the teachers in Yurovichi, a village which was the scene of heavy casualties during World War II because it occupies strategically important high ground. The village was also the site of a massacre of 400 Jews by the Nazis, a fact recalled in a remarkable school museum which has Jewish memorabilia as well as exhibits ranging from locally excavated mammoth tusks through antique agricultural artefacts to Soviet-era portraits of Lenin.

The teachers produce a generous four-course meal which climaxes in a magnificent concoction of sponge cake, chocolate, sugar, cherries, nuts and jam. It rejoices in the politically correct politically correct Politically sensitive adjective Referring to language reflecting awareness and sensitivity to another person's physical, mental, cultural, or other disadvantages or deviations from a norm; a person is not mentally retarded, but  name of `ruins of the count's castle'. As we tackle this tour de force, the teachers tell me that in this school, too, the children often faint, and get pains in their livers when they run. The teachers are also concerned about their pupils' psychological state. `Since Chernobyl there is a lot of anxiety. The children have difficulties with their mental and emotional development. Concentration and intelligence are lower than previously.'

Pinchook and Shavrei have visited this school many times before. In fact the school director, Tamara Veko, is one of the five founding directors of CentreAction which is a registered NGO. Pinchook--who has reduced his work-load at university in order to devote more time to CentreAction--stresses the importance of building long-term relationships of trust with the teachers and pupils if the psychological and spiritual damage from Chernobyl is to be dealt with.

I ask the teachers about their hopes for the children. Some sigh at the size of the task. But they too would like the children to have time outside the `zone', especially in Western countries, so that the quantity of radionuclides in their bodies could come down.

Pinchook shows me some research done by Professor Vasilii Nesterenko of Belrad. It includes a table of the levels of radiation in children before and after a two-month holiday in Moldova. The recommended `safe' level for children is 20 becquerels per kg. Before the holiday the average reading was 80-100. Two sisters, born in 1991 and 1993, had readings of 896 and 687. After the holiday some children had acceptable levels and even the sisters had come down to 179 and 157. It turned out that their father was a hunter who brought home meat from the forest.

Back in Mozyr, a city of 105,000 just outside the contaminated zone, I talk with Pinchook and his wife Nathalie, a post-graduate student of diplomacy in Minsk, the Belarusian capital. She, too, is a director of CentreAction. She worked previously as a journalist in Narovlya, a seriously contaminated town, and knows only too well the fear that many live with. `When the wind was from the direction of Chernobyl I was afraid. I was afraid to sunbathe sun·bathe  
intr.v. sun·bathed, sun·bath·ing, sun·bathes
To expose the body to the sun.



sun
 or eat meat that my colleagues offered me. I had to walk through a beautiful park to catch the bus but I didn't dare to step off the asphalt into the woodland which was contaminated.' When she went to a collective farm to write an article she found great fear there, too. People expected to die young.

Alexander Pinchoook sees an important part of CentreAction's work as dealing with the psychological aftermath of Chernobyl, which one psychologist diagnosed as post-traumatic stress disorder post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mental disorder that follows an occurrence of extreme psychological stress, such as that encountered in war or resulting from violence, childhood abuse, sexual abuse, or serious accident. . `Fear and a sense of helplessness lead to apathy,' he believes. Part of the answer lies in self-help schemes. He cites the example of a school where the teachers were complaining they only had black-and-white TV. CentreAction encouraged them to start breeding pigs. The school was able to earn enough to buy the colour TV they needed. The children learn from such schemes that there is something that they can do, and become motivated to observe safety precautions and have faith in the future.

While Pinchook is in favour of sending children abroad for holidays, he says that the benefits will be short-term unless they are taught how to eat safely--in fact Belrad's research suggests that the contamination in children's bodies can return to previous levels within a matter of days. `Many families say that they cannot afford to eat correctly, but although there is genuine poverty the truth is that many do not take the trouble to eat the right food because they are still suffering psychological trauma Psychological trauma is a type of damage to the psyche that occurs as a result of a traumatic event. When that trauma leads to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, damage can be measured in physical changes inside the brain and to brain chemistry, which affect the person's  from the shock of Chernobyl,' he says.

The Pinchooks and Shavrei gain no material reward for their work but say that they do gain a sense of spiritual fulfilment. It is as if they are doing what they know they are meant to do. Of course, says Alexander Pinchook with a note of realism, they can only keep in touch with about 50 schools out of the thousand or so in Gomel province.

As I leave the contaminated zone, two things live with me--the genuine concern expressed by so many of the teachers, some of whom have also suffered as a result of Chernobyl; and the memory of the children who are so vulnerable and need help.

If any reader of `For A Change' would like to have a part in helping the victims of Chernobyl, please write to the editors. We would also like to hear from anyone who has helped with holiday schemes.

Link: www.centreaction.narod.ru

RELATED ARTICLE: How foreign charities are helping.

The biggest UK charity providing holidays for children from all parts of Belarus is Chernobyl Children Life Line (CCLL CCLL Critical Carbohydrate Level for Losing ), a nationwide organization founded by Maltese-born Victor Mizzi. Over 22,000 children have had holidays in the UK as a result of CCLL's work, including 3,000 in 2001.

Mizzi says that there has been a worrying increase in cases of cancer recently, affecting Minsk especially, even though it is outside the officially designated contaminated area. Even babies have been affected. All the children brought to the UK last year were tested for Caesium-137 and every single one was over the recommended level.

Camps for Children of Chernobyl UK (C4CC) is part of a similarly named US organization. Dave Chatfield, the full-time UK coordinator, speaks with enthusiasm about the programmes that they give Belarusian children. Twenty-two were due to arrive shortly after we spoke. They would start with a programme of physical activities at a centre in Hereford called Taste for Adventure, which is run by two former SAS (1) (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, www.sas.com) A software company that specializes in data warehousing and decision support software based on the SAS System. Founded in 1976, SAS is one of the world's largest privately held software companies. See SAS System.  soldiers. The aim is partly to build up their confidence, which is an important part of combating cancer, and to boost their immune systems immune system

Cells, cell products, organs, and structures of the body involved in the detection and destruction of foreign invaders, such as bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells. Immunity is based on the system's ability to launch a defense against such invaders.
. The children, aged from seven to 12, will be given good food and interesting outings. Children who have previously been through this programme arrived with 20,000 radionuclides in their bodies and left with 1,000, Chatfield says.

He has been to Belarus many times and recently visited Chernigov in Ukraine, just a few kms from the Belarusian border, where the contamination is extremely high.

C4CC also sends aid to the contaminated areas. `Three lorry loads lorry load ncarga  of medical supplies, clothes, beds and bedding will be going to Chernigov shortly,' he says. These will be distributed between the children's hospital A children's hospital is a hospital which offers its services exclusively to children. The number of children's hospitals proliferated in the 20th century, as pediatric medical and surgical specialties separated from internal medicine and adult surgical specialties.  and an orphanage ORPHANAGE, Eng. law. By the custom of London, when a freeman of that city dies, his estate is divided into three parts, as follows: one third part to the widow; another, to the children advanced by him in his lifetime, which is called the orphanage; and the other third part may be by him  for 350 children who lost their parents or became disabled as a result of Chernobyl.

A search of the internet revealed similar initiatives in many other countries including Canada, Germany, the USA, Ireland, Denmark, Switzerland, Italy and Japan.
Links:

www.chernobylchildlifeline.org
www.c4cc.org.uk
www.chernobyl-children.org.uk
www.belarusguide.com/chernobyl1D/chlist.htm


RELATED ARTICLE: Chernobyl fact file.

* One of four nuclear reactors in Chernobyl exploded on 26 April, 1986. Some safety systems had been turned off while an experiment was carried out.

* 70 per cent of the radioactive fall-out landed on Belarus, affecting 23 per cent of the country's area. (4.8 per cent of Ukraine and 0.5 per cent of Russia were contaminated.)

* The area within 30 kms of Chernobyl is now deemed uninhabitable.

* It has been estimated that, although different radionuclides were released, the total radioactivity of the material from Chernobyl was 200 times that of the combined releases from the atomic bombs atomic bomb or A-bomb, weapon deriving its explosive force from the release of atomic energy through the fission (splitting) of heavy nuclei (see nuclear energy). The first atomic bomb was produced at the Los Alamos, N.Mex.  dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

* The most dangerous isotopes released were Iodine-131, Strontium-90 and Caesium-137. They have half-lives of 8 days, 29 years and 30 years respectively. Iodine iodine (ī`ədīn, –dĭn) [Gr.,=violet], nonmetallic chemical element; symbol I; at. no. 53; at. wt. 126.9045; m.p. 113.5°C;; b.p. 184.35°C;; sp. gr. 4.93 at 20°C;; valence −1, +1, +3, +5, or +7.  is linked to thyroid cancer Thyroid Cancer Definition

Thyroid cancer is a disease in which the cells of the thyroid gland become abnormal, grow uncontrollably, and form a mass of cells called a tumor.
. Strontium can lead to leukaemia. Caesium caesium

cesium.
 is the element that travelled the furthest. It affects the entire body and especially the liver, heart and spleen spleen, soft, purplish-red organ that lies under the diaphragm on the left side of the abdominal cavity. The spleen acts as a filter against foreign organisms that infect the bloodstream, and also filters out old red blood cells from the bloodstream and decomposes .

* In the area affected by Chernobyl there have been at least 1,800 cases of thyroid cancer in children who were under 15 years of age when the explosion occurred--a far higher incidence than normal.

* The International Committee for Radiation Protection considers that if a child has x times the permitted level of radioactive substances in his or her body, they are x times more likely to suffer cancer or some other disease.

* In February this year the UN called for a new approach to helping the millions of people impacted by Chernobyl. The `emergency phase' is now over, argues a UNDP- and UNICEF-commissioned report, and a new 10-year `recovery phase' must gradually replace it. A fundamental shift is needed in the way assistance is delivered to those impacted by the disaster, says the report, The human consequences of the Chernobyl nuclear accident--a strategy for recovery. It emphasizes the need for long-term community redevelopment and empowerment in which the affected populations play a key role.
Links:

www.un.org/ha/chernobyl/dev2373.html
www.iaea.or.at/worldatom/Press/Focus/Che
rnobyl-15/cherno-faq.shtml


If any reader of `For A Change would like to have a part in helping the victims of Chernobyl, please write to the editors. We would also like to hear from anyone who has helped with holiday schemes.

Link: www.centreaction.narod.ru
COPYRIGHT 2002 For A Change
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Noble, Kenneth
Publication:For A Change
Article Type:Cover Story
Geographic Code:4EXBE
Date:Jun 1, 2002
Words:2626
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