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a wasted land

10 years later, through fear,
chernobyl still kills in belarus
march 31, 1996


SAVICHI, Belarus--This has been a cheerless decade for 18-year-old
Svetlana Lebenok.  She never finished school because there are
no longer any schools around here to finish.  Her three older brothers
spend their days tethered to a vodka bottle.  Her parents live
like invalids.  

     So when she heard there might be a job open in this emotionally
scarred, ecologically poisoned village not far from her home, and only 
about 10 miles north of the Chernobyl nuclear power station in Ukraine, 
she wasted no time worrying about her health.  She just grabbed it.  

     Everyone is afraid here all the time," she said, standing behind 
the counter of the only store in this mostly abandoned village, where 
she rents a room from an older woman because there are no buses to 
take her home at night.  "People talk a lot about how Chernobyl killed 
our country.  That may be.  But sometimes I think the fear is worse 
than the sickness."  

     Ten years after the catastrophe at Unit 4 of the V. I. Lenin
Atomic Power Station turned the word Chernobyl into the world's
foremost symbol of technological disaster, the legacy of the accident
can be felt in every part of this wasted land.  The fire, which
burned out of control for five days, spewed more than 50 tons
of radioactive fallout across Belarus, Ukraine and western Russia.

     Even now, the full medical consequences of the accident are
unclear, but some truths have emerged.  

     In terms of deaths--and even probable long-term illness--
Chernobyl was not the worst industrial accident of recent times.
Fewer than 500 people have died so far as a direct result.  By
contrast, the chemical leak at Bhopal, India, in 1984 killed at
least 2,000 people and injured 200,000.  Oil fires during the Persian
Gulf war in Kuwait and enormous pipeline spills in Russia may
have caused more serious immediate damage to the environment.

     But in terms of political significance, economic dislocation
and absolute and enduring fear, Chernobyl stands alone.  

     "It's not too much to say that Chernobyl helped destroy the 
Soviet Union and end the cold war," said Richard Wilson, professor 
of physics at Harvard University.  

     "What it did to Belarus is hard to describe," he said while 
attending a recent conference in Minsk, the capital, on the effects 
of the accident.  "But the worst disease here is not radiation 
sickness.  Except for children, the physical effects are not easy 
to measure.  The truth is that the fear of Chernobyl has done 
much more damage than Chernobyl itself."  

     Those are strong words, but even a few figures--and some
time spent traveling through the partial ghost towns of southern
Belarus--bear them out.  The radiation released after the explosion
at the reactor's core on April 26, 1986, was nearly 200 times
that of the combined releases from the atomic bombs at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki in 1945.  

     The wind carried by far the heaviest radioactive deposits across
this country, where even today 25 percent of the land is considered
uninhabitable.  Thousands of villages were abandoned.  Schools were
closed, prime cattle were slaughtered by the ton, huge factories
were shut without a second thought.  Desperate villagers fled their
homes with only the clothes on their backs.  

     The Government here says it devotes more than 15 percent of
its gross national product--a total of more than $235 billion
over the last decade--to paying the cost of resettling tens
of thousands of people, as well as the medical and social bills
growing from Chernobyl, which is still operating just across the
border.  Yet nobody is sure it is making any progress.  

The Fallout The Deepest Scars Are in the Mind

     The worst scars have settled in the mind.  And no place has
been punished more than the Gomel region of Belarus, where the
Soviet authorities denied the accident for several days, allowing
people to linger in the radiation, then lied about its severity.

     An area of nearly 2 million people--20 percent of the country's
population--Gomel once had the most fertile farmland in all
Belarus.  Today it is as if somebody had sown the land with salt:
20 of 21 agricultural districts produce nothing.  People have become
paralyzed with fear.  They are afraid to move, afraid to stay,
afraid to marry and afraid to have families.  All normal life stopped
here simply because there was a strong northerly wind on April
26, 1986.  

     For months after the accident, from northern Finland to the
Adriatic Sea, thousands of women had abortions in panic over the
possible effects of exposure to radiation.  In Gomel, even today,
there are three abortions for every live birth, a rate more than
twice that for the rest of the country.  

     "People say we are not really sicker than anyone else in the 
former Soviet Union," said Nikokai I.  Ermakov, the man in charge 
of Gomel's response to the accident.  "They are talking about 
blood diseases and death rates.  That is not my interest.  My 
interest is life in Gomel.  Here we have no jobs.  The pristine 
forests have radiation signs posted all over them.  Poor farmers 
cannot eat what they grow.  Is it so strange that what happened 
here seems like a biblical curse?"  

     The city of Gomel, 70 miles north of Chernobyl, has more 
than half a million residents.  But it is barren in the surrounding
region, where the soil still holds most of the radioactive fallout.
Driving south into the Exclusion Zone--the area within an 18-mile
radius of Chernobyl that is still considered too polluted for
human habitation--presents a visitor with one of modern life's
eeriest visions.  

     Scores of farms, villages and hamlets remain empty here.  Huge
cafeterias, the buildings where most people ate all their meals
in Soviet times, have been stripped and their deeply contaminated
parts sold on the black market.  Cars lie partly buried in the
loamy soil, and empty buckets hover silently over poisoned wells.

     Deserted houses stand with coats on still on hooks.  There are
butter churns, pots on the shelves and stacks of newspapers 
everywhere.  "My dearest Lydia," reads one postcard on the floor
of a house in the empty village of Molochki, dated a couple weeks
before the accident.  "I hope you pass the exams successfully.
Best of luck and cheer up.  Your loving grandma Sasha."  Half
a dozen dolls were strewn nearby.  

     Several thousand people still live scattered in some of these
towns.  They are not supposed to, but many have no choice.  The
radiation was deposited unevenly across the region, with some
villages heavily contaminated and neighboring villages almost
untouched.  Most residents attribute every ill or problem in their
lives to "the station," which is what they call Chernobyl.

     "My teeth are falling out, and I can't see too well anymore,"
said Volodya Ronashev, a 48-year-old forest administrator who
lives and works in the zone.  "I used to be healthy.  What
else could it be but the station?"  

     The truth about the causes of medical illness is often hard
to find, and much harder to prove.  There seems little doubt that
Chernobyl's enormous release of radiation has affected the thyroids
of many thousand children in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine.  

     The rise in cancer rates is too stark for any other conclusion.
There were seven cases of thyroid cancer among children in Belarus
in the decade preceding the accident.  Since 1990 there have been
more than 300 cases, almost none of which have so far been fatal.
But what about other diseases?  Are people in this contaminated
land really sicker than anywhere else?  

     "Nuclear energy is invisible," said Dr. Johan Havenaar, chief of 
emergency psychiatry at the University Hospital in Utrecht, the 
Netherlands.  "It's treacherous.  It scares people so they think it 
causes them to be sick."  

The Survivors:  Many Accept Fate In Uncertain Land

     Like most doctors or radiation specialists, Dr. Havenaar readily
concedes that it is too early to know everything about the effects
of Chernobyl.  But he decided to test the widely held belief that
people in Gomel are already sicker than people elsewhere.  

     He compared about 1,500 Gomel residents with a similar sample
from the northern Russian town of Tver, where no radioactivity
from Chernobyl had been detected.  The Gomel Project, as the study
came to be known, lasted from 1992 to 1995 and included the most
exhaustive medical examinations the participants had ever received.

     The study showed that the people from Gomel said they were
five times as sick as those from Tver.  And they almost always
attributed those illnesses to some result of radiation from Chernobyl.
In reality, after clinical exams, the level and types of physical
illness were similar--but psychological distress in Gomel was
far greater.  

     "These people are sick," Dr. Havenaar said.  "It's just not the 
type of illness they think.  We have to realize that the psychological 
damage here runs very deep.  And we need to treat that every bit 
as vigorously as we need to treat cancer."

     Svetlana Lebenok, the shop clerk who rents a room in the 
radiated depths of Savichi so that she can sell butter and eggs to 
the 35 families left living there--and make extra wages doing it
in a danger zone--put the issue another way.  "I don't think
my parents have really done anything at all but sit in a room
since the accident," she said.  "They weren't injured.  I know 
that.  People with cancer get help.  But isn't there anything
they can do for everyone else?  There must be some answer."

     The reality is that there are no simple answers to the range
of health, environmental and money problems created by the Chernobyl
accident.  Eight times in the last decade the leaders of Ukraine
have decided to close the giant facility's remaining three reactors.
And eight times they have changed their minds because shutting
the plant would strip 5,000 jobs from a region already devastated
economically.  

     For Belarus, the problem is even more acute.  The country most
affected by history's worst nuclear accident does not even have
a nuclear power plant.  Belarus opposed the dissolution of the
Soviet Union, and when it was left alone it was left with immense
bills it could not possibly handle.  An agricultural land tainted
by the ultimate modern poison is of little use to anyone.  

     The people here have long sought to reunite with Russia, in
part so that it may better pay for Chernobyl.  [On March 23 the
two Slavic countries agreed to form a union that would tie them
to each other politically, economically and culturally, though
they would remain separate countries.] 

     "The Chernobyl disaster taught us there are no borders to the
modern world," said Ivan A.  Kenik, the chief Belarus official in 
charge of the Chernobyl aftermath.  "It taught us to question faith 
in technology and in ourselves.  I now wonder if we as a civilization 
have the knowledge, strength and wisdom to survive this nuclear 
century?"  

     Many of the people living in the region think they already know 
the answer.  There has always been such a lack of certainty about 
the effects of the accident and information from the Government
and health experts that nobody believes much of anything now.
Relatively few even seek answers, although several health centers
are available for questions every day.  

     For years after the accident all those in the Gomel area got
extra wages and free medical care.  When the Government realized
it could not keep up the policy for much longer, it applied a 12 
percent "Chernobyl tax" to wage earners.  Even so, the benefits 
are no longer available to most people.  

     "They come around here and ask us why we never left," said 
Elena A.  Shagovika, a 67-year-old resident of Khoiniki, about 30 
miles north of the reactor.  "Where were we going to go?  And 
what would we do there?  When my old neighbors come back to see 
us they just stand in the road and weep.  We don't belong anywhere
else.  We belong here."  

The Dislocated:  Those Who Left Feel Worst of All

     Most studies have shown that the people who feel worst about
the accident and their lives are the nearly 200,000 refugees who
have been resettled in other parts of Belarus.  Those who stood
their ground, usually out of necessity, like Mrs. Shagovika, seem
to have a better attitude about their fate.  

     "At least I am at home," she said.  Her house is a two-room 
wooden cottage on a road only a few hundred yards from a fence 
that marks the beginning of the forbidden zone.  Most other houses 
there have long been deserted.  The window panes all blew out 
years ago.  

     But there are a few children playing in the street these days
-- new residents from parts of the former Russian empire where
persecution and uncertainty make this quiet town look promising.
Mrs. Shagovika eats the food and drinks the milk drawn from her
cow.  People tell her it is dangerous but it is not as if they are 
busing in new supplies very often.  

     "I have to die sometime," she said, having resigned herself to 
whatever fate was assigned to her on a spring day in 1986.  "I 
want to do it in a comfortable place."  

     But the people of Microregion 17 of Gomel are not happy.  
Evacuated from the most dangerous parts of the exclusion zone, 
they have been forced to trade their simple wooden homes for 
cramped, windy apartments on the soulless edge of the sprawling 
city.  Empty vodka bottles carpet the roads leading to the 
housing project.  

     "If I knew it would be this bad, I would have chained myself to 
the gates back home," Tamara Lusenko said.  She was forcibly 
evacuated shortly after the accident and now lives in a place that 
to her is like a prison.  

     "Is the danger really so bad there now?"  she asked wistfully, 
hoping for the all clear.  "Isn't it time we all went home?"  

     That is a question that may never be answered.  Not even the
experts know what long-term exposure to low doses of radiation
does to people.  Many suspect the effects will not be nearly as
severe as once feared.  But it will take a generation or more to
be certain.  

     "We are the great guinea pigs of modern times," said Yevgeny 
Konoplya, director of the Radiobiology Institute of the Belarus 
Academy of Sciences and an expert on post-Chernobyl effects.


     "We are getting to prove for the world what radiation can do 
to humans," he said.  "We have suffered from the policies of a 
country that no longer even exists.  We have suffered from lies.  
And we have suffered from other people's belief in technology.  
We once had a beautiful country.  What we have now is pain." 
tophome
Copyright (1996) The New York Times Company.  Reprinted by 
Permission. New York Times material may not be used in any 
manner except for personal reference without the written 
permission of The New York Times Company.