Dozens of Russian infantrymen were reportedly evacuated from the Chernothroughl nuclear power plant due to radiation sickness after digging trenches in forests infected by radioactive fallout.
Seven Vladimir Putin buses suffering from acute radiation syndrome were reportedly transported to a hospital in Belarus from the exclusion zone.
The site of the 1986 nuclear tragedy in northern Ukraine captured in the early days of the war, raising fears of a primary radioactive crisis following intense fighting around the plant.
Russian troops have reportedly dug trenches in the highly poisonous area of the Red Forest, according to the UNIAN news agency.
And according to site personnel, Russian infantrymen drove their tanks and armored cars without radiation cover through the most commonly radioactive domain: lifting clouds of radioactive dust.
One Chernobyl worker called their movements “suicidal” because the radioactive dust they breathed in likely caused internal radiation to their bodies.
The two Ukrainian resources said the convoy’s infantrymen used any anti-radiation apparatus while in the Red Forest, the most radioactively infected part of the domain around Chernobyl.
Yaroslav Yemelianenko, a worker with the Public Council of the Ukrainian State Agency for the Management of Exclusion Zones, said Russian troops were taken to the Belarusian radiotherapy center in Gomel.
Writing on Facebook, he said: “Digging trenches in the Rudu forest?Now the rest of your short life with this. “
“There are regulations for the control of this territory. They are mandatory because radiation is physical, it works independently of persecution. “
Infantrymen in poor health were reportedly taken to Belarus in seven buses as Putin’s “ghost buses” secretly send the corpses of war-torn Russian teenagers out of Ukraine.
The bodies of Russian infantrymen would be taken back to Russia via Belarus in planes, trains and special buses at night to attract attention.
Passengers at an exercise station in Mazyr, Belarus, were “surprised” by the number of bodies loaded, while the hospital warned elsewhere to oppose “overflowing” morgues.
Reports of radiation sickness come after U. S. military resources have been reported. The U. S. military claimed that Russian forces were taking off from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and returning to Belarus in a primary descent.
“Chernobyl is [a] domain where they [the Russians] are going to reposition some of their troops,” a Pentagon official said.
They added that the Russians “leave, away from the Chernobyl facilities and settle in Belarus. “
The official continued: “We think they are leaving, I can’t tell you that they are all gone. “
Earlier Wednesday, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said the United States had noticed Russian troops around the capital, Kiev, to the north or in Belarus.
He was quick to point out that EE. UU. no saw this as a retreat, but as an attempt through Russia to resupply, recondition, and then reposition its troops.
“We don’t know precisely where those troops are going to go,” he said.
Earlier this week, it reported that radioactive curtains had been stolen from the site of the broken nuclear force plant.
In the hands, there is a small threat that the fabrics could be used to create a “dirty bomb,” army experts told WordsSideKick. com.
A grimy bomb is a device that combines radioactive fabrics with a traditional explosive.
Chernobyl is [a] domain where they [the Russians] are going to reposition some of their troops.
Looters seized radioactive isotopes from a laboratory used to monitor radiation degrees at the site.
Ukraine’s state has accused Russian troops of stealing “unstable” nuclear samples from Chernobyl after looting a £5 million laboratory.
Then Putin’s men allegedly destroyed the laboratory full of nuclear waste and in the radioactive exclusion zone.
The firm — guilty of the world’s worst nuclear meltdown in 1986 — said the stolen radionuclides are “very active. “
Radionuclides are volatile atoms of chemical elements that emit radiation; the fact that they are now in the hands of the Russians is a major concern.
He said he hoped Russian troops would “harm themselves and not the civilized world” with their fatal loot from the Central Analysis Laboratory in November.
In a statement, he said: “The laboratory contained highly active samples and samples of radionuclides that are now in the hands of the enemy. “
Earlier this month, Ukraine lost all contact with Chernobyl, raising fears of a damaging loss of strength at the site.
Chernobyl lies miles north of Kiev on a strategic highway to the capital from Belarus, Putin’s puppet state where he has stationed 30,000 soldiers.
Soldiers reportedly fought near the giant sarcophagus sealed in the broken reactor.
After the Russian acquisition, the facility lost power and backup turbines with two days of fuel were left to run the complex.
Chernothroughl personnel were taken hostage by Russian troops, posing another major threat to the day-to-day operation of the site.
The state of the comforts of the nuclear garage of the old plant was “unknown” at the time, a radioactive leak was feared after the intense fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces.
A day after the inauguration, radiation levels from Chernobyl increased, according to Ukrainian authorities.
Ukraine’s State Nuclear Regulation Inspectorate blamed the increase on a “disruption” by the passage of Russian forces.
He said “the huge amount of heavy army apparatus in the exclusion zone” had destabilized the topsoil of the delicate site.
Authorities warned that this had resulted in “the release of infected radioactive dust into the air,” but said the buildup so far was “negligible. “
Last week, wildfires around Chernothroughl sparked by Russian bombing burned 25,000 acres of forest.
Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk accused Russia of “irresponsible” acts around the occupied Chernobyl military plant and suggested the United Nations send a project to assess the risks.
He claimed that Russian forces were preventing firefighters from setting a large number of fires in the domain’s control.
“In the context of nuclear security, the irresponsible and unprofessional moves of the Russian military pose a very serious risk only to Ukraine and to many millions of Europeans,” Vereshchuk said on his Telegram account.
Ukraine’s human rights commissioner, Lyudmila Denisova, warned that a higher point of radioactive pollutants in the air could threaten neighboring countries.
“The control and extinguishing of fires is due to the seizure of the exclusion zone by Russian troops,” he wrote on Facebook.
“As a result of combustion, radionuclides are released into the atmosphere, which are carried by the wind over long distances. This threatens the reach of Ukraine, Belarus and European countries.
The politician warned that intervening could only see “irreparable consequences” for “the total world. “
“The catastrophic consequences can only be avoided by the prompt vacancy of the territory by Russian troops,” Denisova added.
The April 1986 reactor explosion and fire killed at least 31 other people and dumped a huge cloud of radioactive debris into the air.
It blew all over Europe and rained for thousands of kilometers.
The Chernothroughl site still lies across a giant exclusion zone where other people can only stop for short periods of time to avoid maximum doses of radiation.
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