Fire burns in Chernobyl exclusion zone, radiation levels unchanged

SHARE Fire burns in Chernobyl exclusion zone, radiation levels unchanged
UKRAINE_CHERNOBYL_FIRE_53422677_999x664.jpg

Fire hits an abandoned village in the exclusion zone around Chernobyl, Ukraine, Tuesday, April 28, 2015, as fire has engulfed a large sector of woods in the exclusion zone around the destroyed Chernobyl nuclear power plant. | Andrew Kravchenko / AP

KIEV, Ukraine — There has been no change in background radiation levels in the Ukrainian capital as a result of nighttime fires in woodlands in the exclusion zone around the destroyed Chernobyl nuclear power plant, Ukrainian authorities said Wednesday.

The emergency services agency said in a statement that isotope levels in surface soil and water are within the norm.

Authorities in neighboring Belarus, which lies adjacent to the exclusion zone, said it too had detected no change in radiation in its southern regions.

A fire strip crosses a forest floor in the Chernobyl area, Ukraine, Tuesday, April 28, 2015. | Andrew Kravchenko / AP

Kiev, the capital of Ukraine, lies less than 100 kilometers (60 miles) downriver from the zone around Chernobyl, which was heavily contaminated by radiation from the 1986 reactor explosion and fire.

A 30-kilometer (18.6-mile) zone around the plant is off-limits to most people except for workers constructing a new shelter to cover the destroyed reactor’s building, and to visitors on short trips.

Authorities said Tuesday evening’s fire swept through 400 hectares (1.5 square miles) of woodland.

Belarus was hardest hit by the Chernobyl accident with 70 percent of the country’s territory affected to some extent by radiation.

Yury Golikov, head of the information department at the Belarus state center for radiation pollution, said that a blaze at least half the size of that seen in 1986 would be required to lead to a change in background radiation levels.

Ukrainian officials warned Tuesday evening that the situation could be complicated by the strong winds blowing the fire in the direction of the plant. But Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said the winds had died down later in the night.

Security was tightened around the perimeter of the exclusion zone amid suspicions the blaze had been sparked intentionally, Avakov said.

“Patrols have been stepped up. National Guard and Interior Ministry units have been placed on high alert,” he said in a statement.

UKRAINE_CHERNOBYL_FIRE_53422681.jpg

An aerial view of a forest fire in the Chernobyl area, Ukraine, Tuesday, April 28, 2015, as fire has engulfed a large sector of woods in the exclusion zone around the destroyed Chernobyl nuclear power plant. | Andrew Kravchenko / AP

A firefighting plane extinguishes a forest fire in the Chernobyl area, Ukraine, Tuesday, April 28, 2015.

____________________Yuras Karmanau in Minsk, Belarus, contributed to this report.

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