Forest Fire Threatens Ukraine’s Chernobyl Nuclear Zone

19629568-UKRAINE-CHERNOBYL-04_26_2012
Associated Press

(Reuters) KIEV – Emergency services were battling on Tuesday to prevent Ukraine’s largest forest fire since 1992 from spreading towards the abandoned Chernobyl nuclear power plant, Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk said.

Earlier, the interior ministry had warned that high winds were blowing the fire in northern Ukraine towards Chernobyl, where in 1986 a reactor fire led to the world’s worst nuclear disaster.

A 30 km (18.6 miles) exclusion zone remains in place around the plant, which remains contaminated by radioactive particles.

“The situation is being controlled, but this is the biggest fire since 1992. We’ve not had this scale of fire,” Ukraine’s Interfax news agency reported Yatseniuk as telling journalists.

“It is around 20 kilometres (from the fire) to the plant. Our emergency services are actively working there to prevent the fire spreading further,” he said.

In February, international experts warned that a large amount of dangerous isotopes remained in the forests near Chernobyl, which could be spread by forest fires.

Read the full story at Reuters.

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