Rosja - Nowosybkow skazenie

EN_00065496_0014
Rosja - Nowosybkow skazenie
PHOTO: EAST NEWS/SIPA PRESS Angler fishing in the lake of Novozybkov. The lake bed was coated in concrete to prevent radioactivity from seeping to the surface. The radioactive fallout in this area was sometimes higher than in Chernobyl itself. Twenty years after the nuclear accident in Chernobyl, the health and environmental impacts are still devastating. Many people were forced to move away from the region where their families had lived for generations. Cancer and related conditions have affected almost the entire population. Novozybkov/RUSSIA-24/4/2005/0511141350 00519171
SUR ONLINE SAUF FRANCE, ALLEMAGNE ET GB Minimum price 50PLN
2005-04-24
EAST NEWS
SIPA
IPON-BONESS/SIPA
NOWOSYBKOW_SKAZENIE15_017
2,56MB
46cm x 35cm przy 300dpi
2005, 4, ACCIDENT, AFFECTED, AFTER, ALMOST, AND, ANGLER, ARE, AREA, AWAY, BED, CANCER, CAPTION, CHERNOBYL, COATED, CONCRETE, CONDITIONS, CZARNOBYL, CZERNOBYL, DEVASTATING, DISASTER, ENTIRE, ENVIRONMENTAL, FALLOUT, FAMILIES, FISHING, FOR, FORCED, FROM, GENERATIONS, HAD, HAVE, HEALTH, HIGHER, IMPACTS, IN, IPON-BONESS, ITSELF, KATASTROFA, LAKE, LEVEL, LIVED, LOCAL, MANY, MOVE, NOVOZYBKOV, NOWOSYBKOW, NUCLEAR, OF, PEOPLE, POLLUTION, POPULATION, POZIOM, PRESS, PREVENT, RADIOACTIVE, RADIOACTIVITY, RADIOAKTYWNOSC, REGION, RELATED, REPORTAZ, SEEPING, SKAZENIE, SOMETIMES, STILL, SURFACE, THAN, THE, THIS, TO, TWENTY, WAS, WEDKARZ, WERE, WHERE, YEARS,