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28 images Created 12 Jul 2021

Chernobyl: In The Belly Of The Beast

Chernobyl: In The Belly Of The Beast

On 26 April 1986 an unauthorised test led to two explosions in the Chernobyl nuclear plant, blowing a hole in the roof of Reactor Number 4, which spewed radioactivity into the surrounding Ukrainian countryside.

For almost two days, while emergency crews struggled to contain what was to be the world’s worst nuclear accident, Soviet authorities claimed that only a minor incident had occurred. It was only when the evacuation of residents began and radiation alarms were triggered in Sweden that the Soviet government finally admitted a nuclear accident had occurred.

Once the reactor fire was extinguished the next problem was to prevent the continuing spread of radioactivity from the disaster zone. This was already becoming widespread through wind and rainwater, as well as the presence of birds and other wildlife. The solution was to encase the ruins of Reactor Number 4 in a huge steel and concrete structure that became known as the sarcophagus, constructed from June to November of that year.

In October 1995 I was the first Western photographer to gain access to the sarcophagus enclosing the remains of Reactor Number 4.
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  • Engineer Mikhail Luchenko stands in the abandoned control room of Reactor No. 4, all the surfaces of which are shrouded in decontaminated plastic.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100116.jpg
  • Workers in protective clothing walk toward Reactor No 4.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100117.jpg
  • Maintenance work inside the sarcophagus which encloses the destroyed Reactor No 4.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100118.jpg
  • Ruins inside the sarcophagus enclosing Reactor No 4.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100166.jpg
  • Maintenance work inside the sarcophagus which encloses the destroyed Reactor No 4.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100156.jpg
  • A memorial to a worker whose body was never recovered in the corridor which connects Reactors 3 & 4.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100119.jpg
  • Staff at work in the still-functioning Reactor No 2.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100141.jpg
  • Staff at work in the still-functioning Reactor No 2.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100142.jpg
  • The sarcophagus which encloses the ruins of Reactor No 4 has huge holes which allow radiation to escape into the surrounding countryside.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100120.jpg
  • Tons of contaminated equipment & vehicles used in the clean-up are dumped near the village of Rasoha - many have been looted for spare parts.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100121.jpg
  • Chernobyl workers pass through radiation checks to and from the closed train which takes them to work at the plant.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100127.jpg
  • The city of Pripyat, within sight of the power plant, and formerly the home of Chernobyl staff and thousands of others, lies deserted.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100135.jpg
  • Radiation emergency leaflets litter an abandoned local administrative office in Pripyat.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100125.jpg
  • Former plant employee Lexai Musenko visits his apartment in the abandoned city of Pripyat and rediscovers a piano he had forgotten he owned. All his other furniture had been stolen.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100134.jpg
  • Amusement park in the city of Pripyat, within sight of the power plant, and formerly the home of Chernobyl staff and thousands of others, lies deserted.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100122.jpg
  • The city of Pripyat, within sight of the power plant, and formerly the home of Chernobyl staff and thousands of others, lies deserted. The fallen sign reads "Glory to our free Motherland".
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100157.jpg
  • A kiosk in the city of Pripyat, within sight of the power plant, and formerly the home of Chernobyl staff and thousands of others, lies deserted.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100132.jpg
  • The city of Pripyat, within sight of the power plant, and formerly the home of Chernobyl staff and thousands of others, lies deserted.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100126.jpg
  • Measuring contamination near Gomel in the closed and radioactive zone surrounding Chernobyl.
    Chernobyl-Zone-by100080.jpg
  • Bulldozing homes near Gomel in Belarus in the closed and radioactive zone surrounding Chernobyl.
    Chernobyl-Zone-by100071.jpg
  • Like many older residents Maria Kirilenko has returned to live illegally in her home in the closed and radioactive zone surrounding Chernobyl.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100124.jpg
  • Like many older residents Ulyanna Kolyenchuk [left] & Maria Kirilenko have returned to live illegally in their homes in the closed and radioactive zone surrounding Chernobyl.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100155.jpg
  • Like many older residents Yelisavola Ryka  has returned to live illegally in her home in the closed and radioactive zone surrounding Chernobyl.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100147.jpg
  • Children and others are checked and treated in a Belarus hospital for the effects of radiation from the accident.
    Chernobyl-Zone-by100072.jpg
  • Children undergoing cancer treatment in a Belarus hospital against the  effects of radiation from the accident.
    Chernobyl-Zone-by100074.jpg
  • Children undergoing cancer treatment in a Belarus hospital against the  effects of radiation from the accident.
    Chernobyl-Zone-by100075.jpg
  • Operations in a Belarus hospital on cancer victims suffering from the effects of radiation from the accident.
    Chernobyl-Zone-by100076.jpg
  • The abandoned & closed radioactive zone around the plant.
    Chernobyl-Zone-ua100143.jpg