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United Nations A
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General Assembly A/45/PV.32
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Forty-fifth session
Excerpts from the provisional verbatim record of the thirty- second
meeting held at Headquarters, New York on Tuesday, 23 October
1990,
at 10 a.m.
Mr. Blix (IAEA):
..
The technical causes and phases of the Chernobyl accident were
analysed in detail
under the auspices of the IAEA in 1986 and the Agency has since
then been
continuously engaged in various studies concerning the accident.
This year, renewed
attention has been drawn to the radiological consequences of the
accident through
appeals made last spring by the Byelorussian, Ukrainian and Russian
Republics. Many
United Nations bodies and specialized agencies have been called
upon to provide
assistance of various kinds to the affected Republics. Preparations
for decisions on
assistance are under way. At the reguest of the Soviet Union,
the IAEA and a number
of international organizations - such as the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the
United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP), the World
Health Organization (WHO) and the Commission of the European Communities
- with the
full participation of the affected Republics have organized an
international expert
assessment of the radiological consequences of the accident and
of the protective
measures taken.
The work of technical missions - corroborating existing data
and assessing the
current radiological situation, individual and collective doses,
environmental
contamination and clinical health effects and evaluating the protective
measures
taken - will be completed by the end of this month. An interim
report has been
submitted to the United Nations to be considered in the context
of the United Nations
system's response in mitigating the consequences of the accident.
The assessment will
be concluded by the end of the year and in early 1991 an International
Advisory
Committee will review the task group reports and prepare a comprehensive
report that
will be published by the International Atomic Energy Agency. A
very substantial
effort is going into this assessment. Over 100 international experts
in different
fields have visited affected areas and thousands of measurements
have been taken. The
purpose of course is not only to obtain as accurate an assessment
as possible but
also, when such an assessment is made, to help identify the most
appropriate
responses.
Turning to IAEA activities to strengthen nuclear safety I should
mention that a
conference will be arranged by the IAEA in September 1991 to discuss
the next phase
of international co-operation in the field of the safety of nuclear
power, including
final disposal of waste. After the Chernobyl accident in 1986,
an expanded nuclear
safety programme was launched in the IAEA and many new activities
were embarked upon.
It is felt that the time has come not only to assess what has
been accomplished but
also to map the road to be taken in the future. Even though ultimate
responsibility
for nuclear power safety remains vested in the Governments of
the countries in which
the nuclear activity is taking place, safety is at the same time
considered a
question of international concern.
...
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Mr. Kravchanka (Byelorussian SSR ) (interpretation from Russian):
...
Mankind will most probably not be able to do without the peaceful
uses of nuclear
technology both now and in the future, but every country and every
people has the
right to determine when, how and in what circumstances they should
be used in its
economic development strategy and its strategy for preserving
environmental balance
and the biosphere. It is not a mere coincidence that in 11 out
of the 27 countries
where there are currently nuclear power stations in operation,
no new nuclear plant
is currently under construction.
It is obviously completely out of the question to construct
nuclear power stations in
areas which have already suffered the effects of nuclear accidents-from
a
humanitarian standpoint, principally. Our Parliament and Government,
in view of the
situation in which the Byelorussian people finds itself and in
the light of the
categorical demands the public has made, have taken the decision
to halt the
construction of two nuclear power stations in Byelorussian territory,
in our
Republic, there has been enthusiastic support for the decision
by the Ukrainian SSR
to shut down the Chernobyl nuclear power station completely.
The fears Chernobyl caused for the future of nuclear power
in the minds of its
advocates are no justification for the lack of information available
to the world
community about the true scale of the Chernobyl disaster, since
this lack merely
holds back the development of international solidarity and the
flow of voluntary
assistance to the victims. Without over-dramatizing the situation,
I can state that
among the people of the Republic, who are living in a very difficult
situation in
psychological terms, there has emerged a clear element of mistrust
in respect of the
activities of the official structures, particularly those in place
in 1986, and there
is also hope that international assistance will be increased.
I want to be completely
frank with the Assembly: the bitter truth is that it is only now,
four and a half
years later, that we are finally and with tremendous difficulty
making a breach in
the wall of indifference, silence and lack of sympathy, and for
this we ourselves are
largely to blame.
The verdict of history has yet to be passed on those in our
Republic who for over
three years hid the truth about the effects of the accident from
our people. It is
difficult to say why they did this, and to disentangle cause from
effect: was the
deception caused by secrecy, or was the secrecy the result of
the deception? Either
way, it was inhuman.
Practically everyone in this Hall now will have had occasion
to use a map, but I do
not think I will be wrong if I say that only those in the Ukrainian
and Byelorussian
delegations will ever have had to use charts of radiation levels
in their daily
lives. Our newspapers print them: just imagine a situation in
which the life of every
family, every individual, must be organized, every day, around
such charts. We are
literally living under the sword of Damocles.
A mere glance at these charts will make it clear to you how
unprecedented the
situation in Byelorussia is in its complexity. Seventy per cent
of the Chernobyl
radionuclides landed on Byelorussia. They have contaminated a
third of its territory.
One in five of the total population, 2,200,000 people, including
almost 800,000
children, have become the innocent victims of Chernobyl, hostages
to the hazardous
aftermath of radiation. From 120,000 to 150,000 people residing
in zones of
especially high risk are awaiting relocation to settlements now
under construction in
uncontaminated areas. The geographical limits and the safety criteria
for living in
the contaminated parts of the Republic have yet to be precisely
defined. Over 30,000
people were evacuated in the very first months after the Chernobyl
catastrophe. This
area is now a radiation desert, depopulated no-go areas covering
many hundreds of
thousands of hectares, fenced off with barbed wire. It will be
impossible to live
there for hundreds of years to come, even according to the most
optimistic estimates.
New patches of radiation contamination keep appearing. Decontamination
is not
producing the results we hoped for. Radionuclides are spreading
throughout the
Republic and are threatening to spread even beyond. They have
been detected in people
even in uncontaminated areas.
In order to fully comprehend the enormity of what has happened
it is necessary to
review the history of the Byelorussian people within the context
of European history.
There are not many peoples to which history has been as cruel
as it has been to the
Byelorussian people. More than once over the last centuries it
has seen its capacity
for survival put to the test. For centuries our territory, which
has been a kind of
cross-roads of Europe, has not been spared a single invasion,
campaign or aggression.
Wars and plagues have with terrible and implacable regularity
at least once a century
reduced the Byelorussian population by a quarter to a half. Between
the middle of the
seventeenth century and the end of the eighteenth, its population
was halved. At the
end of the seventeenth century fewer than one million people were
left on our soil.
Our stock was on the brink of physical extinction. At the beginning
of the nineteenth
century we lost a quarter of our population. In the years of the
First World War we
lost a fifth of our population. And the whole world knows that
in the holocaust of
the Second World War one out of four inhabitants of our Republic
was killed.
At the site of Khatyn, the peaceful inhabitants of the Byelorussian
village were put
to the torch along with the village. In the Memorial Centre there
now stand in
mourning three birch trees, and in place of the fourth tree burns
an eternal flame in
memoriam. I should like to stress that it has taken a full 30
years for the
population to be restored to the pre-war figure.
Then there was this new ordeal: Chernobyl, the Calvary of the
twentieth century for
the Byelorussian people. As I stand at this rostrum, in my mind
I can hear the now
stilled voices of my people cry out over and over again the same
question: why? why?
In Slavic languages, including the Ukrainian and Byelorussian
languages, there is a
word "chernobyl", which means wormwood, bitter grass.
This has striking relevance to
the Chernobyl tragedy. I am no fatalist. I do not believe in the
blind inevitability
of fate, but who can fail to be moved by these tragic and elegiac
words from
Revelation, which must leave their indelible imprint on the heart:
"... and there fell a great star from heaven, burning
as it were a lamp,
and it fell upon the third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains
of
water;
And the name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third
part of the
waters became wormwood; and many men died of the waters, because
they were
made bitter." (The Holy Bible, Revelation 8:10-11)
At the end of the twentieth century the human intellect-educated
in rationalism, in
faith, in the creative power of science and knowledge-refuses
to accept that those
words may prove prophetic and fateful for the Byelorussian people.
To prevent
Chernobyl from becoming an irreversible tragedy for the Byelorussian
people, we must
immediately adopt a more comprehensive set of additional measures,
particularly
medical and biological measures. The reality is vastly different
from the earlier
estimates of Soviet and foreign experts. This has been demonstrated
by reliable data
concerning the deterioration in the health of our Republic's inhabitants.
There is a particular danger to the thyroid glands of children.
Even now, in the
southern area of Byelorussia, the average incidence of thyroid
disease has doubled.
In zones affected by radiation there has been a seven-fold or
eight-fold increase in
the incidence of anaemia; a ten-fold increase in chronic pathology
of the
nasopharynx; and a 1.5 to two-fold increase in the number of congenital
birth
defects.
The manifold changes in the immune, endocrine, nervous and
hemogeilic systems of the
human body and their slow and steady progression constitute a
sort of radiation AIDS.
A serious threat is posed by deferred oncological and genetic
pathologies. An upward
trend has been observed in the incidence of cancer and leukemia
among children.
According to the estimates of certain authoritative American researchers,
the number
of cancer cases is expected to reach its peak between 1994 and
1996.
The chronic effects of radiation over a number of generations
may lead to a geometric
increase in the level of mutations. There exists a genuine threat
to the gene pool of
our nation. The potential genetic threat to the population, as
is clearly shown by
data from a sociological survey, in the next few years may form,
in the sphere of
marriage and in other areas of human relations, a kind of band
of outcasts. A
demographic decline has already begun. The natural population
growth of the
Byelorussian SSR decreased from 7.4 per thousand in 1986 to 5.1
per thousand in 1989.
Our Republic is taking extraordinary measures. The Byelorussian
SSR has appealed to
the world community for assistance and co-operation, and it is
grateful for the
international solidarity and support that has been provided. However,
assistance has
come mainly through non-governmental channels. We appreciate the
co-operation that
has begun with the international specialized agencies of the United
Nations and with
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
A second Chernobyl must be prevented. We need the full store
of international
experience in the struggle against the consequences of such disasters.
Such
experience could be useful for the international community since
the Chernobyl
disaster has global consequences. This was shown in the report
of the Scientific
Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation published in 1988
and compiled on the
basis of data provided by 34 countries.
The fields of future international co-operation will be defined
in large measure by
the results of international research and expert missions carried
out in the affected
areas, in which a number of intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations have
taken part, including the United Nations system, particularly
the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and
IAEA, as well as the
Commission of European Communities, the League of the Red Cross
and Red Crescent
Societies and tho World Council of Churches.
Our constant interest in the various forms of co-operation
with the IAEA has been
demonstrated by the scientific examination of radiological effects
carried out under
the auspices of the Agency and the signing by the Byelorussian
SSR, the USSR and the
Ukrainian SSR with the IAEA of the quadripartite agreement on
conducting
international research, and the bilateral agreement with the Agency
on receiving
technical assistance.
Our Republic intends to participate actively in working out
the strategy of
rehabilitating ecological systems, preserving human health and
protecting the
population against radiation. We are interested in the activities
of, and
co-operation with, IAEA on the quantification of levels of radiation
and
radioactivity in food and animal fodder for intervention criteria
and recognition of
the role of "hot particles", effects of low-level radiation,
radio-biological effects
and other deferred consequences.
We propose that an international centre be set up in the Byelorussian
SSR
specifically designed to study hitherto unknown radiation ecological,
and
radiobiological problems which would logically supplement the
international research
of the Chernobyl centre in the Ukrainian SSR and the radiation
medical centre in
Obninsk in the Russian Federation.
The Byelorussian SSR proposes a review of the criteria, terms
and procedures for the
adoption of relevant decisions in the IAEA, the United Nations
Development Programme
(UNDP) and other international agencies and programmes within
the framework of the
United Nations system for the provision of special assistance
to States in cases of
transboundary nuclear damage.
These should be primarily States which do not possess the necessary
national capacity
to take protective measures. We propose also to set up a special
voluntary Chernobvl
trust fund for the financing of appropriate programmes of international
co-operation
and assistance. If such a fund is set up we are firmly convinced
that its Board could
include eminent political figures, former presidents, Heads of
State or Government,
businessmen, prominent representatives of the scientific and cultural
communities,
leaders of religious communities and faiths and famous sportsmen.
The IAEA, the
Interagency Committee on Reacting to Cases of Nuclear Accidents,
and a number of
specialized agencies and organs within the United Nations system
could also
participate in activities of such a fund.
Today we wish to make one more proposal: to proclaim 26 April,
the day when Chernobyl
disaster occurred, as an international day for the prevention
of nuclear and other
industrial disasters. I wish to emphasize that the Parliaments
Byelorussia and the
Ukraine by special decrees have already proclaimed 26 April, the
day of the Chernobyl
tragedy, a day of mourning and remembrance.
The Byelorussian SSR believes it to be very important for the
forty-fifth session of
the General Assembly to adopt a special resolution which would
reflect an
understanding of the global nature of the catastrophe and to formulate
concrete plans
for stepping up co-ordinated action between the United Nations
system, including the
IAEA, and other international organizations in order to ease and
minimize the global
and local consequences of Chernobyl.
In conclusion, I should like to express the hope that the decisions
to be taken by
the forty-fifth session of the General Assembly on the IAEA report
and also on
questions of the effects of atomic radiation and international
co-operation in the
easing and minimizing of the consequences of the Chernobyl catastrophe
will promote
more active co-operation among United Nations member States and
increase the
effectiveness of the work of the Agency itself.
All those problems can be resolved only if there is harmonious
interaction between
ecology and politics, radiation safety and morality and further
advances in
scientific thought and genuine humanism.
I am firmly convinced that the world community will not be
able to enter the
twenty-first century with a clear conscience without solving global
problems,
particularly those related to the prevention of war and the elimination
of hunger,
disease and underdevelopment-and here we declare our full solidarity
with our
brothers in the developing countries-including the problem of
saving the people who
suffered from Chernobyl-Russians, Ukrainians, Byelorussians and
other
nationalities-the matter of eliminating the threat to the heriditary
identity of the
nation.
Let us hope that it wiil not be the words quoted above that
great literary monument
of all times and peoples, the Bible, that will be prophetic and
prove to be our fate
but rather the words of our national Byelorussian poet, Ouladzimir
Dubouka, ringing
with faith in the indomitable will, steadfastness and tremendous
vitality of our
people:
"Oh, Belarus, my wild rose,
A green leaf, a red flower
Neither whirlwind will ever bind you
Nor chernobyl [wormwood] will ever cover"
Our people believe and trust that people of good will, fellow
residents of our common
home, planet Earth, will not leave us to face catastrophe alone.
The meeting rose at 11.45 a.m.
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United Nations Page on Chernobyl Disaster