- Title: Tree decorated with memories in ghost town of Prypyat near Chernobyl
- Date: 29th December 2019
- Summary: VARIOUS OF FORMER DJ AT PRYPYAT MUSIC HALL AND RESIDENT OF PRYPYAT, OLEKSANDR DEMIDOV, HANGING DECORATIONS AND PHOTOGRAPHS ON TREE DOLLS AND VINYL RECORDS UNDER TREE (SOUNDBITE) (Russian) FORMER DJ AT PRYPYAT MUSIC HALL AND RESIDENT OF PRYPYAT, OLEKSANDR DEMIDOV, SAYING: "I used to work as a DJ in a city music hall 'Energetik'. The name of our discotheque was 'Disco Edison-2', we worked here from 1980 till 1986. After the accident... On April 27 we had to have a show there. We even did some preparations. We came there on April 26, when rumors were already spreading around that something happened at the nuclear plant. But we came to get ready for the show." DEMIDOV'S DJ BADGE (SOUNDBITE) (Russian) FORMER DJ AT PRYPYAT MUSIC HALL AND RESIDENT OF PRYPYAT, OLEKSANDR DEMIDOV, SAYING: "It was a beautiful city and I would like it to remain the way it was, at least in our memories. At least the city centre must be restored for tourists. And let there be the forest around. Let's leave the windows of the hotel as they are. It will show the contrast. And staff from (other) nuclear plants must come here, especially nuclear scientists, who build nuclear reactors, must know the price of one single mistake and how it buried the town, the beautiful, powerful town of Prypyat."
- Embargoed: 12th January 2020 10:23
- Keywords: Chernobyl Christmas New Year New Year tree Prypyat Ukraine accident nuclear disaster residents
- Location: PRYPYAT, UKRAINE
- City: PRYPYAT, UKRAINE
- Country: Ukraine
- Topics: Disaster/Accidents
- Reuters ID: LVA008BC133A1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: A spruce tree was installed on Wednesday (December 25) on the main square of the abandoned town of Prypyat in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone for the first time since the April 1986 nuclear explosion.
Instead of traditional decorations, former residents of the town hung photographs on the trees branches, recalling happier times before their evacuation as the disaster unfolded.
Most of the residents recalled the day of April 26, 1986, when a botched test at reactor number 4 at the Soviet plant sent clouds of nuclear material billowing across Europe and forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate.
Vera, a former resident who also worked at the power plant, said she remembered her daughter going to watch the flames from the rooftop of a building as pieces of graphite from the burning building began to fall.
Oleksandr Demidov, who used to work as a DJ in a Prypyat music hall, called for the city to be preserved as a warning of the potential risks of nuclear power.
The disaster and the government's handling of it - the evacuation order only came 36 hours after the accident - highlighted the shortcomings of the Soviet system with its unaccountable bureaucrats and entrenched culture of secrecy.
Thirty-one plant workers and firemen died in the immediate aftermath of the accident, mostly from acute radiation sickness.
Thousands more later succumbed to radiation-related illnesses such as cancer, although the total death toll and long-term health effects remain a subject of intense debate.
In Ukraine and other majority-Orthodox countries New Year is celebrated first as Christmas celebrations fall in early January. As in other countries spruce trees are decorated during December and called New Year trees rather than Christmas trees.
(Production: Sergiy Karazy, Margaryta Chornokondratenko) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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