40 Years After Chernobyl, Disinformation Campaign Still Distorts Nuclear Debate, Experts Warn

Date:

The Sarcophagus of the Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor number 4 in Chernobyl, Ukraine, on Jan. 25, 2006. Daniel Berehulak/Getty ImagesThe Chernobyl nuclear disaster. Widely held beliefs include that hundreds of thousands—even millions—of people died from radiation-induced cancer; ecosystems were ravaged; and territories left uninhabitable for millennia.April 26 marked the 40th anniversary of the disaster. Several experts, as well as the French Association for Scientific Information, an organization backed by Nobel-laureate scientists, caution that public memory of the disaster has been shaped less by epidemiological evidence than by a long-running narrative effort sustained by ideological and economic interests.

spot_imgspot_imgspot_img

Share post:

More like this
Related

Vance and Iranian Negotiators in Switzerland for Peace Talks

U.S. Vice President JD Vance, U.S. President Donald Trump's...

Canada Imposes 10 Percent Tariff on Imported Canned Vegetables to Support Domestic Producers

A customer shops at a grocery store in Toronto...

Thousands of Canadians Logged 100-Plus Doctor Visits Annually: Report

Medical devices are seen in an examination room at...

US, Uzbekistan Launch Joint Investment Platform With an Eye on China

(L–R) U.S. International Development Finance Corporation CEO Ben Black,...