Local personnel follow procedures to minimize their exposure.Certain Russian user wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 4:32 amHmm, interesting question... maybe because there are no any such photos?
Try to grasp this: they stayed there for a month jointly and in the same conditions with local personnel who was there permanently. Local personnel does not suffering any terrible consequences. And now try to draw conclusions. I hope this will not be so difficult with your bachelor degree.
...
Source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... world.htmlAround 3,000 live inside the exclusion zone for up to 14 days at a time carrying out their dangerous work, while another 3,800 live on the borders of the exclusion zone and commute in.
They inhabit towns such as Slavutich, Ukraine, located just over 40 miles away from Chernobyl, which was built to house 25,000 former exclusion zone residents. Each day three ‘elektrichka’ trains ferry workers to the site, via Belarus, and then back again, having passed through radiation detectors.
In contrast, Russian soldiers have reportedly acted with reckless disregard to hazardous conditions.
Source: https://fortune.com/2022/03/29/chernoby ... radiation/Shortly after the occupation started, Ukrainian officials warned that radiation levels at Chernobyl were rising due to a large number of heavy military machines disturbing the topsoil around the area. These reports have now been confirmed by employees working at Chernobyl around the time of the invasion who observed “a big convoy of military vehicles” driving straight through zones so contaminated with radiation that even trained safety workers at Chernobyl are not allowed to venture there.
Russian armored vehicles without radiation protection were seen driving through an area called the “Red Forest,” an area of woods four square miles in size surrounding the power plant. The area absorbed so much radiation from the Chernobyl explosion that its trees turned a gingery brown color, giving the forest its nickname. It is considered one of the world’s most radioactive places.
The employees said that the military vehicles kicked up a “big column of dust,” which may be what sent radiation levels soaring in the area following the invasion. The workers believed that breathing in that much radioactive dust could cause radiation poisoning, which can quickly turn lethal.
You speak of me being glad of losses of Russian forces in the fighting, yet you rationalize and are in denial concerning the policies that put them at risk in the first place. Chernobyl just being one of the more blatant examples, one that does not even involve Ukrainians acting in their self-defense as a source of injury to those soldiers.