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  • 26
    Apr
    2012
    11:02am, EDT

    Marking the Chernobyl disaster 26 years later

    Ivan Sekretarev / AP

    Russian veteran fire fighters lay flowers at Mitino Memorial to commemorate those who died after the Chernobyl 1986 nuclear disaster, in Moscow on April 26. Russians marked the 26th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, which was the world's worst ever nuclear accident.

    Gleb Garanich / Reuters

    Men walk near a containment shelter for the damaged fourth reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on April 26. Belarus, Ukraine and Russia mark the 26th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, the world's worst civil nuclear accident, on Thursday.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Victims of Chernobyl nuclear accident's widows hold pictures of their late husbands during a memorial ceremony at the Chernobyl victims memorial in Kiev on April 26.

    AP reports -- "The Chernobyl disaster underscored that mankind must be extra careful in using nuclear technologies," Ukraine's president Viktor Yanukovych said during a ceremony Thursday inaugurating the initial assembly of a gigantic arch-shaped steel containment building to cover the remnants of the exploded reactor. "Nuclear accidents lead to global consequences. They are not a problem of just one country, they affect the life of entire regions."

    The April 26, 1986, explosion spewed a cloud of radiation over much of the northern hemisphere, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes in heavily hit areas of Ukraine, Belarus and western Russia. The Soviet government initially tried to hush up the explosion and resisted immediately evacuating nearby residents. It also failed to tell the public what happened or instruct residents and cleanup workers on how to protect themselves against radiation, which significantly increased the health damage from the disaster.

    A shelter called the "sarcophagus" was hastily erected over the damaged reactor, but it has been crumbling and leaking radiation in recent years and a new confinement structure is necessary.

    Yanukovych said 2 million people have been hurt by the tragedy and it was the state's obligation to protect and treat them.

    But his reassurances fell flat with some Chernobyl cleanup workers and victims. About 2,000 protesters staged an angry rally Thursday outside parliament in Kiev, demanding an increase in compensations and pensions.

    Read the full story.

    Photojournalist documents Chernobyl aftermath for nearly two decades, then creates an iPad app to tell the story

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    A Chernobyl's handicapped person cries in front of the Chernobyl victims memorial in Kiev during a memorial ceremony on April 26. Ukraine launched today construction of a new shelter to permanently secure the stricken Chernobyl plant as it marked the 26th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear disaster.

    Andrew Kravchenko / EPA

    The widow of a victim holds a child during a ceremony, commemorating the 26th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear accident in Kiev, Ukraine, on April 26. On April 26, 1986 reactor number 4 blew apart at the Chernobyl power station. Facing nuclear disaster on an unprecedented scale Soviet authority tried to contain the situation by sending thousands of men into a radioactive area.

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    3 comments

    Very sad - scary to think this could happen again like in Japan. There was an interesting show regarding the disaster and how the contamination has affected the wildlife, waterways, etc. Surprisingly, animals are thriving at about the same rate as areas not affected by the nuclear disaster.

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    Explore related topics: russia, nuclear, ukraine, chernobyl
  • 3
    Feb
    2012
    5:18pm, EST

    Are tablet apps a good alternative to photo books?

    By Meredith Birkett

    If you're a fan of photography, you may have succumbed at some point to the photo book addiction. It’s not a cheap habit, at $50, $75, even $100 a pop. From the photographer's perspective, having your work published in book form is a rite of passage that you've owned a topic or you’ve arrived at a certain status in your career.

    The downside is that the process can be expensive for a photographer these days. You’re lucky if you find a publisher who is willing to take on the project. And even if you do, you’re often paying for that good fortune. The publisher isn’t footing the entire bill; the photographer is often fronting tens of thousands of their own dollars for production costs. But publishing for tablets is giving photographers a cheaper alternative to books.

    Gerd Ludwig / INSTITUTE

    On April 26, 1986, this amusement park in Pripyat, Ukraine, with bumper cars and a Ferris wheel, was being readied for the annual May Day celebrations when the nearby Chernobyl reactor blew up. Rotting away for 25 years, the contamination zone around the reactor has become a symbol of the utter abandonment of the area. Now it is an attraction for tourists who have started flocking to the area in droves.

    One recent example is Gerd Ludwig's "The Long Shadow of Chernobyl" iPad app released December 2011. Some images from the app are shown here.  A long-time and well-known National Geographic photographer, Ludwig has covered the fallout of the Chernobyl meltdown periodically since 1993.


    In the app you see 150 images, a book-length number. They are broken up into chapters and features on different topics. But unlike a book, you can help yourself to the material in a linear or non-linear way.

    Some other photo apps are truly books ported over to app form, an adjunct to the print publication. One example is Christopher Anderson's "Capitolio," where you literally see the book page layout in the app, along with some non-print features like a video interview with the photographer.

    Gerd Ludwig / INSTITUTE

    Suffering from thyroid cancer, Oleg Shapiro, 54, and Dima Bogdanovich, 13, receive care at a thyroid hospital in Minsk, Belarus, in 2005, where surgery is performed daily. As a liquidator, Oleg was exposed to extreme levels of radiation when the Chernobyl reactor blew up in 1986. This was his third thyroid operation. Dima's mother claims that Chernobyl's nuclear fallout is responsible for her son's cancer, but his doctors are more cautious. Belarusian officials are often instructed to downplay the severity of the radiation.

    In the case of Ludwig's app, his team worked with Lisa Lytton, who spent years in both magazine and book publishing and then started Lightbox Press, an app publishing company. I asked them if their project was a book or an app. Both said this experience changed their thinking -- it goes beyond a book to thinking about interactivity. 

    Gerd Ludwig / INSTITUTE

    The city of Pripyat, Ukraine, once inhabited by 50,000 residents and brimming with life, now stands as a chilling ghost town. Built in 1970 for the scientists and the workers of the nearby Chernobyl nuclear power plant, authorities did not warn residents of the April 26, 1986, accident, and only issued an evacuation notice two days after the explosion.

    Ludwig and Lytton’s app includes panoramic images and video. One video lets you experience a trip deep inside the destroyed reactor. Ludwig has gone deeper into the reactor than any other Western still photographer, so deep in fact, that his photo assistant refused to go in with him for fear of the radiation exposure. Recorded with a Go Pro camera mounted to his head, you hear what he calls the nerve-wracking beep of the Geiger counter checking his radiation exposure as he wound his way with work crews through the dark tunnels and rooms of the reactor.

    Lightbox Press

    The app as seen on an iPad.

    Ludwig has published a book before, but he said he appreciates the app for enabling him to tell the story in a more complex way than a traditional book. The app tells the story both about the subject and the experience and process behind the story, transparency that’s not always possible in a traditional book.

    While they spent dearly in time and staffing to organize the material for the book, there was no big upfront production fee. Both Ludwig and Lytton are gambling on a new business model, hoping to recoup their expenses through sales of the $6.99 app.

    Will that business model work? I asked Greg Harris, co-founder and creative director of Daily Interactive. His company created an app for Michael Nichols' wildlife photography and released it last summer. The goal of the app wasn't to create a photo book in app form, but to replace a web site and monetize the content. He says the key to success with apps is making sure consumers know the content is available. "It all depends on marketing to drive downloads. They are doing well but not “Angry Birds” well.”

    When I asked Ludwig if he had a personal connection to the Chernobyl story, he said it hit home for him when he called home to his native Germany and heard of friends who sent their children or pregnant relatives to Holland because the radiation cloud was moving into southern Germany.

    Ludwig plans to continue covering the story he started almost two decades ago. He said the story of the geography and people of Chernobyl continue to resonate because it will always be the first huge nuclear accident. He hopes it will be the last.

    Gerd Ludwig / INSTITUTE

    In 2011, a quarter-century after the Chernobyl nuclear accident, books decay and paint peels in a school library in Pripyat, Ukraine, once the area's largest town with 50,000 inhabitants.

    Learn more about the app "The Long Shadow of Chernobyl." (An Android version is not available)

    Related story: Chernobyl experts hopeful on Fukushima

    Gerd Ludwig / INSTITUTE

    Initially branded as illegal residents, a few hundred elderly have returned to their village homes near the Chernobyl nuclear disaster site. Now tolerated, but without means of transportation, the returnees have no easy access to medical help. To ensure basic health care, teams of doctors from the Chernobyl hospital make their rounds to the few inhabited villages each month, shown here in Ilyintsy, Ukraine, in 2005.

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    9 comments

    Silly, People will Trust computer implicitly, they wont think twice, about how the data can be stored, yes its something nice to be able to store 200-300 book on a tablet, but get this, dont rely on computers because one EMP and everything gone in an instance. even precious tablets. Keep everything  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, chernobyl, apps, featured
  • 2
    Nov
    2011
    9:40am, EDT

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators stand next to riot police on November 2, during a protest as the Ukrainian cabinet was meeting in Kiev. Ukrainian veterans of the clean-up from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster are demonstrating against planned benefit cuts. In September, lawmakers gave initial approval to a bill cutting back benefits paid to those who helped clean up the April 1986 nuclear disaster and those who still live on the affected lands.

    Ukrainians demonstrate against benefits cuts

    .

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: politics, ukraine, chernobyl, austerity-measures
  • 25
    Apr
    2011
    10:01pm, EDT

    Ukrainians grieve at Chernobyl victims' monument in Slavutich

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    A man grieves at the monument to Chernobyl victims in Slavutich, some 30 miles away from the accident site, and where many of the power station's personnel used to live, during a memorial ceremony early on April 26, 2011.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    A boy points to his grandmother's portrait in the Chernobyl victims' monument in Slavutich, some 30 miles away from the accident's site, and where many of the power station's personnel used to live, during a memorial ceremony on the night on Monday, April 25, 2011.

    The world’s worst nuclear accident at Chernobyl took place 25 years ago when a blast at the power plant spewed a cloud of radioactive fallout over much of Europe and forced hundreds of thousands from their homes in Ukraine, Belarus and western Russia. Today, a 19-mile exclusion zone around the plant remains in place because of contamination from the plant. See more images from Chernobyl here.

    Related content:

    • Photographers recall Chernobyl's first days
    • Anti-nuclear protesters demonstrate in Germany on eve of Chernobyl disaster anniversary
    • Ghost town near Chernobyl still deserted after 25 years

    1 comment

    I think Europe is on the right track.....leading away from nuclear power. Clearly, no nuclear reactor can ever be safe from acts of terroism, earthquakes, volcanos, tidal waves. I think those who would ramp up new reactors after Fukushima are full of themselves and a terrible hubris.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ukraine, nuclear-power, world-news, chernobyl
  • 25
    Apr
    2011
    2:04pm, EDT

    Anti-nuclear protesters demonstrate in Germany on eve of Chernobyl disaster anniversary

    David Ebener / AFP - Getty Images

    Anti-nuclear protesters march towards the Grafenrheinfeld nuclear power plant near the southern German city of Bergrheinfeld on Monday, April 25. Several Easter Monday protests took place throughout the country on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster and after Japan's nuclear accident at Fukushima.

    Peter Steffen / EPA

    Anti-nuclear activists sit in front of a nuclear power plant during an Easter protest march in Grohnde, Germany, on Monday. Tomorrow, April 26, 2011, marks the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster - a date that sparks anti-nuclear protests all over Germany.

    Ingo Wagner / AFP - Getty Images

    Anti-nuclear protesters take part in a march near in the northern German city of Kleinensiel on Monday.

    For more on the anti-nuclear protests in Europe click here. See Chernobyl-related images on PhotoBlog here.

    2 comments

    ALERT Albacore Tuna will migrate from the radioactive waters of Japan and arrive in Northern California by mid summer of this year 2011. If you have children who eat Tuna fish or who may be visiting a friend’s house where it could be served you need to inform yourself of the health risks invo …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, nuclear, protest, demonstration, world-news, chernobyl
  • 24
    Apr
    2011
    12:43pm, EDT

    Photographers recall Chernobyl's first days

    By Rich Shulman

    AP published a fascinating story about the photographers who were allowed to photograph the Chernobyl disaster in its early days. Talk about a dangerous job.

    Volodymyr Repik / AP

    In this 1986 photo shows the sarcophagus under construction over the 4th destroyed reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. On May 12, 1986, more than two weeks after the explosion, the leading Soviet daily newspaper Pravda published its first photograph from the site for the first time, shot three days earlier from a helicopter by Repik. "If I had been ordered now to get aboard and go, I would not have gone — you might have easily died there for nothing," said the 65-year-old Repik.

    Volodymyr Repik / AP

    In this 1986 photo, a helicopter throwing chemicals to suppress radiation approaches the 4th destroyed reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in. On May 12, 1986, more than two weeks after the explosion, the leading Soviet daily newspaper Pravda published its first photograph from the site for the first time, shot three days earlier from a helicopter by Repik.

    AP

    This 1986 photo, shows photographer Volodymyr Repik inside a helicopter as he covers the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster. On May 12, 1986, more than two weeks after the explosion, the leading Soviet daily newspaper Pravda published its first photograph from the site for the first time, shot three days earlier from a helicopter by Repik. "If I had been ordered now to get aboard and go, I would not have gone — you might have easily died there for nothing," said the 65-year-old Repik.

    Volodymyr Repik / AP

    In this 1986 photo, a Chernobyl nuclear power plant worker holding a dosimeter to measure radiation level is seen against the background of a sarcophagus under construction over the 4th destroyed reactor on this file photo taken in 1986. On May 12, 1986, more than two weeks after the explosion, the leading Soviet daily newspaper Pravda published its first photograph from the site for the first time, shot three days earlier from a helicopter by Repik. "If I had been ordered now to get aboard and go, I would not have gone — you might have easily died there for nothing," said the 65-year-old Repik.

    AP

    This 1986 photo shows photographers Volodymyr Repik, right, and Valery Zufarov in Chernobyl area after the explosion in the 4th reactor of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. On May 12, 1986, more than two weeks after the explosion, the leading Soviet daily newspaper Pravda published its first photograph from the site for the first time, shot three days earlier from a helicopter by Repik."If I had been ordered now to get aboard and go, I would not have gone — you might have easily died there for nothing," said the 65-year-old Repik. Zufarov died in 1993, aged 52, of Chernobyl-related disease. His first pictures were made from a helicopter 25 meters above the plant.

    AP

    This 1986 photo shows photographer Igor Kostin taking photographs after the explosion in the 4th reactor of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Wearing a lead protective suit and placing his cameras in lead boxes, photographer Igor Kostin made a terrifying and unauthorized trip to the Chernobyl danger zone just a few days after a nuclear power plant reactor exploded in the world's worst atomic accident. He came back home with nothing to show for his determination to document the crisis — the radiation was so high that all his shots turned out black.

    Efrem Lukatsky / AP

    In this April 4, 2011 photo taken at his home in Kiev, Ukraine, photographer Igor Kostin shows a photograph taken in the first days after the explosion of the 4th reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. The photo shows cleanup operations on the roof of the neighboring 3rd reactor. Wearing a lead protective suit and placing his cameras in lead boxes, photographer Igor Kostin made a terrifying and unauthorized trip to the Chernobyl danger zone just a few days after a nuclear power plant reactor exploded in the world's worst atomic accident. He came back home with nothing to show for his determination to document the crisis — the radiation was so high that all his shots turned out black.

    AP

    Chernobyl nuclear power plant photographer Anatoly Rasskazov two months before the April 26, 1986 explosion. Anatoly Rasskazov was the first photographer to take photographs of the Chernobyl disaster. As a staff photographer for the plant, he was allowed in on the day of the explosion. On April 26, at noon — hours after the blast — he made a video of the destroyed reactor and submitted it to a special commission working in a bunker close to the plant, said Anna Korolevska, deputy director of Chernobyl museum in Kiev. Rasskazov died last year, aged 66, after suffering for years from cancer and blood diseases that he blamed on the radiation.

    Comment

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  • 28
    Mar
    2011
    3:48pm, EDT

    Ghost town near Chernobyl still deserted after 25 years

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    A ferris wheel remains abandoned in the empty town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday, March 25, 2011, in Pripyat, Ukraine. The 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster is next month. On April 26, 1986, a series of explosions destroyed Chernobyl's reactor No. 4 station causing a nuclear meltdown as firefighters tackled a blaze that burned for 10 days and sent a plume of radiation around the world in the worst-ever civil nuclear disaster.

    Isifa / Getty Images Contributor

    A house remains abandoned near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Pripyat.

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    Personal articles are seen in the empty town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Pripyat.

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    A housing unit remains abandoned in the empty town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Pripyat.

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    Operating staff work at the control center of the 1st and 2nd nuclear reactor block in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Chernobyl, Ukraine.

    Full story here.

    3 comments

    It is an eerie place. I've been there several times.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nuclear, anniversary, ukraine, disaster, world-news, chernobyl, wasteland

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Meredith Birkett

Meredith Birkett is a senior multimedia editor for special projects at MSNBC.com. In this role, Meredith works with freelancers, picture agencies, and staff multimedia journalists to produce multimedia projects across all sections of MSNBC.com.

Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

Rich Shulman Blogroll

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