Press
Centre
Joint Press Release
UN Report Says Chernobyl Disaster Still Hurting Millions
UN Agencies Call For New International Effort to Restore
Normalcy
NEW YORK, 6 February 2002 - The United Nations called
today for an entirely new approach to helping millions
of people impacted by the Chernobyl nuclear accident,
saying that 16 years after the incident those affected
remain in a state of "chronic dependency," with
few opportunities and little control over their destinies.
The UN warned that populations in Belarus, the Russian
Federation and Ukraine would continue to experience general
decline unless significant new measures are adopted to
address health, the environment and joblessness.
Executive summary and full report.
These conclusions are contained in a comprehensive study
of the countries and populations affected by the Chernobyl
disaster, released today by the United Nations in a press
conference in New York. The study, which was carried out
by an international panel of experts in July-August 2001,
was commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF),
and was supported by the World Health Organization (WHO)
and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA).
At the center of the report's findings lies the conclusion
that a fundamental shift is needed in the way assistance
is delivered to the people still suffering from Chernobyl,
emphasizing long-term community redevelopment and empowerment.
The 'Emergency Phase' of the response - emphasizing containment,
relocation, and direct welfare - is now over, argues the
report, and a new ten-year 'Recovery Phase' must gradually
replace it. The report calls for a series of national
workshops in the three countries affected to gain consensus
around new approaches that emphasize basic health services,
economic development, creative ecological measures, and
focused international research on a series of unresolved
health questions.
Among many other measures, the report proposes:
- Resources be concentrated on mainstream services
which have the greatest effect on life expectancy and
general well-being, including primary health care, health
education, clean water, and economic development.
- Expanded health reform in the three countries, ensuring
that services are delivered on the basis of medical
need and that poor rural communities get improved care.
Reformed medical services should also address the effects
of social and environmental factors on health, including
poverty, poor diet, alcoholism, tobacco abuse and poor
living conditions.
- Special attention to the lifetime needs of people
who were infants or children at the time of the accident,
lived in the areas affected by the fallout of radioactive
iodine and may have contracted or be at risk of thyroid
cancer, which has emerged as a primary threat.
- Attention to research showing that the psycho-social
welfare of people who stayed in their homes is better
than that of those who were relocated, along with new
studies examining how far the present regime of residency
restrictions could responsibly be relaxed to enable
a growing number of people wishing to return to make
informed decisions about the risk.
- A long-term, independent, properly funded and internationally
recognized programme of research on the lasting environmental
and health effects of Chernobyl.
- Intensive economic measures aimed at expanding self-sufficiency
among those most affected, along with ongoing but more
focused direct support until such sufficiency is achieved.
National policies that bring about an investment-friendly
business environment, including village-level enterprise
zones, and business development incentives in towns
and cities adjacent to the most affected areas. Special
emphasis must be put on the local agricultural economy.
- Improvement of environmental policy planning, implementation
and management at the local, national and transnational
levels to build on lessons learned and develop innovative
approaches to land use as the radiation threat diminishes
over time. Ongoing and focused research on the impact
of radioactive contamination on the environment, including
in the water, with special attention on the impact on
hunters, forestry workers, and others who rely on the
land for their incomes.
The United Nations report - entitled "The Human
Consequences of the Chernobyl Nuclear Accident: A strategy
for Recovery" - recognizes the lead role that has
been played by the respective governments involved, and
notes the enormous investment of resources that they have
made into the humanitarian relief effort over the last
15 years. But it also calls on international donors and
governments to continue to play an active supporting role,
and sets forward a series of proposals for moving forward.
A Downward Spiral
The United Nations report sheds light on what it calls
a "complex and progressive downward spiral of living
conditions" affecting hundreds of thousands of people.
The study emphasizes the need for the recovery phase
to focus attention on two broad groups: The first group
includes some 100,000 to 200,000 people caught in the
downward spiral. These are people who live in severely
contaminated areas; people who have been resettled but
remain unemployed; and those whose health remains most
directly threatened, including victims of thyroid cancer.
Some 2,000 people have been diagnosed with thyroid cancer,
and the report states that as many as 8,000 to 10,000
additional cases are expected to develop over the coming
years.
The report states that this group of up to 200,000 people,
spread across all three countries, is "at the core
of the cluster of problems created by Chernobyl,"
and focusing on their needs and helping them take control
of their futures must be a priority.
The second group identified for priority action includes
those whose lives have been directly and significantly
affected but who are already in a position to support
themselves. This group has found employment, but still
must be reintegrated into society as a whole so that their
ongoing needs are addressed through the mainstream provision
of services using criteria applicable to other members
of society. This group includes hundreds of thousands
of individuals.
The report also identifies a third group, encompassing
millions of people, who have been indirectly impacted
by the stigma, uncertainty and fatalism that have become
associated with Chernobyl. This group, too, needs to be
aided through clearer information and more open and continuous
disclosures about the evolving situation in the region,
the report argues. The report notes that some 7 million
people are in some way or another recipients of state
welfare connected with Chernobyl.
The three affected countries and the international community
need to join forces in moving toward a new phase of recovery
and sustainable development, the United Nations concludes.
The aim should be to "work toward normalizing the
situation of the individuals and communities concerned"
using a holistic, community development approach.
According to the report, such a transition is both long
overdue and absolutely essential. "Within the available
budgets, it is really the only alternative to the progressive
breakdown of the recovery effort, continuing hemorrhaging
of scarce resources and continuing distress for the people
at the centre of the problem."
* * *
For further information, please contact:
Alfred Ironside,
UNICEF Media, New York, 212-326-7261; aironside@unicef.org
- Robert Cohen, UNICEF Media, Geneva, 4122-909-5631 -Rosemary
McCreery, UNICEF Area Representative, Moscow, 7095-956-6834
- UNDP: Erin
Trowbridge, 212-906-5344; erin.trowbridge@undp.org
- OCHA: David Chikvaidze,
212-963-9665; chikvaidze@un.org
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