Wildfire rips through Chernobyl’s exclusion zone, raging just TWO MILES from crippled nuclear plant (PHOTO, VIDEO)

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Wildfire rips through Chernobyl’s exclusion zone, raging just TWO MILES from crippled nuclear plant (PHOTO, VIDEO)

Ukrainian firefighters are struggling to contain a blaze raging near Pripyat, in the contaminated area heavily hit by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, as a wall of fire creeps dangerously close to its abandoned nuclear power plant.

Due to strong winds on Monday, the flames crossed over a firebreak and reached the Yanov railway station near the town of Pripyat, the agency in charge of exclusion zone said in a statement. Maps show that the station is located just three kilometers (1.9 miles) away from the ill-fated power plant.

The member of the public council at that agency, Yaroslav Emelianenko, described the situation as “critical” and posted photos of surreal orange-colored smoke coming from the burning forest on his Facebook page.

Chernobyl, which was the site of the worst nuclear disaster in human history in 1986, has again found itself in an emergency situation, piling even more headaches on Ukraine amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Smoke from the wildfire engulfing the sarcophagus built above the damaged nuclear reactor No. 4 at the Chernobyl power plant. © Ruptly



The fire in the 30-kilometer (18.6-mile) exclusion zone around the nuclear power plant broke out over a week ago, with the police saying it was arson. A suspect has been arrested.

Some 390 rescue workers, 90 units of specialized hardware and six aircraft have been deployed to the site.

Despite all their efforts, the forest and dry grass keep on burning, with the blaze getting alarmingly close to the nuclear power plant and to the sites where highly radioactive waste is stored.

Ukrainian firefighters tackling the blaze in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. © Sputnik



However, a high-ranking official at the Emergencies Ministry, Vladimir Demchyuk, gave reassurances that “currently, there’s no threat to the nuclear power plant, the storage sites of used [nuclear]fuel and other critical infrastructure in the exclusion zone.”

The radiation levels in the area have exceeded the norm by more than 16 percent, but the authorities insist that it doesn’t pose any risk to the capital Kiev, located 134 km (83.2 miles) away.

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