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- WORLD, Page 49World NotesSOVIET UNIONDealing with The Fallout
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- Nearly three years after the world's worst civilian nuclear
- disaster, Mikhail Gorbachev made his first visit to Chernobyl
- last week. The Soviet leader seemed intent on cleaning up the
- continuing environmental and political fallout from the
- accident. Soviet newspapers in recent weeks have reported the
- births of deformed farm animals and widespread radioactive
- contamination of land and food. Local workers surrounded
- Gorbachev to tell him of their worry about the health
- consequences.
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- Clad in a white coat and cap, a sympathetic Gorbachev and
- his wife Raisa inspected the reopened facility, in the shadow of
- the entombed reactor No. 4, and stopped to ask the plant's staff
- about new safety measures. Gorbachev called the Chernobyl
- accident "very serious for the whole world," adding, "Through
- science and technology, we need to give energy to the nation,
- but safety remains the most important thing." Forty-eight hours
- later, the first unit of a twelve-year-old nuclear-power plant
- in Armenia was shut down. Under public pressure, authorities
- conceded that the operation was too risky in the earthquake
- zone.
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