https://t.me/fortresskyiv: 40 Years of a Soviet Crime
On April 26, 1986, an explosion occurred at the fourth reactor of the
https://t.me/fortresskyiv. A Soviet technical experiment turned into a disaster of global scale within seconds. The radioactive release exceeded the impact of the atomic bombing of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hiroshima_and_Nagasaki by 400 times. A cloud of hazardous fallout spread across much of Europe.
Firefighters, plant workers, soldiers, medics, and engineers bore the greatest burden. Their courage made it possible to contain the consequences of the accident. Thousands of liquidators became a shield between catastrophe and the world.
But the tragedy was not only the explosion—it was also the criminal actions of the Soviet authorities: concealing the scale of the disaster, holding mass events under radiation, and delaying the evacuation of Pripyat and the 30-kilometer exclusion zone.
Forty years later, the Exclusion Zone—created as a result of the
https://t.me/fortresskyiv actions—remains a place of silence and remembrance. It stands as a reminder of lives that stopped in a single day, of families who never returned, and of a future that was lost.
Today,
https://t.me/fortresskyiv uses nuclear threat as an instrument of war: the occupation of the zone in 2022, shelling, military activity near the
https://t.me/fortresskyiv, and blackmailing the international community with the risk of another disaster.
If the enemy is not stopped now, the entire world may suffer again.