The Chernobyl disaster – the severe days
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Published: February 14, 2010

This film shows the terrifying images captured by the Russian filmmaker Vladimir Shevchenko on scene at Chernobyl those dreadful days in April 1986. Shevchenko later died suffering from the radiation he exposed himself to. Although his name is not among the official casualties of the accident, this last tragic film of him keeps his name alive forever. Great video bring with hitvideo.org

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25 Comments
  1. JessFromMead
    12:29 am on February 14th, 2010

    @Fudgey123873434 Until Modern Warfare, I never heard of the city. Now I’m writing a paper on it in AP European History

  2. yutaja
    1:13 am on February 14th, 2010

    wow is the city Pripyat still abandoned?

  3. Fudgey123873434
    1:38 am on February 14th, 2010

    @xoxFerretOnAcidxox

    Except there are still people living there… Elderly men and women who refused to leave, and poor people who just dont give a damn about the radiation or are scavenging materials from the buildings. The military can’t keep everyone out. Hell, they run tours for $100 through Pripyat and the orange forest for anyone over 18!

  4. xoxFerretOnAcidxox
    1:42 am on February 14th, 2010

    @xoxFerretOnAcidxox you can read it in history books as well if they are as recent as the accident

  5. xoxFerretOnAcidxox
    2:34 am on February 14th, 2010

    @Fudgey123873434 Chernobyl is a ghost town its been abandened since the accident. it is highly guarded within a 30 mile raidius (i do belive it is 30 miles) so all the towns within that are also abandoned very little personal are allowed within that due to the high levels of radiation that are still left behind which is deadly. in other words due to health and saftey of the people.

  6. sinisha1vids
    3:17 am on February 14th, 2010

    this is why we shouldnt use nuclear power plants, i know there safer today but i still worry about them, its not impossible for it to have a meltdown, it may be safer but it ruins a shit load in the enviroment so fast if it has a meltdown…

  7. injenlang
    3:32 am on February 14th, 2010

    Standing close to them is still dangerous, so is standing to close to Steve Lang. Injen

  8. pavaccar
    3:55 am on February 14th, 2010

    @stainshield We sold them the plains for the nuke tower its our fault

  9. stainshield
    4:18 am on February 14th, 2010

    i am glad this film had no sound,nothing to take away from the images….im so glad i live in America

  10. decapattack
    5:07 am on February 14th, 2010

    i learned this at school in Brazil. Long long time ago.

  11. geekforlifevandc
    6:04 am on February 14th, 2010

    the soviet union sucked they built the reactor the soviet way which is the cheap way and the man incharge that knight was a russian enginner who wanted to perform a test at 200mg when the minimum was 700

  12. Guitarist1617
    6:13 am on February 14th, 2010

    i think everyone should shut the fuck up about how awsome there countries education system is!
    if you hear about chernobyl then google it im pretty fucking sure you would get loaaads of info.

    and it wasnt a communist lie, if they told the populace about the radiation everyone would be running around like a bunch of fucking idiots creating mass panic and rioting. you cant tell me your own government wouldn’t do it

  13. ubcs109
    6:41 am on February 14th, 2010

    Oh really? Americans only teach their kids about their own country? Please, tell me where you get your information from. I would love to talk to the person that told you this lie. Its almost like me saying, typical Canadian, they only teach their kids about how to master the skill of exporting maple syrup and playing Hockey, but that would just be me comming down to your level.
    Oh, and btw, theres tons of world history classes that you take during grades 1-12

  14. ubcs109
    7:08 am on February 14th, 2010

    Ummm…History Channel? And why does everyone keep posting how old they were when they heard of this? Is it some sort of contest that I am missing or something?

  15. Pupak30
    7:22 am on February 14th, 2010

    respect those people who worked on site after the disaster in spite of communist lies. they weren’t aware of the danger

  16. Fudgey123873434
    8:15 am on February 14th, 2010

    Considering over 20% of Belarus is contaminated and thousands still live in or near Pripyat or Chernobyl, it’s scary no-one hears about it anymore

  17. RedLightBulbs
    9:01 am on February 14th, 2010

    @FromMikeWithLove I learned a lot about this in school. We went over it pretty extensively.

  18. Bryan711117
    9:40 am on February 14th, 2010

    @simplyethan lol who gives a fuck

  19. simplyethan
    10:36 am on February 14th, 2010

    And that’s why you call it shit.

  20. Bryan711117
    11:20 am on February 14th, 2010

    Im a Canadian, ive known about this as long as i can remember lol. They teach us shit that matters.

  21. mafiaosobob
    12:07 pm on February 14th, 2010

    Canada actually, they just don’t bother teachin us shit like this and i never heard about it.

  22. VinceKato
    1:05 pm on February 14th, 2010

    @Bryan711117 I’m american and knew about this when I was around 8. Didn’t know how bad it was, just saw it as a nuclear meltdown with a mass evacuation and radiation poisoning(wasn’t sure how bad that was back then)

  23. Tahmmo
    2:00 pm on February 14th, 2010

    we learned this at school in norway.

  24. Kryptonite314159269
    2:52 pm on February 14th, 2010

    Wierd, I knew about this when I was 7 or 9. I also know about Trafalgar, and the french revolution. But I didn’t learn it in school.

  25. FromMikeWithLove
    3:51 pm on February 14th, 2010

    Most people only learnt this from Call of Duty or STALKER. They really don’t teach a lot about this anywhere. I knew all about this when I was 10.

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