Russian Arctic in Panic-Buying Over Rocket Accident Radiation
There has
been panic-buying of medical iodine in Russia's far north, following a brief
radiation spike linked to a rocket accident, Russian media report.
Pharmacies'
stocks of iodine are reported to be running out in the cities of Arkhangelsk
and Severodvinsk.
Iodine can
block the thyroid gland's take-up of radioactive iodine, but the pills can also
cause medical problems.
Two people
died and six were injured in Thursday's accident at a test site. But the
military has given few details.
The
authorities say radiation levels were higher than normal for about 40 minutes
around the Nyonoksa naval test range, but then returned to normal.
The defence
ministry said a liquid-fuel rocket engine had exploded, but it did not specify
the system involved.
The navy is
now keeping all shipping out of nearby Dvina Bay, on the White Sea, for a
month. Officials did not explain the temporary closure of the bay.
The village
of Nyonoksa is about 47km (29 miles) west of Severodvinsk, which has a
population of nearly 200,000. Severodvinsk has a shipyard that builds and
repairs nuclear submarines for Russia's Northern Fleet.
A news
website for the Arkhangelsk region, 29.ru, said pharmacies' stocks of
iodine pills were running out in Arkhangelsk on Thursday evening.
The website
also said medics who evacuated the injured at Nyonoksa wore chemical and
nuclear protection suits.
There was a
rush on iodine stocks during the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine,
which sent a huge plume of radiation across Europe.
It is the
second accident involving Russia's military this week.
On Monday,
one person was killed and eight others were injured in a blaze at an ammunition
dump in Siberia.
Earlier on
Thursday there were reports of a fire at a military facility near Nyonoksa.
Telegram-based media outlet Mash said radiation levels in the village were
three times higher than normal.
The defence
ministry insisted that "there have been no harmful chemicals released into
the atmosphere, the radiation levels are normal".
Nyonoksa
carries out tests for virtually every missile system used by the Russian navy,
including sea-launched intercontinental ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and
anti-aircraft missiles.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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