Your browser does not support this video. Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Anna-and-Vasily-Malashenko-in-Ukraine---Web-Video--Clean-version--27MZIFJ6UV312.htmlConceptually similarAnna and Vasily Malashenko in Ukraine - Web Video (English Subtitles)GP0STPPIICompleted★★★★Investigation in Ukraine: Sampling Wood - Web Video (English Subtitles)GP0STPNK4Completed★★★★Investigation in Ukraine: Sampling Wood - Web Video (Clean Version)GP0STPNKNCompleted★★★★Valery Kuzmich in Ukraine - Web Video (English Subtitles)GP0STPPIHCompleted★★★★Valery Kuzmich in Ukraine - Web Video (Clean version)GP0STPPIPCompleted★★★★Prof. V. Kashparov on Fires in Chernobyl Exclusion Zone - Interview (Clean version)GP1SV2KJCompleted★★★★Prof. V. Kashparov on Fires in Chernobyl Exclusion Zone - Interview (English version)GP1SV2YMCompleted★★★★Investigation in Ukraine: Radiation in Food and Health Effects - Web Video (English Subtitles)GP0STPNK0Completed★★★★Fallout 25 years after Chernobyl - English Subtitled VersionGP03U3MCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STPPIQAnna and Vasily Malashenko in Ukraine - Web Video (Clean version)Five million people still live in the areas contaminated with radiation after the explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on 26 April 1986. Anna and Vasyl Malashenko live in the Ivankiv district of the Kyiv region – an area next to the exclusion zone in Ukraine. A few years after the disaster they moved to Western Ukraine but then came back. Vasyl, who runs a farm on a 70-hectar plot, says he doesn’t feel any radiation, but Anna, who used to work at the local radiological laboratory knows it’s there, “you just don’t see it”.Locations:Ivankiv-Kiev Oblast-UkraineDate:15 Nov, 2015Credit:© GreenpeaceDuration:57sAudio format:Final MixProduction Type :WEB VIDEOKeywords:Agricultural land-Agriculture-KWCI (GPI)-Local population-Nuclear (campaign title)-Nuclear accidents-Nuclear energy-Nuclear radiation-People-Radiation victimsShoot:Chernobyl Survivors 30 Years after the Nuclear DisasterTo better understand how contamination affects the lives of Chernobyl survivors, Greenpeace carries out investigations and meet some of the affected local people.Five million people still live in the areas contaminated with radiation after the explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on 26 April 1986. They know the radiation is around but have little choice. Leaving the place is not an option for them either.Related Collections:Chernobyl 30 Years After the Nuclear Disaster (Photos & Videos)