Chernobyl survivor in Ireland fears war will end plans to meet her birth family
Feb 26, 22

Louise Walsh
A survivor of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, who was later adopted by a Co Meath couple, has described her fears of another catastrophe caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine which would also end her plans to visit her newly-found birth family.
Raisa Carolan said she is concerned following reports of higher-than-usual gamma radiation levels detected in the area near the decommissioned nuclear plant taken over by Russian forces.
Ukraine's nuclear energy regulatory agency attributed the rise on Friday to a "disturbance of the topsoil due to the movement of a large amount of heavy military equipment through the exclusion zone and the release of contaminated radioactive dust into the air."
The 29-year-old ambassador for Chernobyl Children's International has experienced first-hand the horror of nuclear effects, and dreads the thought of radiation being unleashed on a large scale on the world again.
Ms Carolan has undergone 25 operations to treat the health issues she was born with as a result of the radiation from the disaster. These included a cleft palate and eventual limb amputation as she was born with webbed legs and a club foot.
The young woman, who now has a masters in criminology, calls herself a 'Meath woman' after being adopted by Tom and the late Ann Carolan in Trim where she has lived since she was 10 years old.
There are a lot of people buried in the exclusion zone who gave their lives in order to close down the reactor and save others, and this invasion is... disturbing those gravesIn the last year, she has tracked down her birth family after a search of many years and has been in regular contact with them in Belarus by email since January. The Russian invasion means she is worried for their safety and any dreams of meeting them soon may now be scuppered. "I am very fearful of the consequences if the reactor is activated again or sealed radiation is emitted on a large scale over the region, and indeed into wider European territories. The results could be catastrophic," she said. "There are also a lot of people buried in the exclusion zone who gave their lives in order to close down the reactor and save others, and this invasion is trespassing on that exclusion zone and disturbing those graves."










