Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, April 30, 1986 Soviet press says little on disaster MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union on Tuesday struggled to contain a nuclear power plant di saster that may have affected thousands of people and the con trolled Soviet press maintained strict control of information about the accident. After the initial, four-sentence report by the official news agency l ass on Monday night, the Soviet news media were silent for 24 hours about an accident that may have melted the core of a Ukra- nian nuclear reactor and sent a radioactive cloud rolling across hundreds of miles of Russian plains. The first report by Tass was is sued hours after Scandinavian countries detected increased ra diation and said the radiation ap parently came from the Soviet Union. Tass said the accident was at the Chernobyl plant, but did not say the accident occurred only 60 miles from Kiev, a city of 2.4 mil lion people. The report did not say what happened, when it hap pened, mention whether there were casualties or discuss possible i isks to health. 'fhe report was read on the main TV news program Monday night and there was no new infor mation issued until nearly 24 hours later when Tass issued a second government statement saying two people were killed and that people had been evacuated from four towns in the area. That report said the radiation from the damaged plant had been contained. Soviets call for foreign aid to fight fire MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union struggled Tuesday to cope with one of history’s gravest nuclear catastrophes, appealing for foreign help to fight a reactor fire and evac uating thousands of people from the imperiled countryside. In its first report on casualties, the Soviet government said the Ukrai nian nuclear plant disaster killed two people and injured an unspecified number of others. A radioactive cloud loosed by the accident shifted, meanwhile, from Scandinavia back toward Central Europe. Poland ordered emergency mea- olitic sures, and European political lead ers angrily demanded that Moscow explain why it did not quickly alert the rest of the world to the disaster, an apparent reactor meltdown be lieved to have occurred late last week. Some called on the Soviets to shut ( down all their nuclear plants until international inspections could be carried out. The Soviet government claimed the “radiation situation” had been stabilized at the damaged Chernobyl plant, 450 miles southwest of Mos cow. But Swedish officials said the Soviets had asked the Stockholm government for information on combating nuclear-plant fires, indi cating continuing serious problems. The official Soviet news media provided only sketchy accounts of the accident. Other report, L ever, drew a picture of h Ur ’ h *' dus from the affected Urne<1{)10, seeming unconcern in the S U1 capital of Kiev, just 60 mjlesT? 8 A West German technician?; mg at the Chernobyl facilin j' 18-mile security zone h-.H K a " tablished around the >"' > plam \ ‘t e Danish state fad? e , „ n fl.T r 'i ck con . v °yt were“,"i mg north front the area tw? Dnieper River, said Swedish r ^f' Swedish experts say core meltdown occurred STOCKHOUM, Sweden (AP) — Swedish experts on Tuesday said ra diation blown over northern Europe indicates a core meltdown at a crippled Soviet nuclear plant. Radioactivity levels in the Nordic countries rose to as much as six times above normal Sunday, but were de clining Tuesday. Swedish weather experts said wind shifts were taking any further radiation into Poland and Czechoslovakia. Bengt Pettersson of Sweden’s Nu clear Power Inspection Board told a news conference that the concentra tion and composition of radioactive fallout measured in Scandinavia in dicated a core meltdown, one of the most dangerous accidents possible in a nuclear power plant. Scandinavian officials also com plained about Soviet handling of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, about 60 miles from Kiev. Danish Prime Minister Poul Schlueter, the first Nordic leader to Publicly criticize Soviet handling 0 f the accident, said it was “totally jn suf licient" that the Soviet Unionhad not warned that the radioactivity was coming until it was detected in t || t West on Sunday. “It shouldn’t be that way in a mod ern society,” he said. 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