Warning
NUKETOWN

Inside community plagued by deformities and freak illnesses after living next to the site of 460 Soviet nuke tests

DEFORMITIES, rare cancers and chilling levels of suicide blight a community living less than a 100 miles from a Soviet nuclear test site.

Some 460 nukes were detonated in Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan, and thousands of people living there today have horrific health problems because of the radioactive fallout.

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Berik who was born not only blind, but disfigured after years of winds blowing radioactive fallout over his villageCredit: Getty Images - Getty
People (ringed in red) can be seen coming out of their homes after nuclear weapon explodes during the night
Babies to this day are born with enlarged skullsCredit: Getty Images - Getty

Between 1949 and 1998 the Soviet Union tested 456 nuclear weapons in the Semipalatinsk Test Site — also known as "The Polygon".

Some of the blasts were conducted underground.

Yet more than 100 were dropped from the air as they would in a catastrophic nuclear war, with large populations living as close as 90 miles from where warheads exploded.

But the effect from fallout on those living near ground zero of the Communist superpower has created a nuclear tragedy for generations of people — that was covered up by Moscow in echoes of the Chernobyl disaster.

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It has been widely alleged the people living there were even used as guinea pigs to see what would happen to humans living near an explosion. 

Thirty years after the termination of tests at the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site, second and third generations of children have mutations caused by long-term exposure to ionizing radiation

Dmitriy Vesselov, ex-Semipalatinsk resident

Magdalena Stawkowski, who is a medical anthropologist researching nuclear weapons legacy in Kazakhstan, told The Sun Online: "Everyone is impacted. Those living nearby are exposed.

"Those further away ingest radioactive meat. 

"When seasonal fires burn through the test site, radioactive particles are resuspended in the air and get carried by the wind who knows where. 

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"Mining industries operating in the region sell their ores on the global market. Are they radioactive?  Some say yes, others say no."

The Red Army would even order people in some villages to go outside during the denotation, according to a UN report.  

The official estimate is over 40 years there were about one million people in the zone of radiation fallout.

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