NEW footage reveals trenches dug by Russian soldiers at Chernobyl, reportedly leaving them struck down with radiation sickness.
Vladimir Putin’s troops occupied site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster, after they captured it in the early days of their Ukraine invasion.
Dozens of Russian soldiers are said to have been struck down with acute radiation sickness and were taken in seven busses back across the border in nearby Belarus.
The site of the 1986 nuclear tragedy in northern Ukraine was captured in the opening days of the war, sparking fears of a major radioactive disaster as a result of heavy fighting around the plant.
Russian troops dug trenches in the highly toxic Red Forest zone, just a few miles west of the plant, but have now retreated as part of a pull-out from around the capital Kyiv.
READ MORE ON UKRAINE
Drone video shows mounds of disturbed earth and fortifications dug on the outskirts of the Red Forest, the most radioactively contaminated part of the zone around Chernobyl.
As the camera zooms out from the abandoned Russian positions the huge steel dome built to cover the destroyed reactor can be seen in the distance.
The first Ukrainian soldiers have now been pictured walking through the Chernobyl site since the Russians retreated.
- Vladimir Putin's secret daughters have been hit with sanctions in the wake of their tyrant father's horrific war crimes in Ukraine.
- Russian death squads slaughtered civilians and even stopped rescuers from saving screaming victims.
- Putin's 'butcher of Bucha' who 'oversaw rape & genocide' was blessed by priest
- Ukraine's president compares Putin's savage troops to ISIS monsters
- Moment Russian army vehicles 'fire on cyclist' in town rocked by war crimes
- Russia shamelessly claims BRITAIN 'staged' Putin's genocide in Bucha
- Moscow will face 'maximum sanctions' following war crimes, warns Foreign Secretary Truss
Pictures show scenes of devastation with abandoned tanks and destroyed bridges.
Putin’s forces have with withdrawn after losing thousands of soldiers in intense fighting around the Ukrainian capital.
Most read in News
Chernobyl lies 80 miles north of Kyiv on a strategic route into the capital from Belarus, Putin's puppet state where he has stationed 30,000 troops.
Soon after the war began, Ukraine lost all contact with Chernobyl, sparking fears of a potentially dangerous loss of power at the site.
According to workers at the site, when Russian soldiers first arrived as the site, the drove their tanks and armoured vehicles without radiation protection through the majorly radioactive area.
That also led to the vehicles kicking up huge clouds of radioactive dust.
A Chernobyl employee branded their actions as "suicidal" because the radioactive dust they inhaled was likely to cause internal radiation in their bodies.
Reports of radiation sickness come after US military sources claimed Russian forces were withdrawing from Chernobyl nuclear site and walking back towards Belarus in a major climbdown.
"Chernobyl is [an] area where they [the Russians] are beginning to reposition some of their troops," a Pentagon official said.
READ MORE SUN STORIES
Read More on The Sun
They added that the Russians are "leaving, walking away from the Chernobyl facility and moving into Belarus".
The official added: "We think that they are leaving, I can't tell you that they're all gone."
Help those fleeing conflict with The Sun’s Ukraine Fund
PICTURES of women and children fleeing the horror of Ukraine’s devastated towns and cities have moved Sun readers to tears.
Many of you want to help the five million caught in the chaos — and now you can, by donating to The Sun's Ukraine Fund.
Give as little as £3 or as much as you can afford and every penny will be donated to the Red Cross on the ground helping women, children, the old, the infirm and the wounded.
Donate to help The Sun's fund
Or text to 70141 from UK mobiles
£3 — text SUN£3
£5 — text SUN£5
£10 — text SUN£10
Texts cost your chosen donation amount (e.g. £5) +1 standard message (we receive 100%). For full T&Cs visit
The Ukraine Crisis Appeal will support people in areas currently affected and those potentially affected in the future by the crisis.
In the unlikely event that the British Red Cross raise more money than can be reasonably and efficiently spent, any surplus funds will be used to help them prepare for and respond to other humanitarian disasters anywhere in the world.
For more information visit