Sensational pictures of the exclusion zone in Fukushima. This is what the territory of death looks like now!

Polish photographer Arkadiusz Podnesinsky visited the nuclear disaster area in the Japanese prefecture of Fukushima to see all the consequences of a terrible incident with his own eyes. When he received permission to enter the 20-kilometer exclusion zone, he ran into scenes similar to those shown in post-apocalyptic films. It is worth saying that previously the photographer was already shooting in the area of ​​the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

"It’s not the earthquakes and tsunamis that are responsible for the accident at the Fukushima nuclear power plant, but the people," Podnesinsky writes on his website. The purpose of his project, he saw the opportunity to "draw their own conclusions, not being influenced by media sensations, government propaganda or nuclear lobbyists who are trying to minimize the consequences of the disaster, doing everything so that the public receives as little information as possible."

Abandoned cars are slowly absorbed by nature on a stretch of road near a power plant.

Some of the cars have already completely disappeared into the wild grass.

Podnesinsky shows a radiation level of 6.7 μR / h.

The field slowly absorbs a motorcycle chained to a post.

These dirty TVs were assembled and stacked during cleaning work.

Web on products in an abandoned supermarket.

Pictures from supermarkets look intimidating, like frames from a post-apocalyptic movie.

This abandoned computer lab is covered in bird droppings from a nearby village.

A dining table with portable cooking stoves was left in a hurry.

Maps in an amusement park located in the exclusion zone.

Musical instruments, including piano, occupied the entire space of this classroom.

An earthquake created a tsunami and destroyed buildings.

These bikes were abandoned when residents fled.

Classes were interrupted by disaster.

In this picture taken by a Google camera from the air, one of the landfills with thousands of bags of contaminated soil is visible.

Radioactive soil bags were stacked on top of one another to preserve space.

The farmers were told that these bags will be disposed of, but most people are skeptical of this promise.

Cows appeared white spots on the skin shortly after the accident. One farmer believes this comes from cows eating contaminated grass.

It says: "Nuclear energy is the energy of a brighter future."

Watch the video: DANS LES PARTIES RADIOACTIVES DE TCHERNOBYL (April 2024).

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