UKRAINE: Mourners laid red carnations - symbols of grief - in the shadow of the ruined Chernobyl power station yesterday as they marked the 20th anniversary of the world's worst civil nuclear accident.
Hundreds filed past a memorial wall engraved with the names of the local fire crew. They were among the first to perish when Chernobyl's reactor number four blew up on April 26th, 1986, spewing radioactive dust across Europe.
One old woman in a headscarf made the sign of the cross as she stooped to lay a single carnation at the foot of the wall.
Ukraine's President Viktor Yushchenko, who presented medals to survivors and rescue workers, said it was time to start healing the scars left by the disaster.
"After 20 years of pain and fear, this land must feel progress," he told mourners in Chernobyl - epicentre of a still-contaminated 30km (19 mile) exclusion zone that straddles parts of Ukraine and neighbouring Belarus. "The trance we were left in by Chernobyl is over. We are a strong and brave people and we are looking to the future."
His former Soviet state has been left to deal with a legacy of contamination, ill-health among its people and a reactor that, though entombed in a concrete "sarcophagus", will remain radioactive for centuries.
Nuclear power, out of favour for years after the accident, is now making a comeback as governments like the United States and China seek cleaner and cheaper alternatives to oil and gas. But environmental groups have warned the lessons of Chernobyl should not be forgotten.
The Soviet authorities sent in firefighters and conscripts to extinguish the fire and clean up radioactive material, some equipped only with shovels. The World Health Organisation puts at 9,000 the number of people expected to die of radiation exposure from Chernobyl, while environmental group Greenpeace predicts an eventual death toll of 93,000.
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan recalled that Soviet officials waited two days before telling their own people, and the world, about what had happened. "Many hard lessons have been learned from Chernobyl, including the importance of providing the public with transparent . . . information," UN chief spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. Services of remembrance began early yesterday, when hundreds of people filed slowly through the streets of Slavutych, the town built to house the Chernobyl plant's workers displaced by the accident. Each bearing a candle, they fell silent at 1:23am Moscow time - about the time of the explosion.
Later in Ukraine's capital Kiev, Lyudmila Snizhok dabbed her eyes with a tissue as she remembered her husband Leonid, a paramedic at Chernobyl. "He died three years ago from the effects of radiation," she said. "He left three children."
Pope Benedict said he prayed for the Chernobyl victims .