Annya was born in 1990 to Valentina and Vachlav Pesenko from Zakopytye,
a village highly contaminated by the Chernobyl nuclear meltdown of
1986. A cancerous brain tumour at the age of four marked the end of
Annya's childhood and the beginning of a life of pain and illness.
Annya, now 15 and bed-ridden, has spent her life in and out of
hospital, between tumours and life support. Every 15 minutes of every
night, she must be turned in order to prevent further pain and
bedsores.
Twenty years after the Chernobyl disaster, Annya, and her parents
battle everyday with the cruel and personal legacy of Chernobyl. Their
home village of Zakopytye, irradiated and uninhabitable, was razed and
buried years ago. Gomel, the region where they live now, is
economically and socially depressed, and work is hard to find.
Annya's is just one story. In the Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and beyond,
there are 100,000's of people who lost a chance of a normal life to
nuclear disaster on a quiet spring night in 1986. Thousands of stories.
Thousands of certificates. Thousands of lives forever and irreparably
scarred.
Nuclear technology is inherently dangerous. Today, thankfully, it is
also unnecessary. Our energy needs can be met with safe and efficient
renewable energy technologies. So, why are so many politicians peddling
nuclear power at the very time we need it least, when we have safe and
sustainable sources available to power the world?
And why does the UN, through its International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) continue to promote the nuclear technology that
creates the very materials used to make the nuclear weapons it is
mandated to stop? Is it the role of a UN agency, funded by your taxes,
to advance the profits of the nuclear industry? Do we not have the
right to expect the IAEA to focus only on the values and principles of
the UN - peace, security, and human rights - and not on private
industry's profits?
In some ways, sadly, Annya is
just a number. She is one of hundreds of thousands of victims living
the devastating aftermath of Chernobyl. For Annya and for the thousands
of children like her, you need to speak out and say NO more nuclear, NO
more Chernobyls. If you don't, who will?