Can there be nuclear fallout in Russia? How many nuclear leaks have occurred in Russia?

Just once, in the early hours of April 26, 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, located 130 kilometers north of Kiev, the capital of the Ukrainian Union*** and State of the Soviet Union, there was a violent explosion, the reactor room of the building was destroyed, and at the same time a fire broke out, and a large amount of radioactive material leaked out of the reactor, the surroundings of the environment has been seriously contaminated, resulting in the most serious accident in the history of nuclear power so far.

This time the impact was so great that after the accident at the nuclear power plant, a large amount of radioactive fallout contaminated parts of northern and eastern and western Europe, and Sweden, Denmark, Finland and the European ****same body lodged a strong protest with the Soviet Union on April 29th. A spokesman for the Swedish National Institute of Radiology said that levels of radioactive material drifting down the eastern coast of Sweden after the accident had exceeded normal standards by a factor of 100. An increase in radioactive fallout has been detected within 10 kilometers of the Fallsmark nuclear power plant in northern Sweden, where 600 workers were forced to evacuate the plant and nearly 1,000 residents waited in long lines to be examined for radioactive fallout. Denmark's Prime Minister, Jean-Pierre Schlüter, strongly condemned the Soviet Union's failure to immediately alert its neighbors to the accident at the plant. Poland was the most contaminated country, and the Polish government set up a special commission headed by the deputy prime minister to deal with the hazards of the accident and other related issues, and took measures to prevent the radioactive fallout from the nuclear power plant from jeopardizing the health of Poles, instructing people not to consume milk from cows fed on green fodder, and distributing potassium iodide to the residents of the areas concerned who were under the age of 18. The Yugoslav government also asked residents not to utilize rainwater, not to drink milk from cows and sheep grazing in the wild, and not to eat fresh vegetables raw.

The radiation hazard from the accident at the nuclear power plant was so severe that in the first year after the accident about 50 percent of the radiation was released, and in the first five years the proportion reached 80 percent, causing great harm to the health of the inhabitants of the contaminated areas, with 15 percent of the victims being children under the age of 7, 10 percent of children and adolescents between the ages of 7 and 17, and 70 percent of adults, and 5 percent of those born after the accident. At the moment the population of Belarus is still affected by radiation, more than 90% of it is cesium-137 with a long decay cycle.

There is still an effect on the population of Belarus, but less on the people of Russia.

Your first question, can not be answered, all parties have nuclear radiation, as long as he does not cause harm to the human body, Russia is in this state.