If accurate, 7 buses filled with Russian soldiers who were at the Chernobyl exclusion zone arrived at the Center of Radiology in Belarus suffering from acute radiation syndrome. https://twitter.com/MrKovalenko/status/1509278005469847574
@corlin Yes, and that they tried to warn them. smh
@99reasons4truth @SPFX
No. Most likely not.
It depends totally on how much they inhaled.
They will have ill effects, and perhaps a higher rate of cancers.
@MrGoat @99reasons4truth @SPFX
Thanks..
@99reasons4truth nah. @corlin @SPFX
@99reasons4truth @corlin I'd say many of them could die. I don't know what their symptoms are but any symptoms is bad. Even if they don't die soon it can kill even years later.
@99reasons4truth @corlin I had a ballroom dancer friend from Minsk who emegrated to the US. He was 6'4" muscular strong man but he had been exposed to the fallout of Chernobyl. About a year after he arrived he quickly declined in health and was diagnosed with luekemia and died.
@SPFX One day in the Chernobyl exclusion zone is the same as being xrayed. After a month it's not surprising they would have symptoms.
@Hoi_Polloi23 especially if they were in fact digging trenches.😬
@SPFX sad …
@SPFX
The unconfirmed report I read said they were hand digging trenches in the forest, in the exclusion zone.
Not the brightest tools.