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<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/article/country/804/</link>
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<title>OneWorld UK - Ukraine</title>
<description>Ukraine</description>
<item>
<title>Tovarisch, I Am Not Dead</title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/article/view/160163/1/</link>
<description>Tovarisch, I Am Not Dead is a sons documentary about his dad. But what a dad!</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Chernobyl: The Great Cover-up </title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/83266</link>
<description>For 50 years dangerous concentrations of radionuclides have been accumulating in earth, air and water from weapons testing and reactor incidents. Yet serious studies of the effects of radiation on health have been obscured  not least by the World Health Organisation, writes Alison Katz.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Averting Disaster in Former Soviet States</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/81594</link>
<description>In past years, the HIV epidemic has ravaged the populations of many former Soviet nations, the majority of victims claimed by needle sharing and drug use. Thanks to new programs such as needle exchange and harm reduction, these countries are taking big steps in the fight against HIV/AIDS.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Russian Oil Tanker Spill 'An Ecological Catastrophe'</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/81239</link>
<description>Severe weather on the Kerch Strait near the Black Sea is blamed for sinking ships transporting oil and sulfur; now that same weather is impeding rescue efforts and cleanup, which is expected to take years.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Colour fades from post-Soviet revolutions</title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/article/view/153809/1/</link>
<description>As the outcome of the Ukrainian election threatens to peel away the orange revolution, Misha Kechaqmadze traces the success of post-Soviet regimes to stamp out the march to democracy.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Chernobyl to Get $505m Cover to Stop Radiation</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/80353</link>
<description>Ukraine is to cover the site of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor with a vast metal shelter in a long overdue operation designed to prevent the further leak of deadly radiation.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Carpathian Forests Declared World Heritage Site</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/79545</link>
<description>Primaeval beech forests in the Carpathian Mountains have been inscribed on the UN's World Heritage List, underlining the global importance of this rare forest habitat  the most extensive in Europe.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>The Day Ukraine Went Non-Nuclear</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/72655</link>
<description>Sunday marked the ten-year anniversary of the day Ukraine--then the world's third-largest nuclear weapons state--handed over all its nuclear weapons for disarmament. Couldn't others follow suit?</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Chernobyl catastrophe 'still a killer'</title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/71706</link>
<description>Twenty years since the biggest-ever industrial accident - the explosion at Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine - the catastrophe is still unfolding. 
* US nuclear industry fires up public relations campaign 
* IAEA asked to help clean Iraq   
* Red Cross Red Crescent thyroid cancer detection programme can prevent hundreds of premature deaths</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Iodine 'could have saved many Chernobyl children'</title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/71654</link>
<description>As the 20th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear plant accident approaches, the UN Children's Fund says that the number of children who developed thyroid cancer could have been significantly lower if they had been consuming iodised salt in their daily diet at the time of the accident.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Chernobyl cancers 'shockingly' underplayed</title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/71596</link>
<description>More than 250,000 additional cancers will be caused by the Chernobyl nuclear accident, of which nearly 100,000 will be fatal, according to a report that accuses previous studies - including one by the the International Atomic Energy Authority - of a &quot;shocking&quot; underestimate of the casualties. 
* Fallout - the human cost of nuclear catastrophe, post-Chernobyl photographs, see OneWorld UK Events</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Oil, gas and imperialism </title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/69758</link>
<description>The Russia-Ukraine crisis is a reminder that politics, not the market, is driving global energy policies, says Daniel Litvin.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Ukrainian migrants and asylum seekers regularly abused </title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/69290</link>
<description>EU policies toward migration are key to tackling the problem of abuse that includes extended detention in appalling conditions, violence, extortion, robbery and forced returns to face torture or persecution, a leading human rights groups said, prior to the EU-Ukraine summit.</description>
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<item>
<title>Chernobyl: The Legacy of The Worlds Worst Nuclear Accident</title>
<link>http://www.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/67928</link>
<description>On 26th April 1986, an explosion occurred in one of the reactors of the nuclear power station in Chernobyl in Ukraine. Over the next ten days more than a thousand people fought to put out the resulting fire, as a radioactive cloud spread across much of northern Europe. Nearly twenty years later, scientists have different opinions about the broader effects on health, the environment, and the social and economic impacts in those countries most affected by the disaster. Listen to a report produced</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>International Workshop on Great Volvo River Route organised in Bucharest</title>
<link>http://www.digitalopportunity.org/article/view/117308/1/</link>
<description>As part of The Great Volga River Route project, an International Workshop on Sustainable Development and World Heritage took place on 28-31 July 2005 in Bucharest, Romania.The aim is to link young people through the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) and engage them in the preservation and promotion of World Heritage and Biosphere sites.</description>
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