As the fourth anniversary of the earthquake-tsunami-meltdown syndrome approached, I looked back at an example of pro-nuclear spin that appeared in the media in the spring of 2011. Ironically, the pro-nuclear message discussed here is in a film about the horrors of atomic weapon blasts in The Polygon, the sacrifice zone in Kazakhstan where the Soviet Union detonated hundreds of nuclear and thermonuclear bombs. As the film was released in the spring of 2011, shortly after the Fukushima Daiichi meltdowns, the director expressed views that were surprisingly similar to those of the nuclear energy sector—an industry that had a public relations campaign in full force during those months before TEPCO admitted having concealed that three core meltdowns had occurred in the first days of the crisis. I'm timing this article to also commemorate the birth of the Nevada-Semipalatinsk anti-nuclear movement which is marked every year in Kazakhstan on February 28th.
After the Apocalypse [1] is a one-hour documentary that takes place in Semipalatinsk,
a town in north-eastern Kazakhstan where the USSR detonated 456 nuclear
weapons, many of them large-yield megaton hydrogen bombs. The camera goes to radioactive
craters where herders still take their animals to graze. It goes to a museum
where the pickled corpses of deformed babies sit in jars. However, the horror
show of the past is not the main attraction. The film concentrates on the fierce
struggle that still goes on today over the reproductive rights of the
Kazakhstan hibakusha. The director,
Antony Butts, follows a pregnant woman, Bibigul, whose wide-set eyes suggest chromosome
damage. She wants to give birth despite the protestations of Toleukhan
Nurmagambetov, a doctor who talks of the deformed, and too often abandoned, babies
in the region as “monsters.”
1989. A Kazakh woman takes the microphone in the first anti-nuclear demonstrations (Not mentioned in After the Apocalypse). |
When the film begins,
the viewer gets a sense that Dr. Nurmagambetov and his staff have made humane
and heroic efforts to care for the severely deformed children abandoned to
their care, and so we can somewhat sympathize with the stern and drastic
positions they have adopted about the need for genetic passports—legal
restrictions on who is allowed to reproduce. The doctor is well aware of the
historical precedents in ancient Sparta and Nazi Germany. He knows his position
is extreme, but outsiders who would judge him haven’t spent years looking after
the doomed and abandoned infants in his infirmary. His belief is that genetic
passports are genocide when applied to ethnicities, but sound medical practice
when applied to individuals and diseases.
Siding with Dr. Nurmagambetov
becomes more difficult as the film follows Bibigul through her pregnancy. She
is determined to have her child, and she knows how avoid the clinic until it is
too late to have a safe abortion. She also refuses to have amniocentesis to
check for Down syndrome while there is still time to terminate the pregnancy. The
film ends with the birth of her apparently healthy and un-deformed child.
While most of the film
is a narrative of Bibigul’s pregnancy, it also has segments that are straight
journalism. The director gives legitimacy to the scientific controversy over whether
the birth defects in the region really were caused by atomic bombs. For most
medical professionals and inhabitants of the region, denying the effects of the
bomb blasts is a cruel joke, but one wouldn’t know this by viewing After the Apocalypse.
Deniers cloud the issue
by suggesting that in the pre-atomic era the region was known for a high rate
of birth defects caused by vitamin deficiencies in the local diet.
The controversy is
presented through interviews with two scientists, Dr. Sergey Lukashenko from the Institute
of Radiation Safety and Boris Gusev from the Semipalatinsk Institute of Radiation
Medicine. As one might suspect by the name Institute of Radiation Safety, Dr. Lukashenko seems to have his
job because his views assured he would fulfill the institutional mission to
speak to the public of such a thing as “radiation safety.” In his short
interviews he states:
At that time they were studying the
after-effects of shockwaves and different types of damage caused by nuclear
weapons, but now we only study things to do with radioecology. This place is
the cradle of the Soviet Union’s atomic weapons research program. They did
everything here. 456 bombs were tested… Kazakhstan is not a nuclear country. We
don’t know any nuclear secrets. (9:00~)
His
statement that Kazakhstan is “not a nuclear country” is true only if one
accepts the political opinion that nuclear weapons and nuclear energy have
nothing to do with each other. While renouncing nuclear weapons, Kazakhstan has
made a very determined effort to be one of the world’s leading uranium
suppliers, yet Dr. Lukashenko’s expertise in radioecology seemed to take no
account of the substantial hazards left behind by decades of uranium mining.
Later
in the film he performed a classic example of the radiation expert waving the “magic
wand” to divert the public’s attention from the actual means by which organisms
and ecosystems are affected by radiation. During a tour of the radiation museum
he waves a Geiger counter at a piece for granite from ground zero of one of the
Soviet bomb detonations. The Geiger counter screams when held close, but drops
off to safe levels a few meters away because of the inverse square law. He
tells the camera:
If the background level is 15 to 20,
then 15 times higher than normal is not a lot. The existence of these objects
[radioactive rocks and buildings at the sites of detonation] cannot be the
cause of all the horrors that they show on TV—I mean the deformed people and so
on. There is no way it can account for it. It cannot be the reason because the
radiation is too low. (32:30~)
It
is notable that he did not say “it is unlikely
to be the reason.” Instead, he speaks with an angry and insistent voice, saying
“cannot be the reason” about a point
which cannot be determined with certainty. He shows here a faith in a
scientific model of the effects of radiation that has been questioned for many
years because it has consistently ignored the effects of internal contamination,
as well as the chemical, as opposed to radiological, effects of nuclear wastes
in the environment.
Dr.
Lukashenko’s rant is meant to deflect attention from these concerns, and it
does so by stating a point that his opponents would not dispute. When he speaks about gamma radiation falling rapidly at a distance, he's referring to some basic high school science--the inverse square law--that no one disputes. Nuclear opponents also don't dispute that that low, temporary doses of gamma rays present little danger. The issue of
main concern is the damage caused at the time of the bomb blasts to the genomes
of all creatures in the ecosystem. These were times of intense irradiation and
heavy metal chemical and radioactive fallout.
They damaged the cells of people alive at the time, and because some of these
cells were reproductive cells, the damage was passed on to future generations.
Thus it is totally beside the point to draw attention to the fact that people are
in no danger from the radioactive rubble at the old bomb sites. It is a
distraction and a deflection of attention from the real concern, made out of a
deliberate wish to deceive, or out of incompetence.
The
more authoritative voice in the film was that of the veteran scientist of the
Soviet radiation research project, Boris Gusev of the Semipalatinsk Institute
of Radiation Medicine. He stated:
We reported directly to Moscow.
These are the records of illness. These [records] are from the most seriously
affected villages next to the Polygon. We observed and analyzed the population.
We investigated which were the main illnesses that were linked to exposure from
radiation. We compiled them into risk groups and so on. All this data was top
secret. When I was a doctor, a neuropathologist, back then all our life was on
the road. We observed the population, we returned for a quick wash and shave,
and then we were back out again. On the first floor where the hospital is now
we had an enormous laboratory which processed this work. We knew precisely
where the radiation was. We knew precisely how much of the different types of
radiation people were being exposed to, what dose the population was receiving.
That is, we were not idle. We knew everything.
But the most important thing was
that willingly or unwillingly the people living in the regions of the Polygon
had been pulled into this game between the United States and the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union played the worst role, of course, because it allowed its
citizens to live through the most real type of nuclear war. They were thinking
about a preventive nuclear war—that if there was going to be one, then they had
to know what would happen to people. And, therefore, no one was evacuated.
Instead, they were observed to see how many would die, how many would become
ill and so on.
Do
you feel a little bit guilty that you took part in the Soviet Union’s
experiment?
My good man, how far we are from one
another. From a moral, ethical point of view and in knowledge of that time you
ask this question—and are probably correct in doing so—but there is no answer
to this question. Simply, there isn’t one. I can’t explain it. And you will
never understand what the former Soviet Union was. You will never understand
this in your lifetime. (19:00~)
Over the last 15 years we have
thoroughly analyzed all the material in the archives. We have made our
conclusions and published our research. And at the same time we have continued
our planned research on the population. Now a huge group has appeared, of
250,000 to 270,000 people. These are the children of parents who have been
irradiated. We thought that everything would go smoothly, that chromosomal
damage and genetic effects would be confined to only the generation of people
who were irradiated, and they could not be inherited by future generations. But
it turned out this was wrong. (46:18~)
The
director inserts a text onto the screen after this statement, citing no expert
opinion to support the claim, in order to cast doubt on what Dr. Gusev has just
stated:
The
vast majority of scientists do not believe that radiation damage in humans can
be passed down the generations. But in Semipalatinsk many believe that
radiation can cause “genetic instability” in later generations.
The
same distortion of the “controversy” occurs in other parts of the film. Another
text inserted into the film asserts, again with no citation:
There is no reliable evidence that
nuclear testing caused the area’s higher than average birth defects. It could
not have caused Bibigul’s appearance: her mother has the same facial
characteristics and she was born before the [nuclear] testing started. Despite
this, many in the medical profession in Semipalatinsk believe that women with “suspect
genes” should not have children. (36:50~)
In
spite of what is stated above about the age of Bibigul’s mother, Biken, the
precise ages of the two women are never stated. Nuclear explosions first
occurred in The Polygon in 1949, and Bibigul appears to be about 30 years old
at most when the film was made shortly before 2011. If her mother had been born
before 1949, she would have been over 30 by the time she gave birth to her
daughter. In any case, even if Biken avoided genetic damage in the womb of her
mother, Bibigul certainly could have been born from an ovum that was exposed to
radiation, one that was in her mother in the 1950s during her childhood. Biken
herself recounts (3:15~) how she witnessed the bomb explosions at the age of
six and became ill from them. “It was definitely the nuclear effects,” she
says, so there is no reason to discount the possibility that her ova (ova exist
in the female fetus even before birth) were damaged by radiation.
Another curious aspect of this issue is that in this film, which is ostensibly about the effects of nuclear weapons, the director focused on an outlier, a person with a serious genetic abnormality who was born before the weapons were detonated. Then he chose to save this information as a big reveal late in the film after the viewer has been led to believe that the abnormality was caused by nuclear bombs. Was Biken a "cherry-picked" research subject in this film? It would have been easier to find younger grandparent-child-grandchild lineages that started in the post-nuclear era (for example, three generations born 25 years apart in 1955, 1980, and 2005).
Another curious aspect of this issue is that in this film, which is ostensibly about the effects of nuclear weapons, the director focused on an outlier, a person with a serious genetic abnormality who was born before the weapons were detonated. Then he chose to save this information as a big reveal late in the film after the viewer has been led to believe that the abnormality was caused by nuclear bombs. Was Biken a "cherry-picked" research subject in this film? It would have been easier to find younger grandparent-child-grandchild lineages that started in the post-nuclear era (for example, three generations born 25 years apart in 1955, 1980, and 2005).
One of the first anti-nuclear demonstrations in Kazakhstan in 1989 (Not mentioned in After the Apocalypse). |
Antony
Butts sometimes uses his subjects to support his view, but contradicts them and
bends their stories at his convenience in order to dismiss the conclusion of
medical professionals who have long and deep experience with the local
situation. Even if the non-effect of radiation on this one family could be
proven, it would be only one family. It would prove nothing about genetic
damage in all of The Polygon hibakusha (who
all have official documents identifying them as victims of nuclear explosions),
yet Butts is willing to imply that he has untangled the mystery by filming the
story of one pregnancy.
One
would think that a film about The Polygon would be the ultimate anti-nuclear
film, yet it seems a nuclear advocate took up the topic as a challenge: What if
we could show that even in the worst place imaginable no harm from radiation
could be proven? But it failed to find an audience among either the pro or
anti-nuclear crowd. This occurred because its conclusions are too pro-nuclear
to gain sympathy from anti-nuclear audiences, but its images are too horrific
for it to serve the purposes of the pro-nuclear lobby.
In
spite of an apparent attempt at objectivity, the pro-nuclear bias becomes more obvious
by the end. Dr. Nurmagambetov ended up looking like a heartless fascist, while the
birth of Bibigul’s apparently healthy baby was used to imply that all is well
in Kazakhstan. Antony Butts might have chosen to keep his own views hidden and
let the film speak for itself, but in an interview in New Scientist [2] at the time of the film’s release, he stated some
views that were straight out of the nuclear industry’s talking points. He showed
that he agreed with Dr. Lukashenko, while he seemed to have not accepted what the
veteran Soviet scientist had told him about the confirmed existence of 250,000
people with inherited genetic defects. He told the interviewer:
I
was very surprised that the radiation did die off as much as it had. They
tested 456 bombs—20,000 times the explosive power of Hiroshima—on this area.
You go to the craters and sure, they’re radioactive. But if you’re a kilometer
away from them, it’s nothing. It’s background level. When you have a nuclear
war it’s actually quite habitable afterwards, so in one sense it’s not as scary
as it’s been made out to be. Yet in another, there’s this other kind of fear—of
long-term genetic damage.
The
radiation is concentrated around the craters, but elsewhere there’s not enough
radiation to cause these birth defects. So what is the reason? That’s where we
get into controversial science. The epidemiological data that the Institute of
Radiation Safety has isn’t perfect, but it suggests that children of the cohort
that got irradiated live on average five to seven years less than those from a
comparable socioeconomic group in an area that wasn’t irradiated. Is that due
to the psychological stress, or, alternatively, could it be because of this
obsession the locals have of protecting themselves from radiation with vodka?
There
is this elevated level of birth defects; there’s no getting around it. There is
a folic acid problem there—the whole area has a lack of greens and folic acid
deficiency is linked to birth defects. But the scientists and doctors I spoke
with said that folic acid deficiency could not account for so many birth
defects, especially now as they’ve begun giving out supplements to little
effect. This is where the science gets difficult. You can talk to scientists
who will say it’s a load of rubbish, or others who will say that it’s been
proven that radiation damage can be passed on in mice but that we’ve got to
prove it in humans. I think this is crucial to nail down.
Yuri
Dubrova, a geneticist at Leicester University, has a freezer full of blood from
all of these generations from Semipalatinsk, down the line. It’s just sitting
there waiting to be defrosted and analyzed when the time is right—and when the
funding is there. I think the time is right now.
I
think Semipalatinsk is particularly relevant [after Fukushima] because it
explores the harrowing consequences of radiation exposure… All forms of energy
creation are going to kill people. Coal kills millions of people per year with
particulate pollution. Before we get really scared about radiation we need to
understand the science and make an analysis. Do we go nuclear power or not?
Instead of the debate being idiotic nonsense of rhetoric and fear, we should
honor these people and let their deaths and lives mean something.
What are the main things that you hope people take away from your film?
There are two main points I hope to make. One
is about a post nuclear-war world—and why nuclear weapons are bad. The second
is how paranoid people are about something they know nothing about. In the
absence of knowledge, fear thrives. This is especially important because we
must choose a new form of energy, and a lot of us are writing off nuclear power
because of fear. We have this golden opportunity to say, well how scary is it?
Let’s give grants to these scientists and find out. Then we can choose to be
frightened or not.
One wouldn’t expect a filmmaker to return
from the Soviet Union’s nuclear test site speaking like a public relations man
for the nuclear industry, but these comments have a remarkable similarity to
the talking points that repeatedly appeared in editorials written by nuclear
advocates in the weeks after Fukushima. The theme of fear is found throughout, along
with the Chernobyl tropes about illness and death from fear, stress and vodka.
Such talk suggests the main concern should not be eliminating an environmental
hazard but rather managing our fear of it. Antony Butts then trots out the
canard about deaths from coal, as if there were no other energy alternatives
besides nuclear. Somehow he knows that the debate is “idiotic nonsense of
rhetoric and fear” and not based on a solid half-century of research by numerous
scientists who concluded nuclear was a technology to be avoided (see the
reading list below).
The most dubious point is the suggestion that
more research is needed, as if we shouldn’t believe what Dr. Gusev stated in
the film about sixty years Soviet and Kazakh research leading to the discovery
of 250,000 people with inherited genetic damage. Supposedly, we have to wait
until the finding can be confirmed by a proper British researcher with a
freezer full of blood from people of Semipalatinsk. The additional problem with
this faith in British research is that it too would be dismissed by nuclear
advocates who would say again, “This is where the science gets complicated. We
just don’t know. It has to be nailed down when research funding becomes
available.” No amount of unfavorable research findings could ever convince the
nuclear lobby to quit its game.
Antony Butts’ ignorance on these matters
points to a general pitfall of documentary filmmaking. The filmmaker might be
an expert in his craft, but not in the subject of his film. We shouldn’t expect
him to speak like an expert on a topic just because he spent a few months
making a film about it. However, directors are often given the opportunity to
speak as authorities, while the experts who have devoted their careers to the
topic go ignored. Most directors attempt to be objective and not tell the
audience what they are supposed to conclude about the topic, but the rule to go
in with an open mind doesn’t mean that one has to proceed with an empty mind. It’s alright to read some
books before turning on the camera (see the reading list below).
These comments that Antony Butts made before
the debut of his own film raise serious questions about his pre-existing
motives or who was out to influence him before, during and after the film’s
production. Did he do any research? Did he learn anything about alpha and beta
particles and the mechanisms of internal radioactive contamination? What about
bioaccumulation in the ecosystem? These topics were never mentioned in the film.
A commenter on the New Scientist
website summed it up: “None of his points are
relevant and it smells like propaganda from the nuclear industry.”
The director himself,
or people who had his attention, may have thought it would be a great challenge
to spin the worst nuclear horror story of all in a way that would leave
audiences doubting that radiation is really the cause of poor health in the
populations around The Polygon. The film may have been made as a counter to the
much more comprehensive and contextualized film on the same topic released a
year earlier: Silent Bombs: All for the
Motherland. [3,4] Though After the
Apocalypse tried to neutralize The Polygon as rallying point of the
anti-nuclear movement, any film about this topic would always be too disturbing
to be used as promotional material for the nuclear industry.
It is possible that there
was no deliberate plot to shape the bias of the film. Antony Butts may have
just worked independently and met a few people like Dr. Lukashenko along his
way and found them, for reasons unstated, more convincing than the detailed and
articulate explanations given by the Cold War veteran neuropathologist, Dr.
Gusev. In the end, the film was quickly forgotten in the days just after the
Fukushima catastrophe because, firstly, its subject matter was too grim for
most people spend an hour with. Secondly, it could satisfy no one. For nuclear
opponents it smelled of propaganda, while the nuclear industry had nothing to
gain in encouraging people to see its disturbing images.
Notes
[1]
Antony Butts (director), “After
the Apocalypse,” Tigerlily Films,
May 2011. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kVBNiLqJlw
(official trailer).
[2]
Tiffany O’Callaghan. “The Human Cost of Soviet Nuclear
Tests,” New Scientist, May 11, 2011. http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2011/05/the-aftermath-of-nuclear-war.html
[3]
Gerald Sperling, “Silent
bombs for the Motherland,” Al Jazeera,
July 25, 2010.
[4] Gerald Sperling (producer) & Rob
King (director), Silent Bombs: All
for the Motherland, 4 Square Productions Canada, 2009. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5aUVQiKVKJQ
The photos featured above are stills from this film. Dr. Gusev
was interviewed in this film as well, and he stated, “Oncological diseases and
death in that group—that can be extrapolated to the whole irradiated population—were
two times higher than in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.”
Reading List
The
nuclear lobby might wish to label these books and articles as examples of the “idiotic nonsense of rhetoric and fear,”
but they are all written by qualified scientists. Some of them lost government
support for radiation studies as soon as they produced research findings that
were troublesome for the nuclear industry.
Rosalie Bertell. No Immediate Danger: Prognosis
for a Radioactive Earth, Book Publishing Company, 2000). http://www.ratical.org/radiation/NRBE/.
Christopher Busby and Mireille Escande de Messieres, “Miscarriages
and Congenital Conditions in Offspring of Veterans of the British Nuclear
Atmospheric Test Program,” Epidemiology
4:4, September 29, 2014. http://omicsonline.org/epidemiology-open-access-abstract.php?abstract_id=30829.
Helen Caldicott, Nuclear
Power is Not the Answer (The New Press, 2007).
Benjamin Dessus & Bernard Laponche, En finir avec le nucléaire: Pourquoi et
comment (Seuil, 2011). (Finishing
with Nuclear: Why and How).
Gordon Edwards, “Consideration of Environmental
Impacts on Temporary Storage of Spent Fuel After Cessation of Reactor Operation,”
Docket ID No. NRC-2012-0246: submitted by The
Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility
to the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, http://www.ccnr.org/CCNR_NRC_2013.pdf.
Ian Fairlie, “A
hypothesis to explain childhood cancers near nuclear power plants,” Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 133,
July 2014, Pages 10–17. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0265931X13001811.
John Gofman & Arthur R. Tamplin. Poisoned Power: The Case
Against Nuclear Power Before and After Three Mile Island (Committee for
Nuclear Responsibility, 1979) http://www.ratical.org/radiation/CNR/PP/.
Gayle Green, The
Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation (University
of Michigan Press, 2001).
Ernest J. Sternglass, Secret
Fallout: low-level radiation from Hiroshima to Three-Mile Island (McGraw-Hill,
1981). http://www.ratical.org/radiation/SecretFallout/.