"North Korean soldiers and their families are being treated in a
military hospital for radiation exposure after the September hydrogen
bomb test at the Punggye-ri nuclear facility.
"More than a thousand
troops of the North Korean army were deployed to the site to dig
tunnels and patrol the surrounding area, Japanese newspaper The Asahi Shimbun reported Wednesday, citing anonymous sources with knowledge of North Korean affairs.
"The news comes after reports in the Japanese press indicated that around 200 people died in an accident at the facility due to a tunnel collapse in October.
"After reporting a series of small earthquakes
and a landslide in the area near where the facility is located, south
of the Mantapsan mountain, several experts have warned that the site has
become too unstable to host further nuclear experiments. Another bomb
test would risk a massive collapse and radioactive leaks, Chinese geologists warned.
"According to researchers writing for the North Korea monitoring website 38 North, North Korean scientists were unlikely to abandon the site altogether, trying instead to build new underground tunnels to move the test facility to another part of the mountain.
"Concerns
over radiation leaks from the North Korean nuclear test site continue
to grow in Japan, a country that has suffered enormously from the
consequences of nuclear bombs from world War II and the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster.
"According
to the Asahi newspaper report, a computer simulation of possible leaks
of radioactive materials ran by the Korea Institute of Ocean Science and
Technology (KIOST) showed that meteorological conditions at the time of
North Korea’s nuclear test would have allowed for radioactive materials
to carry into the atmosphere in a northeastern direction.
"They would affect a wide area touching upon Russia, the Kuril Islands and the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido.
"South
Korean, Chinese and Japanese authorities recorded no abnormal radiation
levels in the immediate aftermath of the test. The Japanese Nuclear
Regulation Authority said at the time radioactive substances would not
be released into the atmosphere in case of an underground nuclear test.
"But Chinese nuclear weapons expert Wei Shijie told The Telegraph that
a nuclear leak was 'inevitable.' He said: 'It is just a matter of time
to detect it, because there are cracks on mountains where radioactive
substances will leak.'"
http://www.newsweek.com/north-korean-soldiers-being-treated-radiation-exposure-after-nuclear-test-698246
Chubby Cheeks looks pleased. He must have just eaten somebody.
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