American satellites carry cancer to Russia

On September 23, the skies of Moscow, Kiev and Ekaterinburg, where the fragments of UARS satellites flew, radioactive elements that could cause cancer, Dr. Igor Ostresov of the Modern Commission Russia's chemical claims.

On September 23, the skies of Moscow, Kiev and Ekaterinburg, where the fragments of UARS satellites flew, radioactive elements that could cause cancer, Dr. Igor Ostresov of the Modern Commission Russia's chemical claims.

When NASA's UARS satellite fell into the Earth's atmosphere, it flew through the skies of Moscow, Kiev and Ekaterinburg. That could threaten the health of Russians and Ukrainians.

Picture 1 of American satellites carry cancer to Russia

UARS satellite fragments can pose a health threat
people where they fly over.(Photo: NASA)

According to the Russian Rbc site, the number of people with cancer will increase and those who live in the former Soviet Union breathing radioactive nuclei may have cancer as has happened to Oleg Iankovxki.

Mr. Ostresov explained: 'A NASA-like satellite fell in 2008 in the spring, Iankovski's summer is still perfectly healthy, but in the autumn, it was discovered that he had suffered a level 4 cancer. In the street, Iankovski was swallowed by active alpha particles, containing plutonium-238. Now the probability of 'swallowing' such particles in falling aerial particles can reach any Russian. '

According to him, Americans launch satellites to take responsibility if that happens and are proved by medicine.'When people know that satellites will fall to North America, people have shot at it, breaking and proactively "dividing the danger" for the whole world. Russia is also in danger. Currently it is impossible to prevent this phenomenon. The problem is finding out who is suffering, who is lucky, who is at risk '.

So what is America responsible for if a citizen of a country is at risk?

Frans von der Dunk, professor of space law at Lincoln University, Nebraska (USA), told the AFP reporter that the United States is responsible for compensating any country where US satellite fragments fall.

He said: 'According to the Space Law, damages can be compensated without a limit,' and he cited the Protocol of Liability Assignment that 80 countries signed in 1972. , including the US.

Update 17 December 2018
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