Every third child in Jadugoda has a disability. It is located in Jharkhand. Uranium is the sole radioactive substance that is responsible for this. This location provides the first and most uranium, which is utilized in power plants and to create nuclear bombs.
The Jaduguda Mine is a uranium mine located in Jaduguda village in the Purbi Singhbhum district of the Indian state of Jharkhand. It is occasionally written as Jadugoda or Jadugora. It was India’s first uranium mine, and it started up in 1967. This mine’s reserves were found in 1951. This Jaduguda Mine is one of eight operational uranium mines in India as of March 2012. Mining is set to begin at the newly discovered Tummalapalle Uranium Mine.
The Nuclear Graveyard at Jadugoda
Only nine nations possess nuclear power, and our nation is one of them. This is a blessing for our nation and will give us nuclear power, but it is a burden for Jadugoda Village because our government is doing nothing for Jadugoda. Every home has a handicap. Many children die while still in the mother’s womb.Every child has skin disorders, and many of them have five fingers or six fingers In medical term we can say Skeletal deformities. Women also frequently abort.
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This village gets its water from a uranium power plant wich mix into ponds, wells, and other natural resources. The village’s residents use this water for bathing, cleaning their clothes, cleaning their steel pots, and other purposes. At the very least, the government should not take steps to improve the water supply, which is the primary source of all illnesses and skin conditions. The plant’s water travels via the tailing pond, mixes with the pond, well, and river, and turns all of the water radioactive. Consider how the locals live here. Despite our nation’s tremendous progress, we are unable to dispose of the radioactive water. For decresing the expance we play the life of pepole belongs to this native area think this is correct .
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Laxmi Das, a Jadugoda native, has lost five children within a week of their births and had three miscarriages. She thought she was lucky that her ninth child, Gudia, had survived, but she later learned that her child had cerebral palsy and would be bedridden for the rest of her life. Gudia’s memory was left scarred after her death in 2012. Many women in the uranium-rich area of Jadugoda in the eastern Indian state of Jharkhand suffer from the same fate as Laxmi.
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Jadugoda residents are exposed to radioactivity in a number of ways, including the dust and radon gas released by uranium mining and milling activities, which miners inhale and induce internal irradiation. Radioactive debris falls off and lands on the side of the road when uranium ore is transported in uncovered trucks over uneven roadways. The tailings from the mine are disposed of in exposed and unlined ponds that release gamma and radon radiation, retaining a significant portion of the initial radioactivity.
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There isn’t any kind of mining there, if you go there. Only the beauty of nature, such as the mountains and forests, is visible. However, mining is taking place in this forest’s depths. The process of urination takes place in the same location as the mining, which takes place 600 meters below the ground. The final pieces are sent to Haydrabad, and the waste is dumped in Jadugoda.
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A team from Indian Doctors for Peace and Development (IDPD) conducted a study which found that the frequency of baby fatalities from cancer, infertility, and congenital malformations had significantly increased. People who live close to the mines have a lower life expectancy; 68.33% of them pass away before turning 62. High levels of uranium contamination have been found in the vicinity of the tailing pond and along the stream that transports the tailing waste to the nearby river, Subernarekha, according to a different investigation conducted by professors at Kyoto University in Japan. High levels of radiation were also discovered on the roadways that trucks use to transport uranium ore to the Jadugoda mill.
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Despite all of this, the local government and the mining company claim that these people are solely to blame for the situation because they are unruly, unfit, and unsanitary. The government should also consider these individuals, provide appropriate medical care, relocate, and show compassion for those who are affected.
The mining corporation, UCIL, is establishing new mines in the Jadugoda area and other regions of the nation while ignoring the issues facing the local community. The business should address public concerns, handle radioactive materials in accordance with international safety regulations, and give radiation-affected individuals the appropriate medical attention.
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Once an area of breathtaking beauty, with little villages surrounded by hills and hardworking tribal people, Jadugoda—meaning “land of magic” in the local Sadri language—is now a man-made nightmare. The people of Jadugoda are being sacrificed on the altar of progress, left to fend for themselves.
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jadugoda
images source: Google
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