A new awakening, decades after Chernobyl

The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant disaster in 1986 sent five percent of the radioactive reactor’s core into the atmosphere and upwind into Belarus, Ukraine and parts of Russia – contaminating over 150,000 sq km of the region. The radioactive material spread over a 30 km radius from the plant, leading to the creation of an “exclusion zone” on both sides of the Belarus-Ukrainian border – an area of 2,600 square kilometers that is not inhabitable by people to this day.

Soon after the disaster, the region developed the ethos of a forlorn land not fit for human habitation.  1.8 million hectares of the most fertile arable lands had been contaminated, and if anyone wanted to stay behind it was because they wanted to spend the last years of their lives “where their ancestors are buried.”

Maria holds a portrait of her husband Eugeny, who was much younger than she is. When the evacuation started, military told that the residents would return to their homes soon. Eugeny didn’t believe them and convincing Maria to stay.

Maria is one of those people. She continues to live in her village of Navaselki, the last inhabited place at the very edge of the Belarusian part of the exclusion zone, located only 50 km from the reactor. Once home to 1,300 and a thriving collective farm, today only 156 are left, and most villagers are in 70s, 80s and 90s.

Even after her husband passed away in 2001, Maria refused to move away. During winters she goes to her relatives in a neighboring town, but every spring she returns to her native village and works on her land. 

Decontamination activities here have helped clean the soil. Villagers grow fruits and vegetables, breed chickens and pigs and are supplied by a mobile shop that comes three times a week. Like others living in affected areas, they undergo regular health screenings. But at their ages, most do not care about radiation levels. They are more frustrated about not being able to cross into the exclusion zone for berries, mushrooms and game like they used to.

Prior to the accident, southeast parts of Belarus were some of the most rapidly developing districts in the country – with booming oil and chemical industries, along with some of the best agriculture in the former Soviet Union, heavy machinery production and tourism. But in the years that followed the catastrophe, agriculture and industry collapsed, exports dropped to almost zero and tourism ceased.

Take Brahin district, once famous for its high delicious butter, regularly exported to the Russian Imperial capital of Saint Petersburg. The local milk and meat industry of the town almost disappeared after local pastures were hit by radiation. Now, more than 30 years later, sisters Tatiana and Elena Simonavy became a part of Brahin’s communal efforts to eliminate stigma and revive the local milk and dairy products farming.

The family has lived in their village for generations, which thankfully didn’t require evacuation. Elena worked in a local collective farm, while Tatiana went to a nearby town for culinary college before returning home with her young daughter to help start their dairy business. They sell their fresh, raw milk to a local dealer but hope to someday go private and produce their own cheese and curd.

The sisters regularly send milk from their cows to be tested for radiation. Laboratory tests confirm that theirs and the districts’ other dairy and agricultural products are safe to eat. Much of this is due to innovative cultivation and decontamination measures put into practice by the government and locals. The contaminated soils were massively treated with calcium which helped lock and remove radioactive cesium in the soil. Radioactive levels decreased, the contaminated layer went deep underground and the upper layers of soil are safe for crops. Many farmers today also use greenhouses for growing greens and vegetables.

More than 12 percent of the population in Belarus currently live in affected territories, and for over three decades these districts have suffered from the stigma associated with possible contamination. For those living in the region, the challenge on their minds is how to provide good living for those who remained and how to keep young people from leaving.

Of course, the main development goal of the area is not just to recover, but to build “a new economy”. The community has found the answer in various avenues – heritage and culture tourism, information and communications technology, green economy, organic farming and restoring ecosystems.

The only people who can enter the exclusion zone today are the Polesie State Radioecological Reserve, foresters and researchers who live and work there in shifts, to diminish the impact of radiation on their health. They govern checkpoints, test materials from the affected areas for radiation levels and conduct research.

The Reserve’s highly-prized scientific community has accumulated unique knowledge on the impact of radiation on wildlife and how nature recovers after a disaster of this type. Some also tend to beehives and work on the reserve’s horse farms and bison feeding grounds. The animal work serves both research (studying the impact of radiation on agriculture) and commercial aims (leading to exports).

These sites are now included on tourist routes since the Reserve has been opened for visitors. Tourist are transported in 4WDs and short stops are made near the main attraction points – abandoned villages, old buildings, the river bank with half-sunken tugboats and bison feeding grounds. They can also see the incredible amount of wildlife that has flourished in the absence of human development.

Unlike Ukraine, who in 2010 opened Pripyat and Chernobyl towns, as well as its part of the exclusion zone for tourists, Belarus didn’t rush to commercialize its part of the Reserve, but Chernobyl tourism can help earn money, especially after the success of the HBO hit show.

Tourism and agrotourism remain the most attractive option for starting business both for young and old in the affected districts. The folk heritage that has been miraculously preserved within local communities is increasingly popular among young people who see its potential in attracting visitors.

But tourism has to be properly supported, regulated and provide form in terms of infrastructure and services. In November 2018, the country opened part of the Polesie State Radioecological Reserve to managed tourist groups, and is thinking about turning it into an international scientific hub.

In the future, realizing the economic potential of the affected territories will depend upon stronger cooperation with the private sector – which UNDP is attempting to broker through social impact investment.

Since the beginning of the decade there has been a considerable increase in economic activity — 37,000 small- and medium-sized businesses now operate in the areas directly affected by the disaster, up from only 2,375 in 2002.

Hopefully, these opportunities will bring young people back to these districts.

But many locals already see the shift as a signal to the rest of the country that they are still alive and kicking.

UNDP Belarus, with EU support and in close cooperation with local authorities, has been leading a transition from emergency relief and humanitarian assistance to capacity-building and sustainable development. By providing support to more than 200 initiatives, UNDP and partners help local communities get back on their feet and start taking on the challenges of today and tomorrow.

Photos: Siarhiej Leskiec / UNDP Belarus

Kyrgyzstan’s ‘kidnapped brides’ find renewed strength on the runway

Five years ago Elzat was grabbed off a Kyrgyzstan street by a group of men wanting to marry her to an uninvited suitor. She was only 19.

“I felt as if I was an animal,” she recalls. “I couldn’t move or do anything at all.”

Elzat was taken to the groom’s home in the rural Issyk Kul region, where she was dressed in white for an impending ceremony.

She spent hours pleading with the groom’s family — and her own — to stop the forced marriage.

“My grandmother is very traditional. She thought it would bring shame to our family if I did not marry him and tried convincing me to stay.”

However, her mother understood that her daughter was a victim of a crime and threatened to call the police. Because of her action, the groom’s family finally let Elzat go. She escaped the attempted forced marriage because of her own, and her mother’s courage and understanding of Kyrgyzstan’s legal system.

Today, as Elzat proudly walks down a catwalk under the spotlights, her nightmare experience is behind her.

Elzat is part of a fashion show to raise awareness against bride kidnappings. “I hope the fashion show, depicting historical women figures, will help to bring the taboo subject to the fore,” she explains.

Her courageous example is important for other women, because despite the crime being outlawed in Kyrgyzstan in 2013 and punishable by up to 10 years in prison, thousands of women continue to be abducted and forced to marry each year, particularly in rural regions.

Women activists have brought increased attention to the persistent violation in the recent years. In 2018, “kidnapped bride” Burulai Turdaaly Kyzy, 20, was locked in the same police cell as the man who abducted her — where he stabbed her to death. The story sparked national outrage and protests, with many campaigners insisting that “more severe sentences are often issued for kidnapping livestock” than women.

Fashion designer Zamira Moldosheva is part of a rising public movement against “bride kidnapping.”

“Can’t we women do something against the violence taking place in our country?” Zamira asked herself. Her answer was to organize a fashion show featuring only women who had been abused or kidnapped, dressed as historical Kyrgyz women, because supporters of bride kidnapping often cite tradition as an argument to justify the illegal act.

“Bride kidnapping is not our tradition,” Zamira explains with passion, adding, “‘bride kidnapping’ has always been a form of forced marriage, and not a traditional practice.”

Elzat, one of 12 models in the fashion show, said she was glad to participate in the event last October to highlight her painful experience, encourage women to resist and flee forced marriages, and support each other to do so.

“Women nowadays are characters of new fairy tales and examples for others,” she explained, dressed as a woman freedom fighter from ancient Kyrgyzstan.

“This is how I’m fighting for women’s rights.”

“For me, participating in this project has seriously impacted my life,” another model said. “I participated in the show portraying the image of Kurmanzhan Datka, the Alai Queen. When I put on the suit of such a strong and brave woman, I had the most unforgettable feeling of pride and strength. I felt that I have the power to change my life every day.”

Data is scant on the number of women abducted each year, as many women did not report the crime through fear of the stigma it brings to them and their family. An estimated 14 percent of women under 24 are still married through some form of coercion.

 “Most cases do not make it to court, as women are often forced to retract their statements, often under pressure from other family members, fearing public shaming for not complying with the family wishes or no longer being ‘a virgin’,” Umutai Dauletova, gender coordinator at UNDP in Kyrgyzstan, explains.

The fashion show is not only breaking taboos. It has also given women survivors the permission to dream. “I feel more self-assured after participating in the project,” a woman modeling the famous heroine Karlygach said. “All these rehearsals and our conversations with other models taught me to love myself and take care of myself and my loved ones.”

“My faith and my strength returned to me,” she continued. “Now I am working on realizing my dream to open a small day-care center for children, so other mothers like me can work without worrying about their children.”

This story was adapted from a piece published by the Reuters Foundation, produced in partnership with UNDP.

Relief for women at all stages of the law

Zarina Zaynitdinovna picks up her daughter from kindergarten, making sure she’s warm enough for the chill outside. She’s protective of her, but that care comes at a cost.

Zarina and her daughter. Photos: Danielle Villasana / UNDP

Zarina had separated from her husband nine months ago. Not working, she and her five-year-old daughter moved to her parents’ house.

“I was hoping that my marriage would resume…I worried if I file for alimony, then my husband would never come back home.”

She worried about being a burden on her parents, and the future of her daughter. “My current financial situation was not that good. I needed pay for kindergarten and to purchase my daughter’s food and clothing, so I filed for alimony,” she says.

Emotionally, it was hard enough to separate, but the prospect of a long legal process made it even scarier.

Zarina wasn’t alone in her predicament. In western Uzbekistan, getting justice can be challenging, especially when it comes to the personal nature of family law. Many who apply for divorce or alimony have to travel frequently to the courthouse – sometimes dozens of kilometers away – just to submit documents.

Time off work and money required for travel can be especially hard on single mothers, not to mention the public shame they often feel at the courthouse.

Judges at a Bukhara civil court use a new digital filing system.

But things took a painless turn when Zarina was given a chance to file her papers online, thanks to Uzbekistan’s legal reforms and adoption of new technology.

“I was surprised, because I had heard from others that I would have to go through all the frustrating steps on my own,” says Zarina. “Instead of long meetings with court employees or judges, dealing with vast quantities of paperwork, I easily submitted my case online.”

She is now waiting for a court date, helped by her lawyer Xumora Begmuzodovna.

Xumora, who specializes in matrimonial disputes, wants the best for Zarina and others like her. The initial filing is now free and easy, so she has been able to attract new clients.

Xumora is not the first lawyer in her family. She shares a practice with her mother. When her mother first applied to study law, the school told her a farmer’s daughter couldn’t be a lawyer, but her father insisted she could.

When Xumora applied, her mother also tried to dissuade her, but this time Xumora insisted.

“If you have a degree, you’ll still be independent even if you’re married,” Xumora explained.

Xumora has seen how women’s circumstances are affected by their husbands. Many women file for divorce, and thanks to the new system, the status of their cases is easily checked.

That transparency is a blessing for many of them, and crucial in a country working to establish a foundation of good governance.

The system is helping prevent corruption as cases are allocated blindly to lawyers, eliminating unwanted influences and unreasonable delays. It also generates templates of court decisions so judges don’t have to write court procedures from scratch.

“Fewer cases languish incomplete and judges can better manage their time,” says Gulru Khayrullaevna, a judge at a civil court in Bukhara.

Gulru Khayrullaevna, right, a judge at a civil court in Bukhara, Uzbekistan.

This helps with life outside the courts as well, giving judges and lawyers more flexibility with their time. Judge Gulru and her husband both worked long hours in the courthouse, their kids living with the grandparents during the week. Now she can adjudicate from anywhere, and the increased efficiency means she can spend more time with her children.

Judge Gulru sits in her office with Nigora, who is fighting a challenge from her ex-husband on their alimony case.

Nigora’s then-husband had left to work as a laborer in Russia, where he met another woman. Nigora sought and was granted a divorce in 2017.

But now, her ex-husband wants to return to Russia for work. He needs permission from the court and wishes to pay five years of alimony up front.

Nigora needs the alimony to support her family – she, her six-year old daughter, mother and sister live with other family.

So she finds herself back in court in front of Gulru. But the system showed complications with outstanding loans, and Gulru postponed the case so Nigora can consult with a lawyer.

All of these small advantages are adding up, making a huge difference in Uzbek women’s lives at all stages of the law – from filers to lawyers to judges.

Across remote regions of Uzbekistan, close to 37,000 women have resolved alimony disputes over the past two years.

And on the judicial side? A clerk notes that before the digital system, she had stacks of papers to file everyday. “It was literally two feet high…now, there is no stack.”


The E-SUD national electronic case management system is part of a joint project of UNDP, the Supreme Court of the Republic of Uzbekistan, and USAID. Its goal is to develop and establish online tools that help to remove red tape, increase case efficiency, reduce corruption, improve transparency and strengthen the rule of law.