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EU country to issue iodine tablets to populace

Another EU country decides to provide citizenry with anti-radiation tablets amid Ukraine conflictEU country to issue iodine tablets to populace

EU country to issue iodine tablets to populace

Packs of iodine pills ® AFP / Sebastien Bozon

Romania’s health ministry has said it’s going to hand out potassium iodine pills to all persons, from babies to 40-year-olds. The EU member state joins Finland, Bulgaria, Belgium and some others that have also provided such drugs to their population amid the ongoing Russian offensive in Ukraine.

A campaign to teach people about how to store and administer the tablets, which help reduce the impact of radiation on human systems, will kick off in the country this week, the ministry announced on Sunday.

The distribution of tablets is going to begin in the second half of April after a relevant legal procedure is established, it added. Its statement didn’t mention the reasons for the move, but pointed out that “at the moment, there is no danger that makes it necessary to take these pills.”

Romania shares a 614-kilometer-long border with Ukraine, which operates four nuclear power stations.

EU stockpiles iodine pills and nuclear-protective gear

EU stockpiles iodine pills and nuclear-protective gear

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EU stockpiles iodine pills and nuclear-protective gear

In the wake of the Ukrainian conflict, the EU urged its member states to stockpile iodine pills – which swiftly became a scarce product – and other designated drugs, as well as nuclear-protective suits. Brussels also said that it was stepping up preparations for dealing with the aftermath of a possible chemical or biological attack.

In early March, a fire at Ukraine’s Zaporozhskaya nuclear power plant, which had been seized by Russian forces, made international headlines. The blaze was swiftly extinguished, with the International Atomic Energy Agency saying there had been “no critical impact on safety” at the facility.

Moscow has also pointed out that it had thwarted an attempt, by what it called Ukrainian radicals, to cut electricity supply to the former Chernobyl nuclear power station, which became the site of the world’s most devastating nuclear disaster in 1986.

Russia put its nuclear weapons on high alert a few days after launching its military operation in Ukraine, citing “aggressive statements” made by NATO and the harsh financial sanctions slapped on Moscow by the West.

READ MORE:
Russian forces hand back Chernobyl to Ukraine – IAEA

Moscow attacked its neighbor in late February, following Ukraine’s failure to implement the terms of the Minsk agreements signed in 2014, and Russia’s eventual recognition of the Donbass republics in Donetsk and Lugansk. The German- and French-brokered protocols had been designed to regularize the status of those regions within the Ukrainian state.

Russia has now demanded that Ukraine officially declare itself a neutral country that will never join the US-led NATO military bloc. Kiev insists the Russian offensive was completely unprovoked and has denied claims it had been planning to retake the rebel regions by force.

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