Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Sergei-Frischmann-Portrait---Tomsk-7-Victims-Documentation--Russia--2005--27MZIFT7A2V.htmlConceptually similarChildren Going to School - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP0IF5Completed★★★★Village Landscape - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP01E2XCompleted★★★★Village Landscape - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP0X93Completed★★★★Village of Georgiyevka - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP01CKLCompleted★★★★Village of Georgiyevka - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP0YQACompleted★★★★Ksenia and Yevgeni Kolomoytsev Portrait - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP0KGECompleted★★★★Valentina and Alexander Boltachev Portrait - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP0TOCompleted★★★★Alexander Zibaev Portrait - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP03DLCompleted★★★★Antonina and Yoseph Rolgezer Portrait - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)GP0FDICompleted★★★★View AllGP0STFSergei Frischmann Portrait - Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)Sergei Frischmann (28) is a former worker at Siberian Group of Chemical Enterprises. He quit after two years with heavy nosebleeds, headaches and complaints of immune deficiency. According to Frischmann a lot of the work at SGCE is done without proper protection against radiation. Many inhabitants of cities surrounding the Siberian Group of Chemical Enterprises and its workers have fallen ill. The SGCE is located in the closed city of Seversk and has had over 35 accidents in four decades. The town, once called Tomsk-7, was a secret city until 1992 and did not appear on official maps. The city still remains closed to non-residents. The last major accident took place in 1993. An explosion destroyed part of a reprocessing facility and an area of 200 square kilometers was contaminated with radioactive materials, resulting in evacuations and ongoing devastation. Radioactive materials from Europe are still processed by the SGCE and additional contamination stems from deliberate dumping of highly radioactive waste in the Tom River.Locations:Eastern Europe-Russian Federation-Samus-Tomsk OblastDate:9 Jan, 2005Credit:© Robert Knoth / GreenpeaceMaximum size:5878px X 5878pxCopyright Valid Until: 31 January, 2031Restrictions:Limited Copyright PeriodKeywords:Accidents-Children-Local population-Nuclear (campaign title)-Portraits-Radiation effects-Radiation victimsShoot:Tomsk-7 Victims Documentation (Russia: 2005)Many inhabitants of cities surrounding the Siberian Group of Chemical Enterprises and its workers have fallen ill. The SGCE is located in the closed city of Seversk and has had over 35 accidents in four decades. The town, once called Tomsk-7, was a secret city until 1992 and did not appear on official maps. The city still remains closed to non-residents. The last major accident took place in 1993. An explosion destroyed part of a reprocessing facility and an area of 200 square kilometers was contaminated with radioactive materials, resulting in evacuations and ongoing devastation. Radioactive materials from Europe are still processed by the SGCE and additional contamination stems from deliberate dumping of highly radioactive waste in the Tom River.