Radioactive particles in England from depleted uranium explosion in May
The earth shook in Ukraine - Scientist: "There are radioactive particles as far as England" - Russia hit depleted uranium warehouses
Russia hit depleted uranium munitions caches in Ukraine according to top scientist.
Dr. Christopher Busby, chemist and scientific secretary of the European Commission on Radiation Risk reports "Increase in airborne uranium particles following explosions at depleted uranium munitions depots in Ukraine has been detected as far away as South East England".
While the amount of uranium particles inhaled by sufferers may seem negligible at first, Dr. Busby notes that such exposure can have serious deleterious effects on the health of those affected and their offspring.
"The levels in Poland, Germany and anywhere by the time the particles reach England would be much higher," he notes, among other things.
It is noted that the scientist is talking about the explosions that occurred this year in Spring in Khmelnitsky. Since then there have been at least two other terrifying explosions at Ukrainian arms and ammunition depots.
According to Sputnik, what he wrote in detail:
"On May 19, I wrote an article for Sputnik about the Khmelnitsky explosion.
I had reviewed gamma radiation data from detectors northwest of the attack site, which showed increases in radiation inside Poland near the border with Ukraine and also in Germany.
I concluded that a warehouse containing Uranium weapons supplied by the United Kingdom had been hit and that the Uranium had exploded and that the particles produced by the explosion had been blown by the wind at that time across Europe.
The fact is that although uranium is a weak gamma emitter, there are other situations where the gamma signal will increase in the detectors. It concerns the naturally occurring radioactive gas, radon, which can increase during rainfall and low pressure systems. A Polish laboratory claimed that the increased readings were from Radon, citing the presence of Bismuth 214. But I pointed out that there were no low pressure systems at the time which would explain the sudden increase in gamma.'
The explosions that shocked - Watch video
We remind you that in May 2023, powerful explosions rocked the city of Khmelnitsky, located in Ukraine, about 200 kilometers from the border with Poland, when a Russian strike destroyed a Ukrainian ammunition depot, where British depleted uranium missiles were allegedly stored.
Even the explosions (two in number) however were...different from the hundreds of others we have witnessed through videos from the Ukrainian front.
Many - rightly - likened them to nuclear strikes! To this day, Moscow has not admitted that it has used even limited nuclear power in Ukraine, despite rumors and videos.





