クレイジージャーニー 旧ソ連の核実験場へ潜入!佐藤健寿★奇界遺産旅

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クレイジージャーニー 旧ソ連の核実験場へ潜入!佐藤健寿★奇界遺産旅
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00:00The Crazy Journey Live 2024 ticket is now on sale!
00:09Enjoy the NG talk on your smartphone or at home!
00:15And to celebrate the event, all the Crazy Goods are now on sale!
00:20The live stream starts on August 31st!
00:24Welcome to the Crazy Journey!
00:28Continuing from last week's episode,
00:31we have a question for Mr. Sato from Kikai-san.
00:38Is there a place you've always wanted to go but haven't been to?
00:42A place you've always wanted to go but haven't been to?
00:46There are a lot of countries.
00:48Really? Is there a country you want to go to?
00:50I want to go to Russia, but I can't.
00:55What's going on there?
00:57I want to go to North Korea.
01:00I want to go to North Korea.
01:04If the three of us decide to go to North Korea, would you go?
01:10Yes, I would.
01:11But we don't have a schedule.
01:13Why not?
01:14Isn't North Korea scary?
01:17But since we're doing this show,
01:20I think we should go.
01:22That's amazing!
01:24Okay, I'll go too, but I'll be a day late.
01:28Why? Why?
01:30It's a bit scary.
01:32I'll tell you what's going on first,
01:35and then you can decide if you want to come or not.
01:39Tonight, at the Super Dangerous Zone,
01:42the secret nuclear bomb test site,
01:45has been infiltrated.
01:51What is this?
01:54This is a proof video of the nuclear test.
01:58The mushroom cloud is spreading rapidly.
02:01The diameter of the center of the pillar is more than one kilometer.
02:07There is a surprising truth hidden there.
02:12It's creepy.
02:14It's scary.
02:15It's really a crater.
02:17It looks like a bomb shelter.
02:20Atsumoto, Shitara, Koike vs. Crazy Journey
02:26Tonight's journey is by Kikai-san photographer, Kenji Sato.
02:32What is this man going to shoot?
02:36Kikai-san
02:39A mysterious giant wall
02:43and strange customs that continue to live somewhere in the world.
02:49Sato calls them Kikai-san.
02:59He has been to more than 100 countries to shoot.
03:04This time, Sato is looking for a new Kikai-san
03:09and he is going to a mysterious area.
03:13Where are we going this time?
03:15This time, I want to visit the countries in Central Asia.
03:20This time, Kikai-san is going to Central Asia.
03:25These five countries were the former Soviet Union until about 30 years ago.
03:32Even though they are independent, they are still surrounded by mysteries.
03:38This time, I want to visit the ruins of the former Soviet Union,
03:42the secret city,
03:44and the ghost town.
03:49That is the direction of Kikai-san.
03:53There are many strange things, so I want to explore them.
03:59So, tonight, we are going to Kikai-san in Central Asia.
04:14I'm Sato. Nice to meet you.
04:17Continuing from last week,
04:19Central Asia, the country of the former Soviet Union, is now independent.
04:25During the Soviet era, it was a republic.
04:27When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, everyone became independent.
04:30I've been to the area where the Soviet Union collapsed before.
04:34It's the direction of Kikai-san, isn't it?
04:37Yes, it is.
04:38The place I visited in this program is called the Communist Party Hall.
04:41Yes, it was.
04:43The Soviet Union made a lot of strange things,
04:47but they left it as it was.
04:49They left it as it was.
04:51The time has stopped. It's a little scary.
04:55I don't know what to do with the country that was left.
04:58In the end, it was abandoned.
05:00It's the same this time.
05:02It's Kazakhstan.
05:03Where did you go to Kazakhstan,
05:06which is not well known in Central Asia?
05:09This time, I went to this place.
05:14It's a place called the Semiparachinsk Nuclear Test Site.
05:17I went to the secret nuclear test site.
05:19Did you go to the test site?
05:20Yes.
05:21That's great.
05:22So you can actually go and see it.
05:25That's right.
05:26It's a place where nuclear tests are conducted 456 times.
05:30456 times?
05:31Yes.
05:32It is said that they conducted experiments on 1,100 bombs of Hiroshima-type nuclear bombs.
05:37Didn't it break down?
05:39It didn't break down,
05:41but it's a place with a lot of towns and villages around it.
05:44That's the theme of this shoot.
05:47Yes, it's related to the atomic bombing.
05:50But at that time, it was a secret and not many people knew about it.
05:54That's right.
05:55It's a place with a thorough tourist guide.
05:58Most of the residents didn't realize that they were doing an explosion experiment.
06:02But no one knew what they were doing at the time.
06:06It's scary.
06:07There was a device that was actually used in the nuclear test.
06:11And I was shown a video of the nuclear test at the time.
06:15I didn't know that.
06:17Please take a look.
06:2012 hours by plane from Japan.
06:25To Kazakhstan, the largest country in Central Asia.
06:29Seven times the size of Japan.
06:31Kazakhstan, where 20 million people live in the world's ninth largest land.
06:37It was independent from the former Soviet Union in 1991.
06:43Currently, about 20% of the population are Russian.
06:49Russian is also the official language of Kazakhstan.
06:52Its influence is still vividly remembered.
06:56The most important thing is...
06:58If you look at it from above, it's quite...
07:00Wow, that's amazing.
07:03Many of the former Soviet secret military facilities that are now abandoned.
07:09In this area, where nuclear experiments were carried out in secret.
07:15This time, the journey of Mr. Kikai...
07:18A secret nuclear experiment.
07:20We're approaching the truth.
07:26Where are we going now?
07:28We're going to the nuclear test site in Semipalachinsk.
07:32We're going to the nuclear test site.
07:36It's a vast area.
07:38Basically, it's a place where there's nothing.
07:41There are facilities that have been used for experiments.
07:46There's also a place where the experiment was carried out.
07:54In other words, it was chosen because it's a place like this.
07:57Oh, I see.
07:59The nuclear test site was built in Kazakhstan, which has a vast national road.
08:05The size of the test site is nine times that of Tokyo.
08:10There were 456 nuclear tests conducted there.
08:17This time, the safety was taken into account.
08:20It was allowed to cover part of the area of the test site.
08:25We also brought a Geiger counter this time.
08:28While measuring.
08:31Even so, there is a risk of an explosion, so go to the site carefully.
08:36I see.
08:40We will soon enter the nuclear test site area.
08:45Thank you for your hard work.
08:47You're welcome.
08:56Nuclear Test Site
09:00If this was a long time ago, it would have been caught right away.
09:04That's right.
09:07What is this?
09:09This is a very close place to the place where the explosion was being experimented.
09:14This is one of the control centers.
09:19In this area, nuclear bombs were buried underground and exploded.
09:24This facility was the base for the experiment.
09:28Originally, it was an underground facility.
09:30Except for the entrance, it was under the ground.
09:33Now it has been dug up for investigation and is being removed.
09:40Nuclear bombs buried hundreds of meters underground were exploded from this facility.
09:47The number of nuclear bombs is more than 100 in this area alone.
09:55What is inside?
09:58The walls are very thick.
10:01It's more than 1 meter thick.
10:04It's quite thick.
10:12It's amazing.
10:14It looks like a square box.
10:17The building itself was so thick that it couldn't be blown up because the explosion was so close.
10:26There is a wiring board around it.
10:35Is this connected to the switch of the nuclear bomb?
10:39I don't know.
10:41It's impossible.
10:43This is the evidence of the nuclear experiment.
10:48This is the ruins of the nuclear experiment that we can't imagine in reality.
10:56In addition, there are traces of various experiments in this area.
11:04So...
11:06Mr. Asada, can I ask for a drone?
11:08Yes, sorry.
11:10He inspects the surrounding area with a drone.
11:13It's amazing.
11:19Can you see anything?
11:21What is this?
11:24There are some holes here and there.
11:27Is this an experiment?
11:29It's a crater.
11:31This hole is different.
11:33Someone must have made a hole in the wall of the experiment.
11:38This is the place where something was dug up.
11:44This place may have been a place where cables were attached.
11:49I see.
11:51It's a dangerous place to steal.
11:53Is there a radiation line?
11:55It's like the valley of the Solymban.
11:57Look at that. It's round.
12:00Yes, this is it.
12:04It's an air-raid shelter.
12:08It's like a ruins excavation site.
12:12And...
12:19What is this?
12:21This is where the missiles were fired.
12:24It's a silo.
12:26This is where the U.S. military fired nuclear missiles during the nuclear war.
12:32The guide said there was a nuclear version of the Patriot missile.
12:41Shall we go closer?
12:43Yes.
12:45What is a nuclear missile launcher?
12:48It's over there.
12:51It's getting closer.
12:54It's strange to see greenery everywhere.
12:58It's amazing.
13:00I can't see the bottom at all.
13:02It's deep.
13:04When I went to Roswell in the U.S. in this program,
13:09I went to the ruins of the nuclear missile launch site on the Roswell side.
13:15This is the Russian version of it.
13:18Yes.
13:19Sato also visited the U.S. missile launch site where the U.S. enemy was stationed at the time.
13:28Was it actually fired?
13:30No, it wasn't.
13:31If it was fired, it would have been a world war.
13:34So they didn't use it.
13:36I don't know if it was a test.
13:39And...
13:41There should be a huge research facility entrance in this area.
13:46But it's too wide to see the location.
13:50So...
13:52I didn't expect to explore with a drone.
13:56It might be a test.
13:59It's amazing.
14:01We can find everything with this.
14:05Is this it?
14:08Can we get a little closer?
14:12Isn't this it?
14:14There's a hole.
14:16Yes, this is it.
14:18This is the research facility.
14:20I can see the entrance of the stairs.
14:22Oh, it's true.
14:24It's amazing.
14:26I don't know how big it is.
14:27This is amazing.
14:28What does this mean?
14:31I can't understand it at all.
14:34It's amazing.
14:37There's a huge underground research facility under this entrance.
14:44This is amazing.
14:45It's amazing.
14:46I can see everything.
14:49Can you see it?
14:50The edge is the height of the ground.
14:54It's about 20 meters underground.
14:57I think that's the entrance.
15:01I can only see the edge a little.
15:04We've done a lot of ground experiments.
15:07We've been testing the effects of the experiment on the ground.
15:11Research facility?
15:12Research facility?
15:16We can't go inside now.
15:19They were testing the radiation under this entrance.
15:24Originally, this was buried.
15:26But after this facility was closed,
15:28the mafia from Kazakhstan and Russia came here.
15:32There are various precious machines and copper wires in the facility.
15:39They were concentrating on these things.
15:44More than 50 years ago,
15:46in this dangerous place where the radiation was high,
15:49the mafias were doing cave work.
15:53Was it forced labor?
15:56I think so.
15:57The mafia was doing it.
15:59It was almost like a ration shop.
16:01The guys with the debt were brought here.
16:04They were working like a taco bar.
16:06So they were working when the radiation was high.
16:09That's right.
16:11In Kazakhstan, just after independence from the Soviet Union,
16:15the poor were rapidly increasing.
16:18Dangerous cave work was going on in this experimental site.
16:23This kind of scenery is unique to the Soviet Union.
16:27It's full of Soviet-like things.
16:30It's a mess.
16:33It's not like this.
16:36There are traces of experiments that we can't imagine,
16:42and caves made by the poor.
16:46It's a machine-like scene.
16:50It's unusual.
16:52Yes, it is.
16:53No matter where the video is cut.
16:59Speaking of the morning of the machine heritage trip...
17:04He's here.
17:07Mr. Sato.
17:09Yes.
17:10Are you awake?
17:11Yes, I am.
17:12You were sleeping.
17:15Mr. Sato is a little excited.
17:24Good morning.
17:25Good morning.
17:26You look great.
17:28I just woke up.
17:31He doesn't play with me anymore.
17:34I became a short sleeper.
17:36Oh, really?
17:40What are you doing?
17:42It's boring.
17:43No, no, no.
17:44It's a good thing that you're on time.
17:48This is a research center.
17:52When I was doing experiments in Saint-Francis,
17:55there was a control center in the central command center.
17:59From there, I sent orders to all the experimental sites,
18:02and carried out the explosion experiments.
18:04It's a very important place.
18:07The central command center of the various facilities we saw yesterday
18:11is a nuclear power research center.
18:14In this part, it's like a library,
18:17and you can see various materials related to this experiment.
18:24Normally, you can't enter,
18:26but this time, we got permission to enter.
18:34Is it here?
18:38Everyone, please prepare your passports.
18:41Passports?
18:42Please.
18:43Do we need passports?
18:44Yes.
18:46It's a very restricted area.
18:47That's right.
18:48It's not a place that's open to the public at all.
18:51It's like the center of nuclear power research in Japan.
18:55Currently, this place is used as a research facility in Kazakhstan.
19:06This time, we went to a place where we could see special and valuable materials.
19:14What kind of nuclear experiments did the Soviet Union conduct?
19:19Wow!
19:22So this is a place that's not in Russia anymore.
19:25That's right.
19:26It was conducted by Mr. Kazumi.
19:27But there were a lot of Russians working here.
19:32These are the photos of the experiments.
19:35Those are the actual photos of the explosion.
19:40There's a video, so I'll show it to you later.
19:44The staff at the facility, Mr. Aisuru, will guide us.
19:49This is a diorama that reproduces the experiments at the time.
19:52Wow!
19:57Under the tower in the middle, a nuclear bomb was placed and exploded.
20:05Various things were placed within a radius of 10 kilometers.
20:08They were conducting experiments to see what effect the explosion would have.
20:17So they actually had fighter jets?
20:19Not only fighter jets, but also houses, buildings, trains, and living animals were used in the experiments.
20:28It is said that animals were also used to study the effects of radiation after the explosion.
20:35This is a specimen of an animal after the explosion.
20:41A pig's head.
20:44A dog's brain and a heart.
20:49It is said that the Soviet Union did not understand the effects of radiation at the time.
20:58And...
21:00Here is a video of the incident at the time.
21:04There was a video of the actual nuclear explosion recorded by this center.
21:16First, an experiment video of a nuclear bomb exploding in the air.
21:34Wow!
21:38There was a video of the actual nuclear explosion recorded by this center.
21:50First, an experiment video of a nuclear bomb exploding in the air.
22:03Wow!
22:05It exploded at an altitude of 380 meters.
22:18We could see the flash of the explosion from a distance of 170 kilometers.
22:23Then, a video of a hydrogen bomb exploding on the ground with a power of several hundred times that of a nuclear bomb.
22:35Preparations are complete.
22:40Explosion.
22:47A five-story building is blown away by a shock wave.
22:51Wow!
22:53A huge cloud of heat rises.
22:57A mushroom cloud spreads rapidly.
23:03A current carries dust on a huge pillar.
23:10The diameter of the center of the pillar is more than one kilometer.
23:13Wow!
23:15The height of the pillar is more than 20 kilometers above the ground.
23:25Then, a video of a hydrogen bomb exploding in the air.
23:40Explosion.
23:42A huge ball of fire appears brighter than the sun.
23:48This ball changes its shape into a huge dome of light.
24:03Later than the light, a terrible power shock and explosion sound occur.
24:11Wow!
24:18This is the second shock wave.
24:22The shock wave calms down.
24:25A cloud of heat rises with a huge pillar of dust.
24:33This explosion was observed from quite a distance.
24:37A town 70 kilometers away from the hypocenter was illuminated by a bright flash.
24:56Even at this distance, the size of the explosion can be seen with the naked eye.
25:01This is Kurchatov.
25:03A park?
25:04Yes, this town.
25:05The shock wave reached the town four minutes later than the sound.
25:14There was a shadow there.
25:23Wow!
25:24It's so big!
25:27I didn't hear anything.
25:30It's eating.
25:32I was told that there was an experiment on the explosion.
25:36I didn't know it would come this far.
25:38That's right.
25:40I saw a mushroom cloud from Kurchatov City.
25:43It looked so big.
25:45It's amazing.
25:48In addition to the valuable video materials,
25:51the heritage of the time used in the experiment was placed everywhere.
25:57What is the most rare thing in the world?
26:01That is the operating device of the nuclear bomb that was used at that time.
26:07It actually still works.
26:10Would you like to sit down and push the button?
26:14Can I experience it?
26:15Yes, you can.
26:17This machine, AP-2, is the switch of the nuclear explosion experiment that has been carried out hundreds of times.
26:26Can I press it?
26:28Please press this button.
26:30You can press it.
26:33Can I press it?
26:34Press it.
26:36What a strange sound!
26:38An explosion just occurred with that button.
26:42The sound is creepy.
26:43It's creepy.
26:45It's totally cool.
26:49Although it is no longer in use,
26:51these are the only two valuable materials in the world.
26:56I don't think there are many places in the world where such things exist.
26:59I mean, these are the only two in the world.
27:03It's scary.
27:07Kuruchatofushi's main street is 70 kilometers away from the lab.
27:15The people at that time witnessed this terrible explosion.
27:20It's too scary.
27:26After this, there was a terrible geological change caused by the nuclear explosion.
27:32We interviewed the people at that time.
27:36We are approaching the present of 70 years after the nuclear experiment.
27:42It's a little different from what I expected.
27:45But first of all, I'm glad that it wasn't used in practice.
27:51Of course, the general public is not allowed to enter the lab.
27:55This time, we have a special permission to enter the lab.
27:59There are a lot of people.
28:02If you don't let me in, I can't breathe.
28:05That's right.
28:07The theme of the theme park is heavy.
28:09You can only eat here at the hotel.
28:12What did you eat?
28:14I ate something like kebab.
28:17You didn't turn the camera at all, did you?
28:20I think I did.
28:21I don't think so.
28:23It's a place to fit in.
28:25I don't know what kind of tension I should look at even if I suddenly get a kebab.
28:29It's a mess.
28:31That's right.
28:34You were wearing a protective suit.
28:36After this, I went to a place where the terrain had changed due to experiments.
28:41Did you go further?
28:43I heard what the people in the village who were closest to the lab at that time were like.
28:50It's valuable.
28:52Let's take a look.
28:55A place where the people in the village who were closest to the lab at that time were like.
28:59Where are we going?
29:01There is a lake called Chaganko.
29:06We started the underground test in 1965.
29:09In the first experiment, we did it in a shallow place.
29:13There was a crater there.
29:15I don't know what happened.
29:17The water was piling up.
29:19What we are going to shoot is the location of the explosion of the nuclear bomb.
29:27What kind of change has the big explosion, which was far beyond our imagination, brought to the terrain and nature?
29:40It's a little dangerous from here, so please wear a protective suit.
29:46A protective suit?
29:49In order to head to the site where the nuclear explosion occurred,
29:52we put on a protective suit to prevent radiation contamination.
29:57Gloves.
30:00It's perfect.
30:02Is this okay?
30:04Yes.
30:06It's okay, isn't it?
30:08Yes.
30:09However, even if you wear a protective suit, it doesn't prevent radiation.
30:14The radiation may stick to the clothes.
30:18In order to prevent the radiation from spreading to the outside,
30:22we wear clothes that are disposable.
30:25I see.
30:27Sato knows a lot of things.
30:30But he doesn't want to hear it now.
30:34It's completely different.
30:36About 300 meters ago, the radiation level was 0.1.
30:40It's easier to understand now.
30:45As we get closer to the site, the radiation reacts strongly.
30:50And then...
30:52Here it is.
30:53We have arrived.
31:03Wow, it's huge.
31:05There is a surprising sight there.
31:18Wow, it's huge.
31:22This is Chaganko, a lake created by nuclear experiments.
31:29At first glance, it's very beautiful.
31:31It's a natural lake, but it's completely artificial.
31:39It's a beautiful sunset.
31:42It's complicated.
31:47It's already changed.
31:49It's getting higher and higher.
31:51How long will it last?
31:57A nuclear explosion 59 years ago.
32:01And it was created by a single experiment.
32:07This is the lake.
32:10I can feel its power.
32:14Let's go down.
32:16Are you OK?
32:18Can I go down there?
32:20Be careful.
32:22Be careful.
32:25Chaganko Lake
32:28It's huge.
32:30This place is 1.5 km in length and 100 m deep.
32:37The number of bombs used was 10 times that of the ones dropped in Hiroshima.
32:46That's how this crater was created.
32:49About 140,000 tons of nuclear bombs were placed 178 m underground.
32:56The explosion created a crater of 1.5 km in length.
33:02It's 1.46 degrees.
33:04It's high.
33:06It's high.
33:07I don't think it's dangerous immediately.
33:10But it's not good to stay there for a long time.
33:13Some people come here without any equipment.
33:17There are some bees.
33:20I think so.
33:22It's a fishing line.
33:24According to the guide, there are some people who don't care about it.
33:29I heard there are some fish here.
33:31I don't know how the fish came here.
33:34Some people fish here.
33:36Do they eat fish?
33:38I think so.
33:41I've never seen anything like this.
33:43The traces of the experiment don't stop here.
33:50It's wide.
33:52It's huge.
33:54Over the past few decades, a lake several times the size of a teapot has been created here.
34:03The scenery is also impressive.
34:11It's so cool.
34:13It's like space.
34:15I can't believe a nuclear bomb exploded here.
34:18I agree.
34:19I can't believe it.
34:21I've never seen such a beautiful scenery in a school uniform.
34:25I don't know if I can call it a beautiful scenery.
34:28It feels like I'm in another world.
34:31It's like space exploration.
34:33There is another beautiful and huge lake that doesn't look like it was created by an explosion.
34:42I found out after I was told about it.
34:46There was a huge explosion here.
34:49Then it became a crater.
34:51There was a river nearby.
34:54The water was drawn in from there.
34:56As a result, it became a crater.
34:59There was a river nearby.
35:01The water was drawn in from there.
35:03As a result, it became a lake.
35:05The water overflowed here.
35:07The water spread over there.
35:09Now it's like a lake.
35:12This is not the result of the experiment.
35:15I see.
35:16Can I borrow a drone?
35:18Sure.
35:19Thank you.
35:20Are you all right?
35:21The drone is very...
35:23What is the scene from the sky?
35:27It's strange.
35:35There are two lakes created by human experiments.
35:44It's very big.
35:46It's amazing.
35:48It would have been different if I hadn't been told about it.
35:51It's complicated.
35:52It's very beautiful.
35:54If I had known, I wouldn't have been able to say it's amazing.
35:59You just said it.
36:03I didn't say it at all.
36:06It's connected here.
36:09The water overflows here.
36:12It's connected here.
36:14It's true.
36:16The water overflowed from the crater.
36:19There is a big lake next to it.
36:26Can I take a picture of it?
36:31It's amazing.
36:32It's like a space.
36:34It's like a space.
36:38It's amazing.
36:41It's a terrifyingly big crack caused by nuclear explosion.
36:46And it's affecting the people living nearby.
36:55Where are we going now?
36:57There is a radiation hospital that specializes in treating people who have been exposed to nuclear explosions.
37:05I'd like to go there.
37:08It's a hospital that was built in secret in the Soviet era.
37:15From here, we will listen to the stories of people who knew about the nuclear experiment at that time.
37:23First, Mr. Nagiyasu.
37:26At that time, he lived in a village 50 km away from the nuclear experiment site.
37:32How old were you when the nuclear experiment happened?
37:36I was 8 years old.
37:37At first, I didn't know what happened.
37:40Rather than being scared, I thought it was interesting.
37:45But when the shock wave came, my mother ran after me.
37:49When I saw her face, I was very scared.
37:52I realized that something terrible was happening.
37:58Did you know about radiation at that time, including your mother?
38:03No one told me about radiation, so I didn't know about it.
38:09Didn't you think it was because of radiation that everyone was sick?
38:15Yes, I did.
38:17There were many people who died of cancer and leukemia at the age of 60.
38:22But I didn't know about radiation.
38:25At first, there was no explanation from the military.
38:30In the village, some children were born at a critical time, and some were very small.
38:39At that time, it was a secret to the people that the bomb was a nuclear weapon.
38:47I heard that you are in the hospital now because your health has deteriorated.
38:52What kind of illness do you have?
38:55I had a symptom 30 years ago.
38:58My joints were swollen and it was very painful.
39:02My fingers, elbows, shoulders, and whole body.
39:06Look at your fingers.
39:11Oh, it's swollen.
39:15The index finger of the right hand is as swollen as the thumb.
39:23It's still better today.
39:27We also talked to the professor who studies at the hospital.
39:31Even children who are still young are still affected by radiation.
39:40Currently, there are fewer children in the 4th and 5th generations.
39:44However, there were many children who died in the 2nd generation.
39:51There were many symptoms such as six fingers, a big head, and a swollen body.
40:00Even now, 30 years have passed since the experiment was completed.
40:07There are not a few people who suffer from the damage.
40:14There is also a story that seems to doubt the meaning.
40:18I read in a book that when the villagers were evacuated to collect data,
40:23they left dozens of people in the village and experimented.
40:30Is that true?
40:34No one talks about it.
40:37There is no clear data.
40:41I heard that there was such an experiment.
40:45There is no evidence, but everyone knows.
40:50Did you take the data? Did you do human experimentation?
40:53Yes. It's a different way of saying it, but it seems to have happened.
40:59A shocking testimony that doubts the meaning.
41:03The last place we went to was the village closest to the lab.
41:10When the experiment was being conducted, we asked two people who were born and raised in this village.
41:17Did you have any health problems, such as your uncle's family or friends?
41:23There were many diseases and suicides.
41:27Especially for young people.
41:30Did you feel that your body was sick?
41:36Yes. I had a surgery, but there were many people who could not use their heads.
41:44The people in the village were also mentally ill.
41:50When did the villagers begin to understand that nuclear bombs contain radiation?
41:57They had already begun to understand around 1960.
42:02But they couldn't say anything to the military.
42:08There was only one time when the government called for evacuation to our village.
42:15I don't know why, but I was evacuated temporarily in 1953, but I was returned immediately.
42:22I haven't heard from them since then.
42:27Let's listen to what happened yesterday.
42:30A human-to-human experiment to make a bomb.
42:35There are many rumors about it.
42:38I heard yesterday that they conducted an experiment. Did that really happen?
42:43It is true that the military left about 40 villagers in this village.
42:50My parents said it, and everyone knew it.
42:56I know it, too.
42:59And they told the villagers to manage this village.
43:04I didn't tell them the details, but I deceived them.
43:08After that, everyone died.
43:12It is a shocking testimony that 40 villagers were deceived by the government and left in the village.
43:20The price of nuclear experiment
43:23Many people still suffer from the price of nuclear experiment.
43:28But not many people in the world know the reality.
43:34I used to work a lot with Japanese people.
43:38Thank you for taking care of me.
43:42The reality of the nuclear experiment using people and nature that the former Soviet Union learned through this trip.
43:50How is Kazakhstan?
43:53What is strange is that this is a place where there are far more human casualties than Chernobyl.
44:03But not many people know the name of this place.
44:06Not many people in the world know this place, and not many people in Japan, either.
44:09When I came here, I found that people who lived here suffered a lot from the fact that they didn't know this place.
44:17I'm not a journalist, so I'm not in a position to take pictures.
44:23I think it would have been better if there were people who knew this place by watching TV.
44:33The harsh reality of Kazakhstan left by the former Soviet Union.
44:38Here is the room used by Khrushchev.
44:43What is the room of Khrushchev, who is also called the father of the Soviet atomic bomb, the person in charge of the experiment?
44:51Everything was instructed from here.
44:54This chair belongs to Khrushchev.
44:56Here is the room used by Khrushchev.
44:59Please take a look.
45:02It is reproduced in great detail.
45:06Everything was instructed from here.
45:09This chair belongs to Khrushchev.
45:12Please take a look.
45:15Here is the room used by Khrushchev.
45:18Please take a look.
45:21It is reproduced in great detail.
45:23This chair belongs to Khrushchev.
45:26Please take a look.
45:29It is reproduced in great detail.
45:32This notebook was left by people from the United Nations and around the world.
45:39Please write something.
45:42Please take a look.
45:45Please take a look.
45:48This is the end of the journey of the Kazakh machine heritage left by the atomic bomb.
46:01The journey of Sato continues in search of the machine heritage that has not been seen yet.
46:08I see.
46:10It was a great material.
46:12I don't think it's okay to say that it's going to affect the country more and more.
46:19I agree.
46:21The country itself is different even if people like that are suffering.
46:26There are people who are affected by radiation in Kazakhstan.
46:31They are paid compensation.
46:34According to a patient, they are paid only about 2,000 yen a month.
46:38It's not enough for treatment at all.
46:41I'm working on a signature.
46:44This problem is very famous among people who are studying Hiroshima.
46:48Semi-parachinsk is famous.
46:50I don't think most people know about it.
46:53He was a great journalist.
46:56As a result, such a thing happened.
46:59I can't see Onebo anymore.
47:03He stopped playing with me in the morning.
47:05I wake up every day.
47:08It's necessary to play with you.
47:12It's like a conversation between a blond teacher and a police officer.
47:18It's very neglected.
47:21I like it very much.
47:23It's the moment when I can see Sato.
47:26Next week.
47:28It's a crazy story about Germany.
47:32It's a world trip special.
47:35It's a scary story.
47:37It's a true story.
47:39It starts at 9.45 p.m. on Monday.
47:42Tonight's broadcast is a free service of TVer.
47:45The past broadcasts are distributed on Unix and Parabi Corner.
47:49Please subscribe to TVer.

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