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Igor Kostin photographed in Kiev in 2006.
Igor Kostin photographed in Kiev in 2006. Photograph: Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images
Igor Kostin photographed in Kiev in 2006. Photograph: Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images

Igor Kostin, photographer who captured the Chernobyl disaster, dies at 78

This article is more than 8 years old

Ukrainian Igor Kostin, who took the first pictures of Chernobyl nuclear plant after it exploded in 1986, has died in a car accident in Kiev

Igor Kostin, a Ukrainian photographer who took one of the first pictures of the ravaged Chernobyl nuclear plant after it exploded in 1986, has died. He was 78.

His wife, Alla, told the Associated Press on Wednesday that her husband died the day before in a car accident on the outskirts of the Ukrainian capital, Kiev.

Within hours of the Chernobyl explosion on 26 April 1986, Kostin and two other photographers flew over the nuclear power plant in a helicopter. The high radiation ruined all of his pictures except for one, and that shot of the destroyed reactor remains one of the defining images of the disaster.

In the following months and years, Kostin repeatedly returned to the contaminated zone to document the cleanup efforts.

Igor Kostin photographed the remains of Chernobyl’s destroyed reactor in 1986. Photograph: Igor Kostin/Corbis

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