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The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. Dmytro Smolyenko
Ukraine

UN's nuclear agency travelling to Zaporizhzhia plant, as Ukraine launches offensive in south

Russia and Ukraine traded claims of rocket and artillery strikes at or near the plant on Sunday, intensifying fears of a radiation leak.

LAST UPDATE | 29 Aug 2022

INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY Agency (IAEA) chief Rafael Grossi said he was en route to inspect Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant today, as Kyiv’s forces launched a counteroffensive to retake the occupied southern region of Kherson.

The coastal region of Kherson and its capital city of the same name have been contested by Russian troops since the war broke out six months ago.

“Today there was a powerful artillery attack on enemy positions in… the occupied Kherson region,” local government official Sergey Khlan told Ukraine’s Pryamyi TV channel.

“This is what we have been waiting for since the spring – it is the beginning of the de-occupation of Kherson region.”

Kherson city lies some 200 kilometres southwest of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant – Europe’s largest atomic facility – which has also been occupied by Russian troops since early March.

The plant was targeted over the weekend by fresh shelling, its operator said, with Moscow and Kyiv trading blame for attacks around the complex of six nuclear reactors in Energodar, a town on the banks of the Dnipro River.

Ukraine’s nuclear agency Energoatom has warned of the risk of a radiation leak. 

Russian troops “continued to fire at Energodar and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant” yesterday, injuring 10, among them four plant workers, it said in an update early today.

As of 10:00am (7am Irish time), the plant was operating “with the risk of violating radiation and fire safety standards”.

But Russia’s defence ministry accused Ukrainian troops of shelling near the plant yesterday, claiming it had shot down a “Ukrainian strike drone” approaching a nuclear fuel and radioactive waste storage area.

And Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov urged the international community “to put pressure on the Ukrainian side so it stops endangering the European continent by shelling”.

Peskov said Russia saw the IAEA visit as “necessary” and had been “waiting for this mission for a long time”, insisting it would ensure its safety in the face of “constant” risks. 

‘Radiation blackmail’

Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskyy today called for sanctions against Russia’s state nuclear energy agency Rosatom over the occupation of the plant.

“It’s not normal that there are no sanctions against Rosatom for its radiation blackmail at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant,” he said.

“The Russians are the only terrorists in the world that have managed to turn a nuclear plant into a battlefield.”

russia-ukraine-war Workers drain water from a crater created by an explosion that damaged a residential building after a Russian attack in Slovyansk. Leo Correa Leo Correa

The UN’s nuclear watchdog has for months been asking to visit the site, warning of “the very real risk of a nuclear disaster”.

Writing on Twitter, Grossi said an IAEA support and assistance mission was “now on its way” with the team due to arrive “later this week”.

The United Nations has called for an end to all military activity in the area surrounding the complex.

Ukraine initially feared an IAEA visit would legitimise the Russian occupation of the site before finally supporting the idea of a mission.

In an update today, Energoatom said the Russians had “increased pressure on the personnel of the plant to prevent them from disclosing (to the IAEA) evidence of the occupiers’ crimes at the plant and its use as a military base”.

The G7 industrial powers demanded free access for the IAEA team to “engage directly, and without interference, with the Ukrainian personnel responsible for operating these facilities”.

And in Stockholm, Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said the team’s mission was “the hardest in the history of the IAEA, given the active combat activities undertaken by the Russian federation on the ground.”

Ukraine was the site of the world’s worst nuclear catastrophe in 1986, when a reactor at the northern Chernobyl plant exploded and spewed radiation into the atmosphere.

Experts say any leak at Zaporizhzhia would more likely be on the scale of the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan.

Energoatom warned any leak would scatter radiation over swathes of southern Ukraine and southwestern regions of Russia.

Handing out iodine pills

On the ground, at least two people were killed when Russian shells ploughed into the centre of the southern city of Mykolaiv, mayor Oleksandr Senkevych wrote on Telegram.

“For now, we know about two dead and five wounded,” he wrote, saying residential buildings had been hit.

With tensions high around the plant, Ukraine’s rescue services have been holding training sessions on managing the risk of nuclear accidents.

Schools in Zaporizhzhia city began distributing iodine pills to reduce medical risk of radiation in the event of a disaster, with some 200 people turning up to collect them on Friday when distribution began, an AFP correspondent said.

“The tablet is taken in case of danger, when the alarm is raised,” said Elena Karpenko, a nurse at the Zaporizhzhia Children’s Hospital.

© AFP 2022

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