25 April, 2024
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‘Gravely concerned’: UN chief warns damage to Ukraine’s nuclear plant is ‘suicide’

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UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says he is “gravely concerned” by the situation at Europe’s largest nuclear power station after it came under shelling at the front lines in Ukraine.

Russia, which captured the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant soon after its February 24 invasion of Ukraine, said it could shut down the facility — a move Kyiv said would increase the risk of a nuclear catastrophe.

Mr Guterres, speaking after talks with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on Thursday (local time), said military equipment and personnel should be withdrawn from the plant.

“We must tell it like it is — any potential damage to Zaporizhzhia is suicide,” he said.

“The facility must not be used as part of any military operation. Instead, agreement is urgently needed to re-establish Zaporizhzhia’s purely civilian infrastructure and to ensure the safety of the area.”

Ukrainian rescuers attend an exercise in Zaporizhzhia. Photo: Getty

Moscow had earlier rejected international calls for a demilitarised zone around the plant, which is still operated by Ukrainian engineers under Russian occupation, as “unacceptable”.

The power station sits on the Russian-controlled south bank of a huge reservoir; Ukrainian forces hold the north bank. Recent days have seen several incidents of shelling at the plant, which both sides blame on each other.

Ukraine also accuses Russia of using the plant as a shield for its forces to launch strikes across the reservoir on Ukrainian-held cities, which Moscow denies.

Reuters cannot independently confirm the military situation there or responsibility for shelling.

Mr Zelensky said after meeting Mr Guterres on Thursday that they had agreed parameters of a possible mission of the International Atomic Energy Agency to the plant.

Earlier, he had accused Russia of “nuclear blackmail”.

“This deliberate terror on the part of the aggressor can have global catastrophic consequences for the whole world,” Mr Zelensky wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

In Moscow, the defence ministry said Russia could shut the plant down if it came under further attack.

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear reactor complex was captured by Russia soon after it invaded Ukraine.

Ukrainian officials have accused Russia of planning to shut the plant to sever it from Ukraine’s power grid and switch it over to Russia’s — effectively stealing its output.

Ukrainian state nuclear energy company Energoatom said shutting down the plant would increase the risk of “a radiation disaster at the largest nuclear power plant in Europe”.

Disconnecting the complex’s generators from Ukraine’s power system would prevent them being used to keep nuclear fuel cool in the event of a power outage at the plant, it said.

Shutting down a nuclear power plant is a complicated operation that requires halting nuclear chain reactions while protecting fuel from heating up and causing a meltdown.

“Should Russia take actions to force (the plant) off the Ukraine power system, that could threaten the operational safety of the station, in addition to escalating Ukraine’s energy crisis into the winter,” Mark Hibbs, senior fellow at the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told Reuters in an email.

Russia’s defence ministry and Ukraine’s main intelligence agency both accused the other side of planning some form of incident at the nuclear plant as a “provocation” to take place during Mr Guterres’ visit.

Three-way talks

Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan also took part in talks with Mr Guterres and Mr Zelensky in Lviv, saying afterwards they had discussed ways to end the conflict.

Mr Erdogan said they had talked about using the positive atmosphere created by a deal brokered by the UN and Turkey to lift a Russian blockade of Ukrainian grain exports to establish lasting peace.

He also said they discussed the exchange of prisoners of war between Ukraine and Russia, and that he would later raise the issue with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The post ‘Gravely concerned’: UN chief warns damage to Ukraine’s nuclear plant is ‘suicide’ appeared first on The New Daily.

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