Former workers at what was then known as the Chernobyl nuclear
power plant (NPP) began commemorative events, holding an
overnight vigil in the northern town of Slavuytch to remember
victims of the world's worst nuclear accident on April 26, 1986.
An explosion at the plant in what was then Soviet Ukraine sent
radioactive material across Europe. About 30 plant workers and
firemen died in the immediate aftermath and many more people
died later from radiation-related illnesses.
"Thirty-seven years ago, the Chornobyl NPP accident left a huge
scar on the whole world," President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in
a statement on the Telegram messaging app.
Ukrainian officials have accused Moscow of exploiting safety
concerns raised by its occupation of Ukrainian nuclear plants to
try to blackmail Kyiv and its allies into meeting Russian
demands over its invasion. Russia denies the accusations.
Zelenskiy said Ukraine and the world had paid a high price over
the 1986 accident, and added: "We must do everything to give the
terrorist state no chance to use nuclear power facilities to
blackmail Ukraine and the entire world."
Ukraine's Foreign Ministry condemned Russia's occupation of the
Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station in southeastern Ukraine,
Europe's largest, and demanded it leave the plant.
Russian forces also seized the now defunct Chornobyl plant in
late February last year but withdrew weeks later.
In Slavutych, built for people evacuated from near the stricken
plant, residents and former nuclear workers holding candles
filed past photographs of victims as sombre music played.
"I know everyone here. It was my shift at the power plant," said
Serhii Akulin, a former worker at the plant. "I am here to
commemorate my colleagues. They are all alive, as long as I
remember them."
(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk in Kyiv, Editing by
Timothy Heritage)
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