Ukraine has denied it is behind a series of drone attacks on the
plant over the past 48 hours, including three drone attacks on
Sunday, which the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said
had endangered nuclear safety.
The plant, run by a unit of Russian state nuclear corporation
Rosatom, said Ukraine's armed forces attacked the plant on
Monday with a "kamikaze drone". It was shot down over the plant
and fell on the roof of reactor No. 6.
"It is dangerous, dangerous for the station, dangerous for the
surrounding territory and potentially dangerous for all of
humanity," Yuri Chernichuk, the Russian-installed director of
the nuclear power plant, told Reuters.
"No nuclear reactor was made to be in the centre of fighting,"
he said.
Rosatom said Ukraine attacked the plant three times on Sunday
with drones, first injuring three people near a canteen, then
attacking a cargo area and then the dome above reactor No. 6.
The Kremlin said such Ukrainian drone attacks were very
dangerous and had extremely grave potential consequences.
A Ukrainian intelligence official said Kyiv had nothing to do
with any strikes on the station and suggested they were the work
of Russians themselves.
The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has six Soviet-designed
VVER-1000 V-320 water-cooled and water-moderated reactors
containing Uranium 235.
The IAEA said its experts had confirmed three drone attacks on
Sunday. It did not apportion blame for the attack but said
Russian troops engaged an approaching drone on Sunday before an
explosion near a reactor building.
It has yet to comment in public on Monday's attack.
"This is a major escalation of the nuclear safety and security
dangers facing the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. Such
reckless attacks significantly increase the risk of a major
nuclear accident and must cease immediately," IAEA Director
General Rafael Grossi said in a statement.
"Attacking a nuclear power plant is an absolute no go," Grossi
said.
Russian forces took control of the plant in 2022 shortly after
their full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Both Moscow and Kyiv have repeatedly accused each other of
risking a nuclear accident by attacking the plant. Reuters was
unable to immediately verify battlefield accounts from either
side.
(Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Angus
MacSwan)
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