Otago Daily Times

UN nuclear inspectors reach plant

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ZAPORIZHZH­IA: United Nations nuclear experts who crossed into Russianhel­d territory in Ukraine to assess the safety of Europe’s biggest atomic energy plant were yesterday seeking to assess physical damage to the facility, where both sides warn of possible disaster.

An Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspection team braved intense shelling to reach the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant on Thursday (local time).

Russia and Ukraine say they fear a Chernobyll­ike catastroph­e due to shelling they blame on each other.

Russia seized the plant early in the now more than sixmonthol­d war, and areas to the south are now the focus of a major Ukrainian counteroff­ensive.

After touring the plant on Thursday (local time), IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said his inspectors were ‘‘not going anywhere’’. Grossi and other members of the team left for Ukrainianh­eld territory but five IAEA inspectors remain at the plant, Ukraine’s state nuclear company says.

The inspectors will assess physical damage to the plant, ensure its safety and security systems are functional and evaluate the conditions of the facility’s staff, the IAEA says. Grossi said on Thursday they would produce a report on their findings.

Since its capture by Russia in March, the plant has been controlled by Russian troops but operated by Ukrainian staff. On Thursday (local time), one of its reactors was forced to shut down due to shelling.

In a video address yesterday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy reiterated his frequent calls that all troops be removed from the plant — a demand supported by Kyiv’s Western allies and the United Nations.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow was doing everything to ensure that the plant could operate safely, and for the IAEA inspectors to be able to complete their tasks.

Ukrainian Energy Minister German Galushchen­ko said yesterday it was being discussed that certain IAEA specialist­s — ‘‘up to two individual­s’’ — will be permanentl­y stationed at the plant.

‘‘But it is important for us that the station must be under national control, meaning that the station must be returned to the control of Ukraine,’’ he told Ukrainian media.

Several towns near the nuclear plant came under Russian shelling on Thursday, damaging homes and other buildings, Zaporizhzh­ia regional council mayor Mykola Lukashuk said. Reuters was unable to independen­tly confirm this.

The plant sits on the south bank of a huge reservoir on the Dnipro River that divides Russian and Ukrainian forces in central southern Ukraine. Before the war, it supplied more than a fifth of Ukraine’s electricit­y.

Ukrainian officials have welcomed the IAEA visit, expressing hope that it will lead to the demilitari­sation of the plant.

The head of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross called for all fighting near the plant to stop, warning that little could be done to respond in the event of a potential nuclear leak.

‘‘[It] will be difficult if not impossible to provide humanitari­an assistance . . . and this is why fighting should stop,’’ Robert Mardini told a news conference during a visit to Ukraine on Thursday.. — Reuters

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin is to miss the funeral of the last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, denying the man who failed to prevent the collapse of the Soviet empire the full state honours granted to Boris Yeltsin.

Gorbachev, idolised in the West for allowing eastern Europe to escape Soviet communist control but unloved at home for the chaos that his ‘‘perestroik­a’’ reforms unleashed, will be buried today after a public ceremony in Moscow’s Hall of Columns.

Gorbachev will be given a mili

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