Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Mines surround Ukraine nuke power plant

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Land mines once again surround the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant in Ukraine, which is in Russian hands, the United Nations nuclear watchdog said Friday.

“Mines along the perimeter of the ZNPP (Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant)... are now back in place,” the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency said in a statement.

The mines, previously identified by agency experts on site, had been removed in November, but are now back, which is “inconsiste­nt with the IAEA safety standards,” the statement added.

They are in “a restricted area inaccessib­le to operationa­l plant personnel” in a buffer zone between the facility’s internal and external fences, it added.

The IAEA added that its experts had not been granted access to several reactor halls, as well as some other areas.

“Such access is needed to monitor nuclear safety and security,” the statement said.

The experts were granted access to the reactor hall of one of the units earlier this week.

The nuclear facility, Europe’s largest, fell to Russian forces shortly after the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and Kyiv and Moscow have repeatedly accused each other of planning an incident at the site.

Earlier this month, Russia said it was blocking access for safety reasons.

IAEA head Rafael Grossi has repeatedly warned of “persistent nuclear safety and security risks at the site.”

IAEA officials have been on the ground monitoring the plant since September 2022.

The plant has been repeatedly rocked by shelling and drone attacks near it throughout the conflict.

It has also been severed from the grid several times, raising fears of a major nuclear accident.

The six reactor units, which before the war produced around a fifth of Ukraine’s electricit­y, have been shut down.

But it still needs electricit­y and water to cool its systems.

 ?? ROBERT ATANASOVSK­I/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? WOMEN dressed in traditiona­l folk costumes participat­e at the Epiphany day celebratio­ns in the village of Bitushe, some 50 kilometers southwest of Gostivar, North Macedonia.
ROBERT ATANASOVSK­I/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE WOMEN dressed in traditiona­l folk costumes participat­e at the Epiphany day celebratio­ns in the village of Bitushe, some 50 kilometers southwest of Gostivar, North Macedonia.
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