The Evening Leader

Nuclear chief: Russia’s Chernobyl seizure risked accident

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CHERNOBYL, Ukraine (AP) — Thirty-six years after the world’s worst nuclear disaster, the head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency said Tuesday that Russian troops risked causing an accident with their “very, very dangerous” seizure of the Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine.

Wearing a blue IAEA jacket and standing under an orange umbrella during rainfall outside the damaged nuclear power plant, agency Director-General Rafael Mariano Grossi said that while the radiation levels are normal, the situation is still “not stable.” Nuclear authoritie­s have to “keep on alert,” he said.

Russian troops moved into the radiation-contaminat­ed Chernobyl exclusion zone in February on their way toward the Ukrainian capital. They withdrew late last month as Russia pulled its forces from areas near Kyiv and switched its focus to fighting in eastern Ukraine.

The site has been back in Ukrainian hands since then, and disrupted communicat­ions have been restored.

Ukrainian officials have said the Russian occupiers held plant workers at gunpoint during a marathon shift of more than a month, with personnel sleeping on tabletops and eating just twice a day.

Grossi congratula­ted the workers on mitigating potential risks during the occupation, including power disruption­s.

“I don’t know if we were very close to disaster, but the situation was absolutely abnormal and very, very dangerous,” he said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, noting the Chernobyl disaster anniversar­y on Twitter, said that “not everyone realized” the dangers of nuclear energy.

“Now, Russia’s actions at Ukrainian nuclear power plants threaten humanity with a new catastroph­e.”

An April 26, 1986 explosion and fire at Chernobyl sent radioactiv­e material into the atmosphere and became a symbol of the Soviet Union’s stumbling final years. The internatio­nal community, including Russia, spent billions to stabilize and secure the area.

The unit where the explosion and fire took place was sheathed in a state-of-art encasement. The dangers at the plant are ongoing, however, because spent nuclear fuel rods requires round-the-clock maintenanc­e. The fuel is from the plant’s four reactors, all now shut down.

Russian forces continue to hold a working nuclear power plant, Europe's largest, in southern Ukraine.

Fighting damaged the training facility of the Zaporizhzh­ia plant in early March.

An Associated Press reporter who visited Chernobyl this month saw evidence that Russian soldiers dug trenches in the forested Chernobyl exclusion zone in the earliest hours of the invasion, churning up highly contaminat­ed soil.

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