The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Ukrainian recalls terror of life at Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant

- By Makiko Yanada

KYIV — A worker of the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine has revealed details about the tough situation at the facility in an online interview with e Yomiuri Shimbun. e worker, who ed the area last month, said the situation has been nerve-wracking for sta amid the hostile presence of Russian soldiers.

e employee, a technician in his 30s who was in charge of controllin­g reactor temperatur­es, lived with his family in Enerhodar, a city of about 50,000 people where the plant is located.

According to the man, the Russians took control of the facility on March 4.

ey deployed tanks in the city center and entered the premises as their attacks swept across the area.

ey then brought heavy weapons into the plant and set up a checkpoint to strictly control access.

He said the Russians would smile at the plant sta , but the workers ignored them as a gesture of silent resistance.

However the soldiers started becoming aggressive, with some assaulting workers, creating a hostile atmosphere inside the plant.

According to the man, residents of Enerhodar began to spend their nights in fear of shelling around May.

In August, when shelling intensi ed in the city center, the employee decided to ee the city with his wife and three young children.

In addition to the risk of physical harm, people who live near the plant live in constant fear of the enormous damage that would occur in the event of an attack on the nuclear facility.

e man said he was terri ed whenever he heard a whooshing sound from the direction of the plant, which about

ve seconds later would be followed by a booming explosion from the direction of Nikopol, a city on the other side of the Dnipro River.

Despite his anxiety, he continued to work at the plant, but around July he was shocked to see Russian soldiers carrying artillery shells and other materials into the engine room near the reactor, where ammable materials are stored. Soldiers guarded the door to the room to restrict the access of plant sta .

e employee, who assumed the Russians chose the engine room as their arsenal to limit the threat of a counteratt­ack, said the possibilit­y the invaders were using the nuclear plant as a shield lled him with terror.

A local pro-Russian TV channel began to broadcast reports claiming Ukrainian forces were responsibl­e for attacks on the plant.

And when the man entered the facility, Russians at the checkpoint would tell him the Ukrainian military was to blame for the shelling, creating a tense situation.

Shelling of Enerhodar’s urban areas intensi ed in August. e interval between the ring and the explosion was about two seconds — indicating the shelling was coming from a closer range.

e man said he thought the shelling was launched by Russian forces deployed around the city center.

When the apartment building next to his home was hit by shelling he decided to ee the city, knowing he would not be able to protect his family if he stayed.

e man expressed gratitude to his supervisor, who issued him with a temporary pass to leave the city.

e Russian military, which does not allow Zaporizhzh­ia plant workers to leave the city without such documents, checked his mobile phone and personal computer for photos or data linked to the Russian occupation at a checkpoint when he was leaving.

e man said many workers, “mainly young and mid-career personnel,” have le amid the prolonged Russian occupation of the Zaporizhzh­ia facility.

In a clear sign that Russian President Vladimir Putin has not changed his position on the invasion of Ukraine, he announced plans to begin calling up reservists on Sept. 21.

Worried about the safety of his supervisor­s and other colleagues who continue to work at the plant, the man said the situation has le him despondent. (Sept. 25)

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