The Korea Times

Renewed shelling threatens Ukrainian nuclear plant

Kyiv, Moscow trade blame for strikes; UN calls for end to ‘madness’ of attacks

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— The U.N.’s atomic watchdog chief on Sunday denounced “targeted” strikes at Ukraine’s Russian-controlled Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant, calling for a “stop to this madness,” as Kyiv and Moscow traded blame.

Ukraine meanwhile dismissed Russian accusation­s that it had executed surrenderi­ng soldiers.

“The news from our team yesterday and this morning is extremely disturbing,” said a statement Sunday from Rafael Grossi, head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

“Explosions occurred at the site of this major nuclear power plant, which is completely unacceptab­le.

“Whoever is behind this, it must stop immediatel­y,” he added.

“As I have said many times before, you’re playing with fire!” There were more than a dozen blasts overnight Saturday to Sunday, some of which a team of experts from the agency on site had themselves seen, the IAEA said in a statement.

Speaking to French broadcaste­r BFMTV later Sunday, Grossi was clear that the strikes on the plant were no accident.

“The people who are doing this know where they are hitting. It is absolutely deliberate, targeted.”

The IAEA is to send a team of experts to the plant — the biggest nuclear facility in Europe — and which is currently controlled by Russian troops.

Ukraine meanwhile dismissed Russian accusation­s that its soldiers had killed Russian troops as they were surrenderi­ng, in what Moscow has described as a “war crime.”

Extracts from the video footage in question showed that in fact, Russian forces had used a “staged surrender” to open fire on Ukrainian soldiers, Dmytro Lubinets, the parliament’s commission­er for human rights said Sunday.

“In this case, persons among the Russian servicemen cannot be considered prisoners of war, but are those who are fighting and committing treachery,” he added.

“Returning fire is not a war crime. On the contrary, those who want to use the protection of internatio­nal law to kill must be punished.”

Video footage circulated on Russian social media last week purported to show the bodies of Russian servicemen killed after surrenderi­ng to Ukrainian troops.

AFP has not independen­tly confirmed the videos.

A U.N. spokespers­on told AFP on Friday it was “aware of the videos” and “looking into them.”

Meanwhile in the southern city of Kherson, which Ukrainian troops recently recaptured, residents were facing a fresh challenge after eight months of occupation by Moscow’s troops — Russian artillery attacks.

After Russian shells pounded the industrial area next to their home, setting fire to an oil depot there, Yuri Mosolov and his wife decided it was time to leave.

“After yesterday’s shelling, my wife said: let’s not take too many risks and go,” Mosolov told AFP.

A carefully planned campaign by Kyiv targeting logistics networks, bridges and pontoon crossings battered Russian supply lines and forced their troops to abandon the city and retreat to the Dnipro’s eastern bank.

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