Gulf News

RUSSIA SHOWS SEIZED UKRAINE NUCLEAR PLANT

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Nearly two months after it was seized by Russian forces, there are few signs of the fighting for the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant in Ukraine that sparked global fears of a potential atomic disaster.

Other than a scorched administra­tive building, the vast complex in southern Ukraine — Europe’s largest nuclear power plant — appeared largely untouched by the clashes during a visit by AFP this weekend, part of a press tour organised by the Russian military.

There has been deep internatio­nal concern over the situation at the plant, which has six of Ukraine’s 15 reactors and can create enough energy for four million homes.

Russian forces seized the A Russian serviceman patrols the territory of the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Station in Energodar on Sunday. site amid fighting in early March that caused a large fire at a training facility at the plant, which sits along the Dnipro river south of the Ukrainian-held city of Zaporizhzh­ia. There was no spike in radiation, but the clashes nonetheles­s caused deep worries, especially in the country that was the site of the world’s worst nuclear accident at Chernobyl in 1986.

Rafael Grossi, the head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, said last week that it was “extremely important” for IAEA monitors to be able to access the site, which was built in the early 1980s but modernised in recent years.

Russia insists it is taking all necessary precaution­s at the plant, where its troops now patrol in the shadows of its enormous and heavily reinforced red-domed reactors.

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AFP

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