Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nuclear safe zone sought for plant

U.N. official says both sides ‘playing with fire’

- By Hanna Arhirova

KYIV, Ukraine — The U.N. atomic watchdog agency urged Russia and Ukraine on Tuesday to establish a “nuclear safety and security protection zone” around the Zaporizhzh­ia power plant amid mounting fears the fighting could trigger a catastroph­e in a country still scarred by the Chernobyl disaster.

“We are playing with fire, and something very, very catastroph­ic could take place,” Rafael Grossi, head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, warned the U.N. Security Council, days after leading an inspection visit to the plant.

In a detailed report on its visit, the IAEA said shelling around the Europe’s largest nuclear power plant should stop immediatel­y. “This requires agreement by all relevant parties to the establishm­ent of a nuclear safety and security protection zone” around the plant, it said.

At the Security Council meeting, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres likewise demanded that Russian and Ukrainian forces commit to halting all military activity around the plant and agree on a “demilitari­zed perimeter.”

Guterres said this would include “a commitment by Russian forces to withdraw all military personnel and equipment from that perimeter and a commitment by Ukrainian forces not to move into it.”

Asked by reporters about establishi­ng a demilitari­zed zone, Russia’s U.N. ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, said the proposal “is not serious.”

“The Ukrainians will immediatel­y step in and ruin the whole thing. We’re defending, we’re protecting the station,” he said. “In fact, it is not militarize­d. There is no equipment at the station.”

He said the only Russians there are guarding the plant.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy offered qualified praise for the IAEA’S report.

In his nightly address to the nation, Zelenskyy praised the report’s “clear references” to the presence of Russian troops and military equipment at the plant. He also called for a more robust mandate for the IAEA and urged the agency to explicitly back Kyiv’s long-held claim that Russian forces need to withdraw from the facility and its surroundin­gs.

Shelling continued around the plant on Tuesday, a day after it was again knocked off Ukraine’s electrical grid and put in the precarious position of relying on its own power to run its safety systems.

Normally the plant relies on power from the outside to run the critical cooling systems that keep its reactors and its spent fuel from overheatin­g. A loss of those systems could lead to a meltdown or other release of radiation.

“For radiation protection profession­als, for the Ukrainian and even the Russian people, and those of central Europe, this is a very worrying time — and that’s an understate­ment,” said Paul Dorfman, a nuclear safety expert at the University of Sussex in England.

Russia and Ukraine accused each other of shelling Enerhodar, the city where the plant is situated. The Ukrainians also charged that the Kremlin’s forces fired on a town across the Dnieper River from the power station.

The Ukrainian mayor of Enerhodar, Dmytro Orlov, reported a powerful blast in the city around midday. The explosion left the city of 53,000 cut off from its power and water supplies. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what caused the blast.

In its report, the IAEA did not assign blame for the shelling at the plant. The agency has sought to keep out of the political fray.

 ?? Kostiantyn Liberov The Associated Press ?? A Ukrainian soldier takes a selfie as an artillery system fires Saturday in eastern Ukraine.
Kostiantyn Liberov The Associated Press A Ukrainian soldier takes a selfie as an artillery system fires Saturday in eastern Ukraine.

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