President Volodymyr Zelenskiy saysUkrainian spies have received information showing Russia was considering carrying out a “terrorist” attack at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant involving a release of radiation.
In a video statement on Telegram,
Zelenskiy said Kyiv was sharing the information about the Russian-occupied
facility in southern Ukraine with all its international partners from Europe
and the U.S. to China and India.
“Intelligence has received
information that Russia is considering the scenario of a terrorist act at the
Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant – a terrorist act with the release of radiation,” he
said. “They have prepared everything for this.”
Zelenskiy did not say what
evidence the intelligence agencies based their assertion on.
Speaking later, after a meeting
of security chiefs and diplomats, the Ukrainian president issued a fresh call
to put pressure on Russia to end its occupation of the plant, seized by Russian
troops days after the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
The Kremlin dismissed Zelenskiy’s
allegation of an attack on the plant as “another lie”, and said a team of U.N.
nuclear inspectors had visited the plant and rated everything highly.
Each side has accused the other
of shelling the six-reactor plant, Europe’s largest. International efforts to
establish a demilitarised zone around it have so far failed.
“Unfortunately, I have had to
remind (people) more than once that radiation knows no state borders. And who
it will hit is determined only by the direction of the wind,” Zelenskiy said.
In his nightly video address,
Zelenskiy said: “We need the complete de-occupation of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear
power station.
“And anyone who turns a blind eye to Russia’s
occupation of such a facility, to Russia’s mining of the territory of the
plant, is actually contributing not only to Russian evil but to terror in
general.”
The world’s intelligence
agencies, Zelenskiy said, had the means to “send appropriate signals and apply
pressure. And this is what is needed.”
Ukraine, then part of the Soviet
Union, suffered the world’s worst nuclear accident in 1986, when clouds of
radioactive material spread across much of Europe after an explosion and fire
at the Chornobyl nuclear power plant.
Zelenskiy made his statement two
days after Ukraine’s military intelligence chief accused Russia of “mining” the
pond used to keep the reactors cool at the Zaporizhzhia plant.
The general director of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, spent time at the plant last
week. According to Russian reports, he was due to meet the head of Russia’s
nuclear authority, Rosatom, on Friday in Russia’s Baltic enclave of
Kaliningrad.
Russian forces have occupied
swathes of Ukraine’s south and east and Moscow has unilaterally declared them a
part of Russia. Moscow plans to conduct elections on the occupied territory
there this September.
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