BY ANDREW
STANTON ON 7/1/23 AT 1:44 PM EDT
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during a press conference in Kyiv on Wednesday. Zelensky on Saturday warned that Russia could remotely detonate the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant after handing it over to Ukraine.YAN DOBRONOSOV/GLOBAL IMAGES UKRAINE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Russia
could blow up the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (ZNPP) after handing it back
over to Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned
on Saturday.
Zaporizhzhia, Europe's largest
nuclear power plant, has long been a focus point in the Russia-Ukraine war,
launched by Russian President Vladimir Putin last
February. Both Ukrainian and Russian forces have fought for control of the
plant, and combat around it has sparked concerns about the potential for a
nuclear explosion, which would have devastating consequences for
the surrounding area. Last month, Ukraine launched a
counteroffensive aimed at reclaiming occupied territory in the Zaporizhzhia
region, with authorities warning about a potential Russian attack at the
facility.
Zelensky on Saturday issued a new warning about a "serious
threat" at the ZNPP.
"We know for sure that
this was considered by the Russian Federation as one of the plans, so that
later, when the station is handed over to us, to detonate it remotely for the
release, and this is also very dangerous," Zelensky said, according to The
Kyiv Independent.
He urged the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to "thoroughly" inspect the power plant
if Russia opts to hand the plant
over to Ukraine.
Zelensky's warning
comes amid increased concerns about the ZNPP. The Ukrainian president said last
month that intelligence reports indicate that Putin is considering to launch a
terrorist attack at the nuclear plant through radiation
leakage. Ukraine has long accused Russia of weaponizing the power plant in
their "aggression."
"We take all such reports very seriously
and I have instructed our experts at the site to look into this matter and
request the access they need for doing their job. Until now they have not
observed any mines or other explosives. Further access will still be
needed," IAEA's Director General Rafael Grossi said on the IAEA's website
on Friday.
The IAEA has found
"no visible indications of mines or other explosives" at the
Zaporizhzhia plant, but experts still need "additional access to carry out
further such checks at the site," according to a statement the
organization sent to Newsweek on
Saturday.
"Intelligence has received information that Russia is
considering a scenario of a terrorist attack at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power
Plant. A terrorist attack with radiation leakage. They have prepared everything
for this," Zelensky said during a video address that was shared to social
media Thursday.
Moscow, however, has denied Zelensky's allegations about a
potential attack using the power plant, pointing to a "high
assessment" from the IAEA.
"The nuclear safety and security situation at the Zaporizhzhia
Nuclear Power Plant is extremely fragile," Grossi said on Wednesday, who
traveled to the plant last month. "Now more than ever, all sides must
fully adhere to the IAEA's basic principles designed to prevent a nuclear
accident. We will intensify our efforts to help ensure nuclear safety and
security, while also providing assistance to the affected region in other
ways."
A
spokesperson for the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)
wrote in a statement to Newsweek that any explosion at
the plant "could have catastrophic consequences as Chernobyl showed."
"We urge all sides to respect the IAEA call for a
demilitarised zone around the Zaporizhzhia power station," ICAN's
statement reads.
Newsweek reached
out to Zelensky's office for comment via email.
Ukraine's Main Directorate of Intelligence at the Ministry of
Defense said on Friday that Russia has gradually been reducing the number of
personnel at the plant, Reuters reported and that three employees of Rosatom, a
Russian state nuclear firm, were among the first to leave the plant.
In addition, the Associated Press reported on Thursday that
Ukraine held drills in the region to prepare for a potential radiation leak.
Update
07/02/2023, 8:38 a.m. ET: This article was updated with comment from ICAN.
https://www.newsweek.com/russia-could-blow-nuclear-plant-after-handing-it-ukraine-zelensky-1810318
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