Bloomberg
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy reinforced his call for occupying Russian troops to withdraw from Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant after damage to transmission lines in the occupied territory disrupted power supply.
There are no immediate safety concerns and the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant is being powered through a restored electricity line, Ukraine’s state-owned nuclear operator Energoatom said. Transmission lines from the plant have also been repaired, while one unit was also reconnected to the country’s grid, supplying electricity to the system, it said. After Russia seized the plant, two units out of six were operating.
Zelenskiy cited the disruption, which he blamed on Russian shelling, to drive home his demand for President Vladimir Putin to withdraw his forces from the complex and for international inspectors to investigate.
“I want to assure all Ukrainians: We are doing everything to prevent an emergency scenario,†Zelenskiy said in his nightly video address to the nation. “It depends not only on our state. The key thing is that international pressure is needed to force the occupiers to immediately withdraw.â€
The atomic plant in Zaporizhzhia was captured in March when Russian troops swept through southern Ukraine and has become one of the most sensitive pressure points of Russia’s occupation. The Ukrainian leader said he addressed the issue with US President Joe Biden in a phone call on Thursday.
European intelligence officials say the Kremlin is exploiting its control of the plant to shield forces from Ukrainian counterattack while it launches artillery assaults from nearby. Russia accuses Kyiv of shelling that has targeted the facility and warned of unsubstantiated false-flag operations, which European intelligence services say is disinformation.
Nuclear inspectors from the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, are expected to visit the plant in the coming days. Officials will be given wider powers — including over security and safety issues — than the IAEA had initially sought, according to diplomats familiar with plans for the visit.