War in Ukraine | Zelensky commemorates Chernobyl and warns against nuclear risk

(Kyiv) Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned on Friday of the risk of a nuclear incident due to the Russian occupation of the Zaporizhia power plant, a warning on the occasion of the 38e anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster.


The Russian army has occupied the huge power station in southern Ukraine for more than two years, which previously produced 20% of the country’s electricity.

“It has now been 785 days since Russian terrorists have taken the Zaporizhzhia power plant hostage,” Volodymyr Zelensky lamented on Friday on X.

“It is up to the whole world to put pressure on Russia so that the Zaporizhzhia power plant is liberated and returned to the control of Ukraine,” he said, believing that “this is the only way to avoid new disasters” like that of Chernobyl.

On April 26, 1986, when Ukraine was still part of the USSR, a reactor at the Chernobyl power plant, located about a hundred kilometers north of Kyiv, exploded.

The nuclear accident, considered the worst in history, contaminated large areas, especially in Ukraine, Belarus and Russia. Much of the rest of Europe also suffered radioactive fallout.

On the first day of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, February 24, 2022, troops from Moscow entered the highly radioactive exclusion zone surrounding Chernobyl through Belarus and occupied the site of the no longer operating plant. since 2000.

They stayed there for a month before retreating, ransacking scientific equipment, according to Kyiv.

The Zaporizhia power plant continued to operate during the first months of the Russian invasion, despite its capture by Russian forces and periods of bombing, before being shut down in the fall of 2022.

Kyiv and Moscow have repeatedly accused each other of having bombed the site, these strikes raising the specter of a “new Chernobyl”.

Two dead in territory occupied by Moscow and in Russia

Two people were killed and two others injured on Friday in Ukrainian bombings in territory occupied by Moscow and on Russian soil, the respective local authorities reported.

“The bombing of the city of Novodrujesk (…) damaged private houses and apartments,” the municipal administration of Lysychansk, the large city under Russian control which borders Novodrujesk, indicated on Telegram.

“One man died from his injuries, two other men were injured by shrapnel,” added this source.

Novodrujesk is a town of nearly 8,000 people before the conflict which is located on the front line in the Luhansk region, almost entirely under the control of Moscow in western Ukraine.

In response to numerous deadly Russian strikes in Ukraine, Kyiv’s forces have promised in recent months to bring the fighting onto Russian soil, particularly targeting the rear lines of Russian forces’ logistics.

“A resident was killed” on Friday in a Ukrainian strike on a small town in the Russian region of Kursk, near the common border, regional governor Roman Starovoit said on Telegram.


reference: www.lapresse.ca

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