[This is too disturbing.
May very well trigger a Fukushima-like disaster.

Calls for immediate response from the international community and, of
course, the UN and the IAEA.
Immediate ceasefire in and around the site - under multilateral
supervision, is the most minimum requirement.]
Rocket attacks at Zaporizhzhia power plant raise fears of ‘nuclear
catastrophe’
John Hudson, Jennifer Hassan
August 7, 2022 at 12:39 p.m. EDT

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s nuclear power firm warned Sunday that rocket
attacks on the site of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant risked a
“nuclear disaster” as the governments of Russia and Ukraine traded blame
for the explosions at the facility.

For days, experts have warned that intensive fighting around the
Zaporizhzhia plant in southeastern Ukraine posed a grave threat, but
purported strikes on Saturday near the plant’s spent-fuel storage facility
prompted even more alarm.

“This is particularly dangerous because these buildings are not built with
the same kind of reinforced concrete that the reactor containment building
is,” said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control
Association. “These places were not designed as fortresses against external
missile or artillery strikes.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged a “stronger response from the
international community” following the attacks and said that he had spoken
with Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, to seek further
sanctions on Moscow’s nuclear industry. He accused the Kremlin of
conducting “nuclear terror.”

The Russian-installed local government of Enerhodar, where the plant is
located, accused Ukraine of hitting the facility using a 220mm Uragan
multiple rocket launcher system.

“The administrative buildings and the adjacent territory of the storage
facility were damaged,” it said in a statement given to Interfax news.

The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Mariano Grossi,
said the situation presented a dire threat to public health and the
environment in Ukraine and far beyond its borders.

On Sunday, he demanded that he be allowed to visit the site with a team of
nuclear experts. “We can put together a safety, security and safeguards
mission and deliver the indispensable assistance and impartial assessment
that is needed,” he said in a statement.

But the likelihood of an immediate visit appeared remote as fighting
intensifies in the contested area.

The shelling also damaged radiation monitoring sensors at the facility, and
wounded at least one worker, Ukraine’s state nuclear power firm Energoatom
said.

“This time a nuclear catastrophe was miraculously avoided, but miracles
cannot last forever,” the company said in a statement Sunday.

At least 174 containers of spent nuclear fuel are stored at the site, which
is Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant. According to Energoatom, Russian
troops “aimed specifically” at the containers.

The Zaporizhzhia plant has been under Russian control since March, but is
run by Ukrainian workers.

According to the company, damage to technology at the facility meant that
“timely detection and response in the event of a deterioration in the
radiation situation or leakage of radiation from containers of spent
nuclear fuel are not yet possible,” it said.

Russia originally seized the facility after one of its projectiles caused a
fire in the plant’s complex, igniting concerns about the safety of
Ukraine’s four nuclear sites that have continued in the months since.

The ongoing fighting has no precedent in military history, experts said.

“This is the first time in the history of the nuclear age that a major
nuclear power facility for a sustained period of time is in the middle of
an active war zone,” Kimball said.

He warned that loss of power at the plant also posed a significant threat.
“Each of these power plants has a certain number of days for which they
have backup diesel power generation,” he said.

Zelensky on Friday cited the attack on Zaporizhzhia as another reason
Moscow should be recognized as a “state sponsor of terrorism,” which he has
repeatedly called for since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February.

Russia’s Defense Ministry in turn has said that protection by
Russian-backed forces was the reason the plant was not more extensively
damaged.
Ukraine Live Briefing: Fresh shelling around nuclear plant as U.N. warns of
possible ‘disaster’
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/08/07/russia-ukraine-war-latest-updates/>U.N.
watchdog warns of ‘nuclear disaster’ from shelling at Zaporizhzhia plant
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/08/06/iaea-nuclear-disaster-ukraine-zaporizhzhia/>

*Hassan reported from London. Praveena Somasundaram in Washington
contributed to this report*

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