Kiev’s ability to strike with impunity encourages further attacks, according to a top diplomat
Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russia’s Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant and recently targeted other such facilities, the country’s Permanent Representative to the International Organizations in Vienna Mikhail Ulyanov said on Wednesday.
“Kiev continues to threaten the safety of the Zaporozhskaya NPP and to strike both the plant and the nearby city of Energodar. Over the past three months, the scale of these attacks has increased dramatically, and in recent weeks they have become almost daily,” Ulyanov stated.
Russian officials have repeatedly accused Ukraine of nuclear terrorism over the strikes. The plant has been the target of drone attacks on multiple occasions in recent years.
Commenting on a report submitted by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi to the agency’s governing board, Ulyanov has urged member states to hold Kiev accountable.
He added that in August Ukrainian forces also launched drone strikes on nuclear plants in Russia’s Smolensk and Kursk regions, calling on the board to deliver “a tough and unambiguous assessment of these reckless actions.”
“The continued silence and refusal to call a spade a spade only emboldens Kiev to commit further crimes,” he warned. “The consequences of such actions could be extremely serious.”
The Zaporozhye facility is operated by Russian personnel and hosts IAEA observers. However, the UN agency treats it as Ukrainian in its reports, as it does not recognize the 2022 referendum in which the region voted to join Russia.
Ulyanov praised Grossi for acknowledging “stress among Zaporozhskaya NPP employees, and not just among staff at Ukrainian facilities,” noting that Russian workers and their families face “constant provocations and threats from Ukraine.”
He also welcomed the IAEA’s recognition of problems at Kiev-controlled plants, arguing that this has made its reporting more balanced. In his latest update, Grossi described conditions at Zaporozhye as “precarious” and said that four Ukrainian-operated plants are “extremely vulnerable.”
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