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Russia-Ukraine war: risk of radioactive leak at ‘repeatedly shelled’ Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, operator warns – as it happened

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Ukraine’s state energy operator: ‘There are risks of hydrogen leakage and sputtering of radioactive substances’

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Sat 27 Aug 2022 13.15 EDTFirst published on Sat 27 Aug 2022 02.06 EDT
A Ukrainian military unit in a field fires self-propelled artillery near a frontline in the Ukraine's Kharkiv region
Ukrainian soldiers fire self-propelled artillery near a frontline in the Kharkiv region of north-eastern Ukraine as the Russian invasion continues into its sixth month. Photograph: Ihor Thachev/AFP/Getty Images
Ukrainian soldiers fire self-propelled artillery near a frontline in the Kharkiv region of north-eastern Ukraine as the Russian invasion continues into its sixth month. Photograph: Ihor Thachev/AFP/Getty Images

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Risk of radioactive leak at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, says operator

Ukraine’s state energy operator has warned that there is a risk of a radioactive leak at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine.

Moscow’s troops have “repeatedly shelled” the site of the nuclear plant over the past day, Energoatom said.

As of midday on Saturday local time (9am GMT) the plant “operates with the risk of violating radiation and fire safety standards”, the operator said in a statement.

Energoatom said:

As a result of periodic shelling, the infrastructure of the station has been damaged, there are risks of hydrogen leakage and sputtering of radioactive substances, and the fire hazard is high.

Russia’s defence ministry has claimed Ukraine’s troops “shelled the territory of the station three times” in the past day.

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Key events

A summary of today's developments

  • Concern about the potential for a radiation leak at Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is persisting. Ukraine’s state energy operator has warned that there are “risks of hydrogen leakage and sputtering of radioactive substances” at the Russian-occupied plant. Authorities were distributing iodine tablets to residents who live near the plant in case of radiation exposure.

  • Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of shelling the area around Europe’s largest nuclear plant. Moscow’s troops have “repeatedly shelled” the site of the nuclear plant over the past day, the Ukrainian state nuclear company, Energoatom, said. Russia’s defence ministry has claimed Ukraine’s troops “shelled the territory of the station three times” in the past day.

  • A team of inspectors from the UN nuclear watchdog is poised to make an emergency visit to the Zaporizhzhia plant, according to reports. Sources have told the Wall Street Journal it is “almost certain” that a mission from the International Atomic Energy Agency will visit the plant early next week, although details are still being finalised.

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy has issued a statement marking Ukraine’s Aviation Day, in which he pledged that Kyiv’s troops will “destroy the occupiers’ potential step by step”. The Ukrainian president vowed that the Russian “invaders will die like dew on the sun”.

  • Russia has probably increased the intensity of its attacks in the Donetsk area of eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region over the past five days, according to British intelligence. Pro-Russia separatists have most likely made progress towards the centre of Pisky village, near Donetsk airport, but Russian forces overall had secured few territorial gains, the latest report from the UK Ministry of Defence says.

  • Russia has blocked an agreement at the UN that was aimed at bolstering the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT). The failure to agree to a joint statement, due to Moscow’s objection to a clause about control over the Zaporizhzhia power plant, is the latest blow to hopes of maintaining an arms control regime and keeping a lid on a rekindled arms race.

  • Ukrainian sailors will be allowed to leave the country for work, the country’s cabinet of ministers has said. The prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said men of draft age employed as crew members will be allowed to leave the country so long as they have permission from their local conscription offices to cross the border.

  • Britain’s defence ministry has said it is giving six underwater drones to Ukraine to help clear its coastline of mines and make grain shipments safer. In addition, dozens of Ukrainian navy personnel will be taught to use the drones over the coming months, the ministry said.

  • Kazakhstan, a neighbour and ally of Russia, has suspended all arms exports for a year, its government said, amid the conflict in Ukraine and western sanctions against Moscow.

  • Poland and the Czech Republic have agreed to protect the airspace of their Nato ally Slovakia, as it upgrades its air force from legacy Soviet-made MiG-29 fighters to a new batch of F-16 jets from the US.

UK organisations have been urged to strengthen their cyber defences to prepare for an extended period of “heightened threat” due to the war in Ukraine.

The National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) published the guidance along with advice to help companies bolster their protections.

Paul Maddinson, NCSC director for national resilience and strategy, said: “From the start of the conflict in Ukraine, we have been asking organisations to strengthen their cyber defences to help keep the UK secure, and many have done so.

“But it’s now clear that we’re in this for the long haul, and it’s vital that organisations support their staff through this demanding period of heightened cyber threat.”

Oleksandr offers an engagement ring to his girlfriend Kateryna in downtown Lviv, Ukraine. Kateryna, who just returned from Poland on Saturday, was met at Lviv train station by her fiancé Oleksandr, ending six months of separation because of the war. Photograph: Emilio Morenatti/AP
Gemma McSherry

The UK is giving underwater drones to Ukraine and training Ukrainian personnel in Britain to use them to clear their coastline of mines, the Ministry of Defence has announced.

Dozens of Ukrainian personnel will be taught to use the autonomous minehunting vehicles by the Royal Navy and US partners over the coming months, with some already commencing their training.

Six autonomous minehunting vehicles are being sent to search for Russian mines in the waters off its coast. Three vehicles are due to be sent from UK stocks while another three will be bought from industry.

The lightweight autonomous vehicles can be used in shallow coastal environments and are designed to operate at depths of up to 100 metres to detect, locate and identify mines with a series of sensors.

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Kazakhstan, a neighbour and ally of Russia, has suspended all arms exports for a year, its government said, amid conflict in Ukraine and western sanctions against Moscow.

The former Soviet republic – which also has active economic ties with Kyiv – has avoided taking sides in the Ukrainian crisis while calling for its peaceful resolution.

The country’s government did not give a reason in Saturday’s statement for the decision to halt arms exports, Reuters reports.

Kazakhstan produces a wide range of military equipment including boats, armoured and artillery vehicles, machine guns, night visors, grenades, torpedoes and protective gear.

The government has not said these items were being exported.

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Faisal Ali

Poland and the Czech Republic have agreed to protect the airspace of their Nato ally Slovakia, as it upgrades its air force from legacy Soviet-made MiG-29 fighters to a new batch of F-16 jets from the US.

The agreement is due to come into effect at the beginning of September and will last a year and a half, the defence ministers of the countries agreed at a meeting during the Slovak International Air Fest.

Slovakia has expressed a willingness to transfer the grounded planes to Ukraine but the defence minister, Jaroslav Nad, said no deal had been reached with Kyiv.

Nad said: “The possibility is on the table, and once there is an agreement we will inform you.”

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Emma Graham-Harrison
Emma Graham-Harrison

The woods outside Chernihiv were quiet in late August when Anatoliy Pavelko scrambled into a 10-metre bomb crater with a trowel and an icebox full of sample jars. He wanted to find out what the Russian FAB-250 bomb left behind when it carved this gaping hole into the ground in the spring.

Four months earlier, the environmental lawyer was dug in on a frontline just a few kilometres away, shells crashing around him in the bitter fight to keep Russian forces out of Kyiv.

Now he has taken temporary leave from his unit of volunteers and returned to Chernihiv for a more familiar battle on a different front in the war against Moscow.

Russia’s invasion has killed tens of thousands of Ukrainians and destroyed homes and entire cities. It is also devastating Ukraine’s environment, an “ecocide” that activists worry is going largely unrecorded amid the broader national tragedy.

Summary of the day so far

It’s 6pm in Kyiv. Here’s where we stand:

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Faisal Ali

A Russian rocket hit Kharkiv’s historic district in the early hours of Saturday, leaving one person injured, according to police.

The rocket damaged nearby buildings, leaving a large crater in the road. A local police officer told Reuters:

There are no military objects, no military equipment. Only residential buildings with regular citizens near the place of impact.

Municipal service workers at a crater following an overnight missile strike in Kharkiv. Photograph: Sergey Bobok/AFP/Getty Images
Passersby gather around the crater in Kharkiv. Photograph: Sergey Bobok/AFP/Getty Images

Tetiana Zviahintseva, a local shopkeeper who was sweeping scattered shards of broken glass in her store, said:

Horror and nightmare – they [Russians] torture our city. The endless shelling exhausted everybody.

Shop owners inspect broken windows in downtown Kharkiv after the Russian rocket attack. Photograph: Andrii Marienko/AP
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Zelenskiy: Russian ‘invaders will die like dew on the sun’

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has issued a statement marking the country’s Aviation Day, in which he pledged that Kyiv’s troops will “destroy the occupiers’ potential step by step”.

On Telegram, the Ukrainian leader posted a series of photos dedicated to the country’s air force and vowed that the Russian “invaders will die like dew on the sun”.

Zelenskiy said:

Ukrainian soldiers will destroy the occupiers’ potential step by step, and the day will come when the enemy will perish in Zaporizhzhia, in the south, in the east of the country, and in Crimea.

The invaders will die like dew on the sun, and our defence is and will be this sun. Happy Ukraine Aviation Day!

This post was amended on 30 August 2022 to provide a link to President Zelenskiy’s statement on Telegram.

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