KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A team of foreign nuclear inspectors headed Wednesday to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant caught amid fighting in southern Ukraine amid considerations of a possible twist of fate or a radioactive leak.
Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said he hoped to identify a permanent project in Ukraine to monitor Europe’s largest nuclear power plant.
“These operations are very complex operations. We are going to a war zone. We entered occupied territory. And this requires particular promises only from the Russians, but also from the Republic of Ukraine,” Grossi said in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv before the departure of the mission followed.
“We control to ensure that. . . So now we’re moving.
The power plant has been occupied by Russian forces and operated by Ukrainians since the early days of the 6-month war.
Recently, the site was temporarily cut off from the force network due to a fire, which led to a disruption of force in the region and raised fears of a crisis in a country haunted by the Chernothroughl crisis.
The Associated Press
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