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Russia stepping up ‘nuclear blackmail’: plant director

Iran nuclear installations 'should not be attacked': IAEA chief
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Russia is stepping up “nuclear blackmail” by bombing the site of Ukraine’s Pivdennoukrainsk nuclear power plant, its director Igor Polovich said Tuesday.

With Monday’s strike in the southern Mykolaiv region “the second phase of their nuclear blackmail has begun,” said Polovich.

Attacks around nuclear facilities in Ukraine have spurred calls from Kyiv and its Western allies to de-militarise areas surrounding the complexes.

AFP reporters on Tuesday saw a deep crater strewn with shell fragments a few hundred metres from the Pivdennoukrainsk plant during a press trip organised by the Ukrainian nuclear energy agency Energoatom.

Dozens of metres from the crater, a building that AFP was not permitted to visit appeared to have its doors and windows blown out by the explosion.

On the other side of the crater, another building, less damaged, had also lost most of its windows.

According to Pivdennoukrainsk security chief Ivan Zhebet, police and prosecutors searched the site for shrapnel, which they took away to identify the projectile.

Pivdennoukrainsk is the third nuclear site to be affected by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine launched in late February.

Europe’s largest atomic facility — the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in Russian-held territory in Ukraine — has become a hot spot for concerns after tit-for-tat claims of attacks there.

Early in the war there was fighting around Chernobyl in the north, where an explosion in 1986 left swathes of the surrounding territory contaminated.

The Zaporizhzhia plant was seized by Russian troops in March and shelling around the facility has spurred interventions from Western leaders.

A monitoring team of the UN’s atomic agency deployed there in early September.

French President Emmanuel Macron this month urged his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to withdraw heavy weapons from the region, while the Russian leader cautioned against the potential “catastrophic” consequences of fighting there.

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AFP

Agence France-Presse (AFP) is a French international news agency headquartered in Paris, France. Founded in 1835 as Havas, it is the world's oldest news agency.

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