Vladimir Putin on Friday accepted that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) send a mission to Ukraine’s Zaporizhia nuclear power plant, the largest in Europe, saying he fears that the bombings might end up causing a “catastrophe of great wingspan”.
At the same time, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, on a visit to Ukraine, asked Russia not to cut off from the Ukrainian network this power station that its army has occupied since the beginning of March, and which has become the target in recent weeks of strikes of which Moscow and kyiv accuse each other.
Earlier in the day, Ukrainian power plant operator Energoatom said it feared such a scenario, saying the Russian military was looking for supplies for diesel generators that would be activated following the reactors were shut down and had limited the personnel access to facilities.
“Of course, Zaporizhia’s electricity is Ukrainian electricity (…) this principle must be fully respected”, insisted Mr. Guterres on the sidelines of a trip to Odessa, the major Ukrainian port on the Black Sea, following having been the day before in Lviv, in western Ukraine.
– An IAEA mission “as soon as possible” –
“The systematic bombardment (…) of the territory of the Zaporizhia nuclear power plant creates the danger of a large-scale disaster which might lead to the radioactive contamination of vast territories”, for his part warned Friday the Russian president to the occasion of a telephone conversation with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.
MM. Putin and Macron in this context “noted the importance of sending as soon as possible a mission of the International Atomic Energy Agency to the nuclear power plant, which will be able to assess the situation on the spot”, informed the Kremlin , stressing that “the Russian side has confirmed that it is ready to provide all necessary assistance to the inspectors” of the IAEA.
The Russian head of state has also accepted that the latter pass “through Ukraine” and not through Russia, which he previously demanded, said the French presidency.
In a statement, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, “welcomed recent statements indicating that Ukraine and Russia support the IAEA’s objective of sending a mission ” in Zaporizhia.
This organization “is in active consultation with all the parties” to send “as soon as possible” a team that Mr. Grossi “will lead himself”, according to this text broadcast in the evening.
“In this highly volatile and fragile situation, it is of vital importance that no further action is taken which might further endanger (…) one of the largest nuclear power plants in the world”, insisted the head of the IAEA.
“The restoration of total security” on this site “can begin following the mission has started its work”, for his part commented in the evening the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
A diplomat explained the same day to AFP that Westerners were mainly worried regarding maintaining the water cooling of nuclear reactors, more than the impact of a shot, because they are designed “to withstand” the “worst “.
The day before in Lviv, where he met Mr. Zelensky and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Secretary General of the United Nations had estimated that “any potential damage in Zaporijjia would be suicide” and urged to “demilitarize the plant”.
On Friday, it was the head of European diplomacy, Josep Borrell, who called on the Russians to “withdraw” from this site and to “immediately return full control to its legitimate owner, Ukraine”.
– New stoppage of gas deliveries-
Mr. Guterres’ visit was marked by another subject that worries the planet: Ukrainian grain exports.
Stuck following the Russian invasion, which raised the specter of a global food crisis, they resumed following an agreement between Moscow and kyiv in July.
Mr. Guterres is expected in Istanbul on Saturday to visit the Joint Coordination Center (JCC), responsible for overseeing this international agreement to allow grain exports from Ukraine, an agreement “of which Turkey is a key element”, a-t-t -he says.
Russia, which is demanding in exchange the lifting of restrictions on its own foreign sales of agricultural products and fertilizers, affected by Western sanctions, deplores for its part “the obstacles which remain” – to use the terms that used Mr. Putin on Friday- in this area.
Allegations that France also immediately rejected, judging that there is on the part of Moscow “a desire to politically exploit this question”.
At the same time, the giant Gazprom warned that deliveries of Russian gas to Europe through the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline would be interrupted from August 31 to September 2 for “maintenance” reasons, at the risk of rekindling fears of a shortage in Europe. , where Russia is accused of energy blackmail.
– “Sharp weakening” –
Regarding military operations in Ukraine, the Pentagon, which on Friday announced a new tranche of military aid in the amount of 775 million dollars to this country, noted a “total lack of progress on the battlefield” of the troops. Russians.
“We have not seen any recapture of territory” by Ukrainian forces, “but we have seen a clear weakening of Russian positions in several places,” said an official from the US Department of Defense.
In eastern Ukraine, however, Russian bombardments continued on Friday, leaving at least five dead and ten injured in several localities in the Donetsk region, one of the two provinces of Donbass, an industrial basin which is the priority strategic objective of Moscow.
Kharkiv (north-east), the second largest city in Ukraine, has also been the subject of new strikes whose toll is at 15 dead.
And more than 21,000 people were evacuated in ten days from the occupied territories, including more than 9,000 from the Zaporizhia region and more than 8,000 from the Kherson region, announced Ukrainian Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk.
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