Russian engineers have arrived to measure radiation at a Ukrainian nuclear plant, the seizure of which during Moscow’s invasion of the country sparked international alarm, officials said.
Russia occupied Zaporizhzhia, Europe’s biggest atomic power plant, after its forces attacked it on March 4.
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Its reactors appeared undamaged after the assault despite a fire that broke out there after tanks bombarded it.
Officials from Russia’s nuclear firm Rosatom arrived at the site on Friday, the Ukrainian nuclear agency Energoatom said in a message on Telegram.
The Russians told Ukrainian personnel they were there “to evaluate the radiation level” and “help to repair the plant” which was hit by shells, Energoatom said.
At the time of the attack, Moscow’s UN ambassador denied that Russia had shelled the plant.
The Ukrainian agency said that the Russians had come directly to the site because Ukrainian personnel had refused to collaborate with them.
It said one of the Russians who arrived at the plant had introduced himself as the new civil and military administrator of the area and declared the plant part of Russian territory, to be run by Rosatom.
With six reactors, Zaporizhzhia can power up to four million homes and produces about a fifth of Ukraine’s electricity. It opened in 1985.
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