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No way to restart Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant at present, IAEA chief says
No way to restart Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant at present, IAEA chief says

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

No way to restart Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant at present, IAEA chief says

By Max Hunder KYIV (Reuters) -The idled Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in Ukraine is not in a condition to be restarted at present, due to a lack of water for cooling and the absence of a stable power supply, the head of the UN's nuclear safety watchdog said on Tuesday. Water would have to be pumped from the Dnipro River for the plant, which has not generated power for nearly three years, to restart, IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi told Reuters. The facility, located in Ukraine's southern Zaporizhzhia region and Europe's largest nuclear plant, was occupied by Russia in March 2022, shortly after it launched a full-scale invasion of its neighbour. Before the war, the plant generated a fifth of Ukraine's electricity. Speaking in an interview in Kyiv, Grossi said the Russians had "never hidden the fact" that they want to restart the plant, but added they would not be able to do so soon. The plant is less than 10 km (6 miles) from Ukrainian positions on the other side of the Dnipro River. It has six reactors, the last of which stopped generating electricity in September 2022. The water level of its cooling pond, which sits on the southern bank of the Dnipro, dropped significantly in the summer of 2023 after the Kakhovka dam was destroyed downstream. Nearby areas regularly come under artillery and drone bombardment, which has on occasion damaged the two remaining power lines supplying the electricity needed for the plant to cool itself, even in its dormant state. Both sides accuse each other of being responsible for the attacks. Greenpeace issued a report last week saying Russia was building a 90-km high-voltage power line to connect the power plant to its grid. Grossi said the IAEA did not agree with that report's conclusions. "There are some areas where there has been some work, but we do not have any concrete evidence that this is part of a concerted, orchestrated plan to connect the power plant in one sense or the other." "We are not in a situation of imminent restart of the plant. Far from that, it would take quite some time before that can be done," Grossi said. The plant's machinery would have to be thoroughly inspected before any restart, he added. "You can imagine in such a huge piece of machinery, you have pumps, you have bolts, you have pipes, you have a number of things that may be suffering corrosion." Grossi said that if enough water could be pumped in from the Dnipro River, all six of the plant's reactors could eventually be restarted, although "a number of things" would need to be done beforehand. RUSSIAN TECHNICIANS Ukraine has said that any attempt by Russian technicians to restart the plant would be dangerous because they are not certified to operate it. Grossi said Russian nuclear staff were capable of conducting a restart, and that the issue of certification was a political rather than technical one. "They are professionals -- they know what they are doing," he said. Ukraine has also protested at the IAEA's monitoring mission to the plant accessing it via Russian-occupied territory. Grossi said this was to protect the safety of his staff, and that at present he does not have the necessary guarantees from the Russian side to safely transit IAEA staff through the frontlines to Ukraine-controlled territory, as had been done several times in the past.

To attack Russian air bases, Ukrainian spies hid drones in wooden sheds
To attack Russian air bases, Ukrainian spies hid drones in wooden sheds

Daily Maverick

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Daily Maverick

To attack Russian air bases, Ukrainian spies hid drones in wooden sheds

Ukraine's SBU domestic intelligence says it carried out 'operation Spider's Web' Drones in sheds were placed on trucks and driven near Russian bases SBU says 34% of cruise missile carriers put out of action Video shows Russian strategic bombers on fire By Tom Balmforth and Max Hunder Ukraine's domestic security agency, the SBU, acknowledged that it carried out the attacks and said they caused considerable damage. The sheds were loaded onto trucks that were driven to the perimeter of the air bases. The roof panels of the sheds were lifted off by a remotely-activated mechanism, allowing the drones to fly out and begin their attack, the official said. The security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said strikes were conducted on Sunday on four air bases, and that 41 Russian warplanes were hit. An SBU statement posted on the Telegram messaging app estimated the damage caused by the assaults at $7 billion. 'Thirty-four percent of strategic cruise missile carriers at the main airfields of the Russian Federation were hit,' the SBU said on Telegram. Unverified video and pictures posted on Russian social media showed Russian strategic bombers on fire at the Belaya air base in the Irkutsk region of Siberia. Igor Kobzev, the regional governor, said there had been a drone attack on a military unit near the village of Sredny, which is near the Belaya base, though he did not specify what the target was. He said the drones had been launched from a truck. The Irkutsk region attack was the first time a drone assault had been mounted by Ukraine so far from the front lines, which are more than 4,300 km (2,670 miles) away. That is beyond the range of the long-range strike drones or ballistic missiles Ukraine has in its arsenal, so required a special scheme to get the drones close enough to their target. Photographs shared with Reuters by the Ukrainian security official showed dozens of short-range quadrocopter drones piled up in an industrial facility. The official said these were the same devices used in the attack. Other images shared by the official showed the wooden sheds with their metal roofing panels removed, and the drones sitting in the cavities between roof beams. Separate video posted on Russian Telegram channels, which has not been verified by Reuters, appeared to show matching sheds on the back of a truck. The roof panels can be seen lying on the ground next to the truck, and the video footage shows at least two drones rising out of the top of the sheds and flying off. The Russian online media outlet that posted the video, Baza, said in a caption that it was filmed in the district near the Belaya air base. The Irkutsk region air base hosts Tupolev Tu-22M supersonic long-range strategic bombers, a type of aircraft that has been used to launch missiles against targets in Ukraine. The operation was code-named 'Spider's Web', according to the Ukrainian security official, and was personally overseen by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Vasyl Maliuk, head of the SBU domestic intelligence agency. If confirmed, the strikes would be the most damaging Ukrainian drone attack of the war, and would be a significant setback for Moscow. The source shared video footage shot from a drone, saying it showed one of the strikes. The images showed several large aircraft, some of which appeared to be Tu-95 strategic bombers, on fire.

Ukrainian military says it hit Russian semiconductor device plant
Ukrainian military says it hit Russian semiconductor device plant

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Ukrainian military says it hit Russian semiconductor device plant

KYIV (Reuters) -A Ukrainian drone attack hit a semiconductor devices plant in Russia's western Oryol region that supplies Russian fighter jet and missile producers, Ukraine's military said on Wednesday. Ten drones had reached the target area and a fire had broken out, the military said on the Telegram messaging app. It said the Bolkhovsky Semiconductor Devices Plant supplies various Russian enterprises, including some involved in the production of Iskander and Kinzhal missiles. "This is one of the leading enterprises in the Russian Federation in the field of development and production of semiconductor devices and components," the statement said. There was no immediate comment on the strike from Moscow, which began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Ukraine has increasingly hit back against regular Russian missile and drone attacks with a fleet of domestically produced drones. (Reporting and writing by Anastasiia Malenko and Max Hunder, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

Ukraine accuses Russia of orchestrating attempt to assassinate prominent blogger
Ukraine accuses Russia of orchestrating attempt to assassinate prominent blogger

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Ukraine accuses Russia of orchestrating attempt to assassinate prominent blogger

By Max Hunder KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine's internal security agency, the SBU, on Friday accused Russian intelligence of orchestrating an attempt to assassinate a prominent Ukrainian blogger, accusing a 45-year-old woman of carrying out the failed hit. The attempt to kill internet personality Serhii Sternenko, who once led the local chapter of a right-wing group but is now better known in Ukraine for crowdfunding donations for military drones, took place on Thursday. In a statement on Telegram, the SBU said the woman, whom it did not name, had fired several shots with a pistol, one of which hit Sternenko in the leg. The blogger said there was no danger to his life. The woman's lawyer said in court that she did not contest the facts of the case. Russia's FSB security service and its military intelligence agency did not immediately reply to requests for comment on the SBU's allegations. The SBU did not specify which of Russia's several security services it believed to have recruited the woman, but said that they had last year told her to move into Sternenko's apartment block in Kyiv, and to pick up a pistol from a dead drop. The SBU said the woman's handler told her on the morning of May 1 to kill Sternenko outside his apartment block. The agency posted screenshots of what it said were messages between the woman and the handler and a video from a security camera showing the assassination attempt. The accused's lawyer said the contact had told the woman that Sternenko was working for Russia's FSB. The woman told the court that the contact, whose gender was not disclosed, had introduced themselves online as an SBU agent, and that she had initially feared them. Subsequently she had fallen in love with them despite never seeing their photo, she said.

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