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Ukraine condemns attack on vital power substations for nuclear plants

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry condemned on Friday what they called Russian attacks on critical substations that supply external power to Ukraine's nuclear reactors.

A ministry statement released late Friday stated that Russia had carried out "targeted attacks" on these substations.

It added that "Deliberate attacks on civilian energy installations which directly affect the safe operations of nuclear facilities bear the hallmarks and are a grave breach of international humanitarian laws."

The ministry referred back to a Thursday statement by the U.N. nuclear monitor, the International Atomic Energy Agency. It reported that military activity had "caused damage to critical substations for nuclear safety and security" in Ukraine.

IAEA reported that incidents near two nuclear power plants, South Ukraine and Khmelnitskyi, led to each plant losing its external power line.

The IAEA added that a third station at Rivne was forced to reduce the power at two of its reactors.

The incident did not indicate which party might be behind it.

Russia and Ukraine accuse one another of military activities that threaten the safety of Ukraine's four nuclear power plants, especially Zaporizhzhia.

In the first weeks of the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russian forces captured the Zaporizhzhia Plant, Europe's biggest with six reactors.

In its statement, the IAEA referred to ongoing efforts to connect the second of the two external powerlines to the Zaporizhzhia Plant. This is vital for keeping nuclear fuel cool and preventing meltdowns. The plant does not generate any power right now.

The IAEA and the Ukrainian statements were not met with any Russian response.

The Zaporizhzhia Plant's external links were unavailable for 30 days between September and October. This forced officials to use emergency diesel generators. Kyiv and Moscow both blamed each other for the outage, and both claimed to have disrupted efforts to fix it. (Reporting and editing by Ron Popeski)

(source: Reuters)