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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Lydia Chantler-Hicks

Russia ‘plans to relocate 2,700 Ukrainian staff from Europe’s largest nuclear plant’ - reports

Russia plans to relocate around 2,700 Ukrainian staff from Europe’s largest nuclear plant, Ukraine‘s atomic energy company has claimed.

Energoatom warned of a potentially “catastrophic lack of qualified personnel” at the Zaporizhzhia facility in Russian-occupied southern Ukraine, should the plans go ahead.

Workers who signed employment contracts with Russia’s nuclear agency Rosatom following Moscow’s capture of the Zaporizhzhia plant early in the war were set to be taken to Russia along with their families, Energoatom said in a post on social media platform Telegram.

Energoatom did not specify whether the employees would be forcibly moved out of the plant, nor was it immediately possible to verify the company’s claims about Moscow’s plan.

Removing staff would “exacerbate the already extremely urgent issue” of staff shortages, Energoatom said.

Fighting near the plant has fuelled fears of a potentially catastrophic incident like the one at Chernobyl, in northern Ukraine, where a reactor exploded in 1986 releasing deadly radiation, contaminating a vast area in the world’s worst nuclear accident.

The Moscow-installed governor of the region ordered civilian evacuations from the area last Saturday, including from the nearby city of Enerhodar where most plant workers live. The full scope of the evacuation order was not clear.

Zaporizhzhia is one of the 10 biggest nuclear plants in the world. While its six reactors have been shut down for months, it still needs power and qualified staff to operate crucial cooling systems and other safety features.

Kremlin-installed authorities in the Zaporizhzhia region were accelerating their push to relocate local residents, including families of workers at the plant, due to an expected Ukrainian counteroffensive, Kyiv officials said.

Military analysts say Ukraine may focus the counteroffensive on the Zaporizhzhia region, trying to split Russian forces in two by pushing through to the Azov Sea coast in the south.

Relatives of Zaporizhzhia plant staff who agreed to relocate were taken to Russia’s southern Rostov region and placed in temporary camps, the Ukrainian general staff said.

It added that plant employees were currently prohibited from leaving Enerhodar. It made no mention of the alleged Russian plan referred to by Energoatom.

Ukraine’s National Resistance Centre says Russian-installed officials in Zaporizhzhia were shutting down schools, preparing buses and appointing officials to oversee the evacuation process. They alleged that the process was largely targeting children.

The International Criminal Court in March issued an arrest warrant for Russian leader Vladimir Putin for alleged war crimes, accusing him and Russia’s children’s ombudsperson of personal responsibility for the abductions of minors from Ukraine.

At the time, Ukraine’s human rights chief Dmytro Lubinets said that 16,226 Ukrainian children had been forcibly taken to Russia, citing data from Ukraine’s National Information Bureau.

After taking over at Zaporizhzhia, Russia left Ukrainian staff in place to keep the plant running but the exact number of workers currently at the plant is not known.

The United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said soon after Russian troops overran the plant following the invasion of nvading Ukraine olast February, that low staffing levels “seriously compromised” one of the fundamental factors in nuclear safety and security, which was that “operating staff must be able to fulfil their safety and security duties and have the capacity to make decisions free of undue pressure”.

The IAEA has deployed a handful of staff at Zaporizhzhia in an effort to ensure its safety.

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