Russia-Ukraine war latest: what we know on day
185 of the invasion
Zelenskiy says situation at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant
remains ‘very risky’; UN inspectors reportedly set to visit facility in days
Léonie
Chao-Fong, Tobi Thomas, Clea Skopeliti and Samantha Lock with agencies
Sat 27 Aug
2022 01.16 BST
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the
situation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant remains “very risky” after
two of its six reactors were reconnected to the grid following shelling that
caused Europe’s largest nuclear power plant to be disconnected for the first
time in its history. “Let me stress that the situation remains very risky and
dangerous,” he said in his regular evening address on Friday, praising
Ukrainian experts working to “avert the worst-case scenario.”
Residents near the Zaporizhzhia plant have
reportedly been given iodine tablets, amid mounting fears that the fighting
around the complex could trigger a catastrophe.
Zelenskiy said the world narrowly avoided a
“radiation disaster” on Thursday when electricity to the Zaporizhzhia plant was
cut for hours after fires broke out around the Russian-occupied complex in
south-eastern Ukraine.
A team of inspectors from the United Nations
nuclear watchdog are poised to make an emergency visit to the Zaporizhzhia
plant, according to reports. Sources have told the Wall Street Journal it is
“almost certain” that a mission from the International Atomic Energy Agency
will visit the plant early next week, although details are still being
completed.
Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, Iryna Vereshchuk,
has announced plans to expand mandatory evacuations for civilians living on the
war’s frontlines. Speaking on national television, she said evacuating women
with children and elderly people would be a priority from some districts of the
eastern Kharkiv region, and the southern Zaporizhzhia and Mykolaiv regions.
Ukrainian forces have struck an important bridge
used by Russian occupying forces in the southern Kherson region, according to
Ukraine’s southern military command. The Daryivskiy Bridge is the only
Russian-controlled crossing across the Inhulets river, which splits the
Russian-occupied land west of the Dnipro into two parts.
Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, an ally
of president Vladimir Putin, said in a French television interview on Friday
that Russia was prepared to hold talks with Zelenskiy subject to certain
conditions, but warned Moscow would not stop its assault until its goals had
been achieved. “Renouncing (Ukraine’s) participation in the North Atlantic
alliance is now vital, but it is already insufficient in order to establish
peace,” Medvedev told LCI television in quotes reported by Russian news
agencies.
EU energy ministers will gather for an urgent
meeting as soon as possible to discuss the energy crisis following Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine, the Czech prime minister said. The Czech Republic
currently holds the presidency of the European Council.
Russia’s claim that it is deliberately slowing
the pace of its military campaign in Ukraine is “almost certainly deliberate
misinformation”, according to British intelligence. The latest UK Ministry of
Defence report said Russia’s offensive had stalled “because of poor Russian
military performance and fierce Ukrainian resistance”.
The Belarusian president has said his country’s
SU-24 warplanes have been re-fitted to carry nuclear armaments. Alexander
Lukashenko said he had previously agreed to the move with his Russian
counterpart, Putin, and warned that his country was ready to respond to
“serious provocation” from the west instantly.
Russia is burning off large amounts of natural
gas that it would previously have exported to Germany while energy costs soar
in Europe, the BBC has reported. According to the broadcaster, which cites an
analysis by Rystad Energy, a plant near Russia’s border with Finland is burning
an estimated £8.4m worth of gas every day.
The head of the UK’s energy regulator, Ofgem, has
blamed Russia for driving up energy prices, resulting in the UK price cap
rising by 80%. Ofgem on Friday approved a £1,578 increase on the current price
cap of £1,971 for the average dual-fuel tariff.
The German ambassador to the UK has acknowledged
there is a risk public support for Ukraine could wane this winter as the energy
crisis intensifies. Putin was “using gas as a weapon” in the UK and all of
Europe, Miguel Berger said. “He wants to test our resolve.”
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