Russia, Ukraine Spar at UN Over Nuclear Plant Dangers

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Russia and Ukraine traded accusations Tuesday over who was endangering the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, as the United Nations urged both
sides to insulate the Ukrainian facility from the ongoing war.Russia called the meeting at the United Nations Security Council to discuss
the dangers that close shelling and a military presence posed to the power plant in southern Ukraine, amid fears that a damaged reactor
could leak radiation across the region.Russian troops have controlled the plant for weeks and allegedly have placed arms and war supplies
there, something that Moscow denies.Russian Ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzya accused Ukrainian forces of shelling the plant, heightening
the danger of a nuclear disaster.Since the Security Council last discussed the issue nearly two weeks ago, "the nuclear safety situation has
further deteriorated," Nebenzya said."The armed forces of Ukraine continue basically every day to shell the territory of the nuclear power
plant [NPP] and the town of Enerhodar, and this creates a real risk of a radiation accident," he said.Sergiy Kyslytsya, Ukraine's
ambassador, countered that Russia is responsible for the risk and must pull its troops away and allow inspectors of the International Atomic
Energy Agency into the plant."The only thing that the entire world wants to hear ..
said.Kyslytsya said Kyiv supports a proposal for the IAEA to send a mission to inspect the plant, and hoped it would create a permanent
presence inside to monitor it fulltime."It is really important to conduct the mission in a way that will allow the international community
to see the real situation and not a Russian theatrical show," he said.Speaking at the beginning of the meeting, UN Undersecretary Rosemary
DiCarlo said both sides need to agree on demilitarizing the plant even as the war continues."The facility must not be used as part of any
military operation, and an agreement on a safe perimeter of demilitarization to ensure the safety of the area should be reached," she