Zelensky and UN atomic agency head warn of heightened risk at huge Ukrainian nuclear plant

Zelensky and UN atomic agency head warn of heightened risk at huge Ukrainian nuclear plant
A Russian service member stands guard at a checkpoint near the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. (Reuters)
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Zelensky and UN atomic agency head warn of heightened risk at huge Ukrainian nuclear plant

Zelensky and UN atomic agency head warn of heightened risk at huge Ukrainian nuclear plant
  • Zaporizhzhia is one of the 10 biggest nuclear plants in the world, and its fate amid the fighting has caused fears of a potential nuclear catastrophe
  • The Vienna-based IAEA has been walking a tightrope in the war, eager to maintain access to nuclear facilities and issuing warnings about the dangers without angering either side

KYIV: Ukraine’s president and the UN nuclear agency head are sounding the alarm about increased safety risks at the Russia-occupied Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine, which lost its external power supply more than a week ago as the war raged around it.
Emergency diesel generators are providing power for crucial cooling systems for the facility’s six shutdown reactors and spent fuel, and there is no immediate danger to Europe’s biggest nuclear plant, according to International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Mariano Grossi.
But “it is clearly not a sustainable situation in terms of nuclear safety,” he said.
The backup generators have never needed to run for so long, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
“The generators and the plant were not designed for this,” Zelensky said late Tuesday, describing the situation as “critical.”
Zaporizhzhia is one of the 10 biggest nuclear plants in the world, and its fate amid the fighting has caused fears of a potential nuclear catastrophe. Russian forces seized it days after the full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine began on Feb. 24, 2022.
The Vienna-based IAEA has been walking a tightrope in the war, eager to maintain access to nuclear facilities and issuing warnings about the dangers without angering either side. Ukraine has four nuclear plants, though Zaporizhzhia is the only one in Russian hands.
Grossi said that Zaporizhzhia’s emergency generators were coping with the extra strain so far.
“The current status of the reactor units and spent fuel is stable as long as the emergency diesel generators are able to provide sufficient power to maintain essential safety-related functions and cooling,” he said in a statement late Tuesday.
An IAEA team at the plant reported that it has fuel reserves ensuring the generators can operate for more than 10 days, with regular off-site supplies maintaining this level.
“Nevertheless, it is extremely important that off-site power is restored,” Grossi said, adding that he was in touch with Russian and Ukrainian officials about how to swiftly reconnect the plant to the grid.
As Russia’s invasion churns across the Ukrainian countryside, the Zaporizhzhia facility has repeatedly been caught in the crossfire.
It lost its off-site power for the 10th time during the war on Sept. 23, when its only remaining power line was damaged by military activity about 1½ kilometers (a mile) from the plant, the IAEA statement said.
Eight emergency diesel generators are operating, with nine additional units in standby mode and three in maintenance, according to the IAEA.
It said that over the past week, the plant has been alternating those in use and servicing idle generators in an effort to ensure continuous availability.


Munich Oktoberfest fairgrounds closed after bomb threat and deadly explosion

Updated 11 sec ago

Munich Oktoberfest fairgrounds closed after bomb threat and deadly explosion

Munich Oktoberfest fairgrounds closed after bomb threat and deadly explosion
MUNICH: Police closed the Oktoberfest fairgrounds Wednesday morning following a bomb threat from the suspected perpetrator of an explosion in northern Munich, city officials said.
At least one person died during the explosion early Wednesday, which Munich police said was part of a domestic dispute. It was not immediately clear whether the deceased was the suspected perpetrator or someone else. Another person, who was not considered to be a danger to the public, remained missing.
Specialized teams were called to the scene to defuse booby traps in the building, police said.
Police searched the fairgrounds for other explosive devices and asked workers to leave the area.
This year’s Oktoberfest began on Sept. 20 and ends Oct. 5. The world’s largest beer festival usually attracts up to 6 million visitors.

Namibia projects tourism decline after wildfire in game reserve

Namibia projects tourism decline after wildfire in game reserve
Updated 6 min 34 sec ago

Namibia projects tourism decline after wildfire in game reserve

Namibia projects tourism decline after wildfire in game reserve
WINDHOEK: Namibia’s tourism industry is expected to suffer over the next three years after a week-long wildfire ravaged over a third of its largest game reserve, Etosha National Park, a senior government official said.
Established as a national park in 1907 during German colonization, Etosha is home to diverse wildlife, including lions, elephants, leopards, giraffes, and zebras, and is one of the top tourist attractions in the southern African country.
Latest official estimates show the fire damaged 38 percent of the roughly 20,000 square-kilometer (7,722 square-mile) park, but unofficial assessments suggest the damage may be worse.
Satellite images showed vast swaths of blackened land and authorities said an unknown number of animals had been killed.
“It’s a hit we’ve taken in terms of damage to both fauna and flora. Recovery is possible, but it will take a little bit of time,” said Sikongo Haihambo, executive director of Namibia’s Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism.
“Insofar as tourism is concerned, I don’t think that we are going to have an extended dip but rather a recovery in a period of two to three years,” he said in an interview on Tuesday evening.
Namibia’s tourism sector had only just recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic, with hotel occupancy reaching 67.55 percent in August — the highest since 2019, a recent report by financial services firm Simonis Storm Securities showed.
The tourism sector contributed 6.9 percent to Namibia’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2022.
The fire inside the park was extinguished on Monday night after the government deployed hundreds of soldiers to fight the blaze, but crews continued to battle fires that had spread beyond it in the Omusati and Oshana regions.

Taliban rejects reports of Afghanistan Internet ban

Taliban rejects reports of Afghanistan Internet ban
Updated 11 min 41 sec ago

Taliban rejects reports of Afghanistan Internet ban

Taliban rejects reports of Afghanistan Internet ban
  • The announcement was the Taliban’s first public statement on a communications blackout that has disrupted banking, commerce and aviation

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: The Taliban government on Wednesday rejected reports of a nationwide Internet ban in Afghanistan, saying old fiber optic cables are worn out and are being replaced.
The announcement was the Taliban’s first public statement on a communications blackout that has disrupted banking, commerce and aviation.
Last month, several provinces confirmed an Internet shutdown because of a decree from the Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada to combat immorality.
“There is nothing like the rumors being spread that we have imposed a ban on the Internet,” Taliban officials said in a three-line statement in a chat group with Pakistani journalists.


91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official

91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official
Updated 01 October 2025

91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official

91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official
  • The multi-story Islamic boarding school suddenly gave way on Monday as students were gathered for afternoon prayers

SIDOARJO, Indonesia: Around 91 people are believed to be still trapped under the ruins of a collapsed school on Indonesia’s main island of Java, authorities said as rescue teams searched for survivors.

The multi-story Islamic boarding school in the town of Sidoarjo suddenly gave way on Monday as students were gathered for afternoon prayers, according to local reports.

“Based on student attendance data, 91 people are suspected to be buried under building materials,” National Disaster and Mitigation Agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said in a statement late Tuesday.

It earlier said three people died and 38 people were still unaccounted for.

Officials said Wednesday they were still trying to confirm the number of missing when asked at a news conference in Sidoarjo.

Rescue teams were focusing on supplying life support to survivors trapped under the rubble, said Emi Freezer, the National Search and Rescue Agency’s head of operations.

They were concentrating on seven areas were signs of life had been detected, he said.

“The main structure has totally collapsed … We prioritized saving victims who were still responsive.”

Dozens of parents waited Wednesday near the collapsed school building as rescue teams searched for survivors under the rubble.


Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action

Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action
Updated 01 October 2025

Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action

Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action
  • Prize also honored Sudan’s humanitarian aid network Emergency Response Rooms
  • Burmese anti-corruption group and a Taiwanese champion of digital democracy was feted as well

STOCKHOLM: A youth-led student group and a human-rights lawyer that took the issue of climate to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) received the Right Livelihood prize on Wednesday, dubbed an “alternative Nobel.”
The prize also honored Sudan’s humanitarian aid network Emergency Response Rooms, as well as a Burmese anti-corruption group and a Taiwanese champion of digital democracy.
Frustrated by slow global efforts to tackle climate change, 27 law students at the University of the South Pacific in Vanuatu in 2019 decided to, in their words, “get the world’s biggest problem before the world’s highest court.”
The Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change’s (PISFCC) campaigning culminated in the ICJ in July this year delivering an advisory opinion that states have legal obligations to address climate change.
While not legally binding, advisory opinions carry political and legal weight.
The prize jury hailed the group “for carrying the call for climate justice to the world’s highest court, turning survival into a matter of rights and climate action into a legal responsibility.”
Faced with the threat of rising sea levels and harsher weather patterns in places like the Pacific Ocean, island nations are particularly at risk from climate change.
“It’s an existential problem for young people in countries like Kiribati, in Tuvalu, in Marshall Islands. They’re witnessing the effects of climate change every high tide,” Vishal Prasad, director of PISFCC, said in July.
The group shared the prize with Julian Aguon, a human-rights lawyer from Guam, whose law firm, Blue Ocean Law, developed the legal strategy to carry the case.
The Sweden-based Right Livelihood Foundation also honored Emergency Response Rooms, a community-led grassroots network, for distributing aid during Sudan’s civil war.
The network was described as “the backbone of the country’s humanitarian response amid war, displacement and state collapse.”
Justice For Myanmar (JFM), a covert group of Burmese activists working to expose companies profiting from and propping up the country’s military junta, was also honored.
Taiwanese programmer and cyber ambassador Audrey Tang also received the award for “advancing the social use of digital technology to empower citizens, renew democracy and heal divides,” the jury said in a statement.
The Right Livelihood award was established in 1980, when Swedish-German stamp collector Jakob von Uexkull sold part of his collection to found it, after the foundation behind the Nobel Prizes refused to create new honors in the fields of environment and international development.