Many attending the Munich Conference remember the radioactive clouds that spread across parts of Europe after the Chernobyl accident that occurred when Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union. The accident was initially hidden by Soviet authorities.
“The vibe right now is like everyone is very angry about this news in Munich,” Andri Yahmack, head of the Ukrainian presidential office, has been posted on social media. As often as “I'm not worried,” I'm really angry. ”
The Kremlin denied that Russian troops had attacked the plants. The spokesman Dmitri S. Peskov said “The Russian army has not done this.”
“Perhaps we're talking about provocation and fraud,” he added.
The Chernobyl structure, which Ukraine says was a hit on Friday, is a huge arch shelter that covers the rest of the crippled reactor. The meltdown spewed radiation into the atmosphere, contaminating an 18-mile zone around plants that residents were forced to leave.
The protective structure, similar to an aircraft hangar, was completed in 2016. This covers another structure known as stone coli, which was built shortly after the disaster.
Yermak pointed out that the whole world helped rebuild the Kremlin after Chernobyl. “Then the whole world invested in shelters and today these Russian idiots set up drones on it,” he added.
The International Atomic Energy Agency said staff members on the site of the former nuclear power plant had heard the explosion overnight.
The strike on Kiev's strike at Chernoville about two hours north of the Ukrainian capital, and the recent increase in military activities around Zaporilla Zhia nuclear power plant in the Russian occupied region, “overcoming sustained nuclear safety risks,” the agency said. Director Rafael Grossi said. .
Ivan Nechepurenko Reports of contributions.

