Soltz: The fire at the nuclear power plant shows how dangerous the situation in Ukraine is

The fire at night at the nuclear plant in Zaporizhia, Ukraine, proves how dangerous the situation is, said Chancellor Olaf Solz.

However, the Federal Radiation Protection Service was reassuring, while a professor of International Law categorizes targeted attacks on nuclear facilities as war crimes.

“Wars always lead to disaster, which can be devastating, with dire consequences, where perhaps none of the warring parties really sought it,” Mr Soltz said, referring to the fire at the Ukrainian nuclear plant. it is crucial to avoid this kind of escalation.

However, the Federal Ministry of the Environment and the Federal Radiation Protection Agency confirmed today that all measurements in Zaporizhia “remain within normal limits” and indicated that they will constantly monitor the situation. In case something changes, then the public will be duly informed and given the relevant recommendations, said a spokesman for the Ministry of Environment, stressing that one should not take iodine tablets alone. “Taking medicines in this way carries significant health risks and at the moment has absolutely no use,” he stressed.

Accordingly, the Company for the Safety of Facilities and Reactors (GRS) announced that it does not see an immediate risk of a nuclear accident in the area. According to the Ukrainian authorities, the site was occupied by Russian troops and is currently operating normally, in accordance with security rules. The building that was hit was not a reactor, but a training center, it was clarified.

Greenpeace’s nuclear expert Heinz Schmidt, for his part, expressed general concern about possible nuclear strikes, but said the situation in Zaporizhia had nothing to do with the Chernobyl accident.

From a legal point of view, Klaus Kress, a professor of international law, told German radio today that a possible Russian attack on a Ukrainian nuclear power plant would be a war crime and that such a case would fall within the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Kres is an adviser to Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan, who has launched a formal investigation into the possibility of war crimes in Ukraine.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

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