
Killing of Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant Chief Engineer Sparks Calls for International Probe
Russia demands an international investigation after a drone strike killed the ZNPP’s chief engineer and his driver, an attack the IAEA condemned as an unacceptable threat to nuclear safety.
On 15 July, a drone strike on a service vehicle near the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) killed chief engineer Alexander Yakovlev and driver Dmitry Filippov. The attack occurred at the boundary between the plant’s industrial zone and the city of Enerhodar, according to Rosatom, the Russian state nuclear corporation that oversees the facility. Yakovlev, who had worked at the plant for at least two decades, was responsible for operational safety.
Russian officials described the strike as a targeted terrorist act. The Russian Foreign Ministry stated that the attack was a deliberate attempt to intimidate ZNPP staff and threaten the plant’s safe operation. Senator Grigory Karasin, chairman of the Federation Council’s international affairs committee, said Moscow would insist on a full international investigation, calling on the IAEA and its director general Rafael Grossi to respond. The ministry also accused Western states of complicity by continuing to support Kyiv.
Ukrainian authorities have not issued an official statement on the incident, according to available reports. However, Ukrainian media outlets, cited by the German newspaper Bild, alleged that Yakovlev, a Ukrainian national, had collaborated with Russian forces after the plant’s occupation in March 2022, signing a contract with Rosatom and obtaining a Russian passport. The IAEA, which maintains a permanent monitoring mission at the site, condemned the attack. Director General Grossi called it an unacceptable assault on a nuclear facility and its leadership, warning that such incidents pose a serious threat to nuclear safety. The agency urged an immediate halt to all attacks on nuclear installations and their personnel.
The ZNPP, Europe’s largest nuclear power station, has been under Russian military control since early March 2022. All six reactors are in cold shutdown, but the plant requires continuous external power for cooling and safety systems. The facility and the adjacent city of Enerhodar have been repeatedly targeted by drone strikes and shelling, with both Moscow and Kyiv trading blame. Rosatom reported that 13 people have been killed and 48 wounded in attacks on the area over the past two and a half months. The IAEA has repeatedly warned of the risk of a nuclear accident, and its experts have been stationed at the plant since September 2022. Russia has informed the agency of the latest incident and is pressing for a clear condemnation and an international investigation.
| Russian & CIS press | −1.00 | critical |
|---|---|---|
| Continental European press | −0.20 | neutral |
Russia accuses Ukraine of nuclear terrorism and fascism, calling for an international reaction to stop the escalation.
It uses historically charged language (Nazism, fascism) to demonize the adversary and present the event as a step toward nuclear catastrophe, legitimizing a harsh response.
It omits any context of Russian occupation of the plant and the possibility that the attack is a reaction to previous Russian actions.
Europe frames the event as an incident in occupied territory, questioning the Russian version and emphasizing the lack of independent verification.
It uses the label 'occupied' to delegitimize Russian control and places the event within a conflict framework, reducing the Russian denunciation to an unverified claim.
It omits the strong Russian condemnation and the link to nuclear terrorism, as well as the call for IAEA reaction.
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