Kiev [Ukraine] / Moscow [Russia], May 4: Ukrainian drone attacks have targeted the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southeastern Ukraine and a Russian Baltic Sea port, as Kiev and Moscow accuse each other of killing civilians in overnight air raids.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said a drone had targeted the external radiation control laboratory, a part of the plant located outside the nuclear power plant's perimeter, on Sunday. It said it was not yet clear if there had been injuries.
"IAEA team at the site has requested access to the lab," agency chief Rafael Grossi said. He reiterated that attacks near nuclear sites pose nuclear safety risks - both sides have repeatedly targeted nuclear infrastructure.
Earlier on Sunday, Ukrainian forces also launched an attack on the Russian Baltic Sea port of Primorsk, Russian and Ukrainian authorities said, The attack on Primorsk, a major oil-exporting outlet, did not result in an oil spill but it caused a fire in the town that was extinguished, Leningrad Governor Alexander Drozdenko said.
More than 60 drones were downed overnight over the northwestern region, he added. Ukraine confirmed the attack on the port, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claiming it as a "successful destruction of the facilities of the port of Primorsk".
"The missile ship 'Karakurt' was hit, as well as a patrol boat and another tanker of the shadow oil fleet," the Ukrainian president said in a post on Telegram.
"Significant damage was also done to the infrastructure of the oil loading port," Zelensky also claimed.
Primorsk, of Russia's largest export gateways, has the capacity to handle one million barrels of oil per day.
It has been hit multiple times in recent months as Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian energy infrastructure and other targets and United States-brokered talks to end the Ukraine war have stalled.
Zelensky said his country's forces also struck two shadow fleet tankers in waters at the entrance to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk.
"These tankers had been actively used to transport oil - not anymore," Zelensky said on Telegram. "Ukraine's long-range capabilities will continue to be developed comprehensively - at sea, in the air, and on land." Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that global oil prices may rise further if Ukraine continues to hit Russia's oil infrastructure, Russian TV reported.
"If additional volumes of our oil are dropped from the market, prices will rise further from current levels, which are already above $120 a barrel. That would mean that even with lower export volumes, our companies would earn more money and the state would receive more revenue," Peskov .
The two neighbours have been launching hundreds of explosive-packed drones at each other on a near-daily basis throughout the four-year war. Other Russian regions also reported drone attacks on Saturday and Sunday. Moscow Governor Andrei Vorobyov said on Saturday evening that a 77-year-old man died in a village in a drone strike.
Sergei Sobyanin, the mayor of Moscow, said four drones were downed on their way to the Russian capital. Vasily Anokhin, the governor of the western region of Smolensk, said three people, including a child, were injured on Sunday in a drone attack on an apartment block.
Russian drone strikes on Ukraine killed at least three people across the country, local officials said on Sunday. Attacks on southern Ukraine's Odesa region, home to key export terminals, killed two people, including a truck driver at a port, Governor Oleh Kiper said on social media.
Source: Qatar Tribune