KYIV: An attack on a major Russian-held dam in southern Ukraine on Tuesday unleashed a torrent of water that flooded a small city, two dozen villages and sparked the evacuation of 17,000 people.
Moscow and Kyiv traded blame for ripping a gaping hole in the Kakhovka dam in what Kyiv said was an attempt by Russia to hamper Ukraine’s long-awaited offensive.
People in the nearby city of Kherson were heading for higher ground as the water levels rose in the Dnipro River, which was held back by the dam and hydroelectric power plant.
“There is shooting, now there is flooding,” said Lyudmyla, who had loaded a washing machine onto a cart that was attached to an old Soviet car.
The water level at Nova Kakhovka, the town immediately adjacent to the breached dam, increased by over 10 metres overnight, the Russian state news agency Tass cited local Russian-backed authorities as saying.
The town is largely under water and the water level could rise by up to 12 metres, the town’s Russia-installed mayor, Vladimir Leontyev, said on Tuesday in a statement posted on Telegram.
The town of Nova Kakhovka is under water after the dam was breached overnight, the Russian state news agency Tass cited the Russian-installed mayor as saying on Tuesday.
On the Russian-occupied side of the Kherson region, officials said there was “no threat” of major population centres being flooded, but said that more than 22,000 people were at risk.
The Kakhovka dam and its power plant were seized by Russia in the first hours of the war in February last year.
Ukraine’s hydroelectricity operator said the power station had been “completely destroyed”.
“The station cannot be restored, it is completely destroyed. … The hydraulic structure is being washed away,” Igor Syrota, the head of Ukrhydroenergo, said on television.
‘War crime’
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky convened a meeting of his National Security Council over what he called a “terrorist attack”.
Western powers also blamed Russia for the damage to the Kakhovka dam, with EU chief Charles Michel calling it a “war crime.”
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said the dam breach was “outrageous” and “puts thousands of civilians at risk and causes severe environmental damage.”
Russia, however, said the dam was partially destroyed by “multiple strikes” coming from Ukrainian forces.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the destruction was the result of a “deliberate sabotage by the Ukrainian side”.
The Soviet-era dam sits on the Dnipro river, which provides cooling water for the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
The flooding fuelled already existing fears for the safety of the Zaporizhzhia plant, under Russian control.
The plant is some 150 kilometres away from the damaged dam.
Moscow and Kyiv offered conflicting versions on the safety of the facility.
The UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said its experts “are closely monitoring the situation” but that there was “no immediate nuclear safety risk at plant”.
The Russian-installed director of the plant, Yuri Chernichuk, echoed the UN agency and said that “at the moment, there is no security threat to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant”.
“The water level in the cooling pond has not changed,” he said, adding that the “situation was controlled by personnel”.
Chernichuk said the water cooling system was not in direct contact with the outside environment and could be refilled from several alternative sources.
Ukraine — which in 1986 suffered the devastating Chernobyl nuclear disaster — sounded the alarm.
‘Slow down’ Ukraine
“The world once again finds itself on the brink of a nuclear disaster, because the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant lost its source of cooling. And this danger is now growing rapidly,” Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhaylo Podolyak said.
The Ukrainian nuclear operator, Energoatom, said the water level of the Kakhovka reservoir was “rapidly decreasing, which is an additional threat to the temporarily occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.”
It said it was “monitoring the situation” and that currently the cooling plant’s pond water level is “sufficient for the power plant’s needs”.
News of the damage came amid increasing speculations over Ukraine’s long-expected counter-offensive.
Ukraine has for days called for silence ahead of its counteroffensive and said there would be no announcement about when it would start.
On Monday, Zelensky praised his troops for advances claimed near the devastated city of Bakhmut, while Russia said it had repelled a large-scale attack.
Ukraine said that Russia’s goal was to “create obstacles” for Kyiv’s long-awaited counteroffensive to retake territory from Moscow’s forces.
Kyiv already accused Moscow of mining the dam as combat raged nearby in October, during the last major offensive by Ukrainian forces seeking to regain lost territory, which Russia denies.
Built in Soviet times in the 1950s, the Kakhovka dam has strategic value as it pumps water into the North Crimean Canal, which starts in southern Ukraine and crosses the entire Crimean peninsula.
This means that any problem with the dam could cause water supply problems for Crimea, which has been under Russian control since 2014.
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