Pope warns of ‘nuclear disaster’ risk at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia plant

Pope Francis attends the weekly general audience at the Vatican, August 24, 2022. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis on Wednesday called for “concrete steps” to end the war in Ukraine and avert the risk of a nuclear disaster at the Zaporizhzhia power plant.

IAEA, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, said Tuesday it will visit the Russian-occupied plant in Ukraine within days if talks to gain access succeed.

Russia and Ukraine have repeatedly accused each other of firing at the facility, the largest of its kind in Europe and which pro-Moscow forces took over soon after the February 24 invasion. The UN has called for the area to be demilitarized.

“I hope that concrete steps will be taken to bring an end to the war and to avert the risk of a nuclear disaster at Zaporizhzhia,” Pope Francis said at his weekly general audience.

READ: ‘It’s like sitting on a powder keg’, say people near Ukraine nuclear plant

Speaking on the day Ukraine marks its independence from Soviet rule in 1991 and six months after Russian forces invaded, Pope Francis condemned wars as “madness” and referred to the death of Darya Dugina, daughter of a prominent Russian ultra-nationalist, in a car bombing near Moscow on Saturday.

“Innocents pay for war, innocents,” he said.

Moscow blamed the killing on Ukrainian agents, a charge Kyiv denies.

Pope Francis called arms merchants who profit from war “delinquents who kill humanity.”

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