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Inside the Ukraine power plant raising the specter of nuclear disaster in Europe

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Inside the Ukraine power plant raising the specter of nuclear disaster in Europe

Kyiv has repeatedly accused Russian forces, which seized the plant in March, of storing heavy weaponry contained in the complicated and utilizing it as cowl to launch assaults, realizing that Ukraine cannot return fireplace with out risking hitting one of many plant’s six reactors — a mistake that will spell catastrophe. Moscow, in the meantime, has claimed Ukrainian troops are focusing on the location. Each side have tried to level the finger on the different for threatening nuclear terrorism.

For Olga and her Ukrainian colleagues nonetheless working on the plant, the specter of nuclear catastrophe is not only the stuff of nightmares — it’s a each day actuality.

It’s “like sleeping and watching a dream,” she instructed CNN in a latest telephone interview, describing the surreal, extended shock that she has skilled working on the plant, which although held by Russian forces, continues to be primarily operated by Ukrainian technicians.

Within the months because the nuclear facility was captured, Ukrainian workers have slowly began to return — finishing up duties in partly shattered rooms and solely coming into contact with Russian troopers after they cross by means of two checkpoints to get contained in the complicated.

“After the occupation, solely operational personnel labored on the station. There have been numerous damaged and burned rooms and home windows. Then they step by step started to go ask folks to come back to work for particular duties,” Olga, whose title has been modified to guard her identification, stated.

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“Now the a part of the workers that didn’t go away is working. About 35 to 40% of employees left.”

The diminished workers and a flare in preventing are making working circumstances more and more tenuous.

Ukraine and Russia once more traded blame after extra shelling across the plant in a single day on Thursday, simply hours after the United Nations known as on each side to stop navy actions close to the ability station, warning of the worst in the event that they did not.

“Regrettably, as a substitute of de-escalation, over the previous a number of days there have been experiences of additional deeply worrying incidents that might, in the event that they proceed, result in catastrophe,” UN secretary common, António Guterres, stated in an announcement. “I urge the withdrawal of any navy personnel and gear from the plant and the avoidance of any additional deployment of forces or gear to the location.”
Addressing a gathering of the UN safety council in New York on Thursday, the pinnacle of the Worldwide Atomic Power Company (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, stated that latest assaults had knocked out components of the plant, risking an “unacceptable” potential radiation leak and known as for a workforce of specialists to urgently be allowed to entry the location, the place the state of affairs “has been deteriorating very quickly.”

“It is a severe hour, grave hour, and the IAEA should be allowed to conduct its mission in Zaporizhzhia as quickly as doable,” Grossi stated.

Energoatom, Ukraine’s state-run nuclear energy firm, accused Russian forces on Thursday of focusing on a storage space for “radiation sources,” and shelling a hearth division close by the plant. A day later, the corporate stated in an announcement on its Telegram account that the plant was working “with the danger of violating radiation and fireplace security requirements.”

Ukraine’s Inside Minister, Denys Monastyrskyi, stated Friday that there was “no satisfactory management” over the plant, and Ukrainian specialists who remained there weren’t allowed entry to some areas the place they need to be.

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CNN is unable to substantiate the small print supplied by Energoatom or Monastyrskyi, however Grossi has stated that some components of the plant had been inoperable. Olga additionally confirmed that components of the complicated are inaccessible to Ukrainian workers.

Russia has continued to accuse Ukraine of being behind the assaults. An area official within the occupation’s administration, Vladimir Rogov, instructed Russian-state information company Rossiya 24 channel on Friday that there was “fixed injury” to the plant’s energy transmission line and advised that the complicated could also be “mothballed” — with none rationalization as to how which may occur.

Ukrainian authorities say that Russian rockets fired from the nuclear energy plant have pummeled the town of Nikopol, on the correct financial institution of the Dnipro River, and surrounding districts during the last week. At the very least 13 folks had been killed within the shelling in a single day Tuesday, and several other extra had been injured on Wednesday and Thursday night, together with a 13-year-old lady, in line with native officers.

A woman assesses the damage on a street in Nikopol, where residents say they are living under a relentless barrage of rockets.

Over the previous couple of months, Olga stated she has seen Russian navy gear arriving on the nuclear complicated, although a lot of it has now been hidden from view. “Initially, there was gear on the territory of the station, now there may be much more of it,” she stated, including that workers usually are not allowed within the areas the place it’s being saved.

However when she returns house from work, Russia’s firepower is evident, she stated. “Horrors occur at evening, they’re f**king shelling the town.

“The incoming hit on the correct financial institution (of the river) rattles a lot that the homes shake and the home windows tremble. It is creepy within the silence of the evening when individuals are sleeping,” she added.

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Throughout the Dnipro, in Nikopol, the assaults now really feel relentless.

From the window of her house close to the town’s port, Oksana Miraevska can look throughout the water and see the volley of incoming shells.

“If one thing occurs with the ability plant, some accident … I can not take into consideration that. Do you suppose one thing may assist us? We’re 7 kilometers from the nuclear energy plant throughout the river! Nothing will save us, I am positive,” Miraevska, a 45-year-old small enterprise proprietor, instructed CNN in a telephone name.

“That is why I do not even entertain that thought.”

When the shelling flared final month, Miraevska stated many residents fled in panic, however she stayed behind making an attempt to assist regionally, principally taking in deserted pets. At evening, she and her teenage son take the animals downstairs to their basement-turned-bomb shelter, the place all of them sleep.

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“Once they began shelling us, then normally life modified. I dwell within the basement, we go there for the evening. Now we have been sleeping there for a month now,” Miraevska stated.

“I do not suppose the enemy must be underestimated,” she added.

It is the identical message being echoed by worldwide specialists warning of the disastrous influence one errant shell may trigger.

Many buildings in Nikopol have been damaged due to the Russian attacks, according to Ukrainian officials.

Over the weekend, shellfire broken a dry storage facility — the place casks of spent nuclear gasoline are stored on the plant — in addition to radiation monitoring detectors, making detection of any potential leak unimaginable, in line with Energoatom. Assaults additionally broken a high-voltage energy line and compelled one of many plant’s reactors to cease working.

That uptick in shelling pushed the IAEA to accentuate its efforts to ship an professional mission to go to the plant to evaluate and safeguard the complicated.

Whereas an preliminary evaluation by specialists discovered “no instant menace to nuclear security” on the plant, Grossi stated Thursday that “this might change at any second.” He added that whereas the company was in frequent contact with Ukrainian and Russian authorities concerning the plant, the knowledge supplied was “contradictory.”

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Calls for for a cessation of hostilities have grown during the last week. The G7 group of main industrialized nations issued an announcement from their assembly in Germany on Wednesday calling on Russia to withdraw its forces and hand over management of the plant to Ukraine.

The assertion laid blame on the ft of the Russian armed forces, who the G7 nations stated had been “considerably elevating the danger of a nuclear accident or incident and endangering the inhabitants of Ukraine, neighboring states and the worldwide neighborhood.”

A State Division spokesperson on Thursday stated that the USA backed requires a “demilitarized zone” across the nuclear energy plant and demanded Russia “stop all navy operations at or close to Ukrainian nuclear amenities.”

CNN’s Olga Voitovych, Yulia Kesaieva and Anna Chernova contributed to this report.

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Israel marks anniversary of Hamas attack as conflict escalates

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Israel marks anniversary of Hamas attack as conflict escalates

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Israelis on Monday marked the first anniversary of Hamas’s deadly October 7 attack, which ignited a devastating war in Gaza that has spiralled into a multi-front conflict and threatens to destabilise the entire region.

In the year since, the fighting has spread across the Middle East, with Israeli forces exchanging fire with militants in Yemen, Syria and Iraq, launching a ferocious bombing campaign and ground offensive in Lebanon and on the verge of a broader conflict with Iran.

The violence continued on Monday, with Israel bombing targets across Gaza to thwart what the military said was an “immediate” threat of rocket fire, and launching further strikes against the Hizbollah militant group in southern Lebanon.

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Ceremonies in southern Israel marking the anniversary of Hamas’s attack began at 6.29am, the same time that the group launched its assault last year. Israeli President Isaac Herzog laid a wreath at the site of the Nova music festival in Re’im, one of the centres of Hamas’s onslaught.

“This is a scar on humanity,” he said. “This is a scar on the face of the earth.”

Two minutes into the ceremony, Hamas fired four rockets at Israel from Gaza. The rockets were intercepted but sent participants at the vigil in Kfar Aza, one of the kibbutzim attacked by Hamas last year, into shelters. Later on Monday, rockets fired from Gaza set off sirens in Tel Aviv.

Other vigils and events are due to be held throughout the country on Monday.

Israel’s President Isaac Herzog attends a memorial service in Re’im © Alexi J Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Hamas’s October 7 attack was the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust, with its militants killing 1,200 people, according to Israeli officials, and taking a further 250 people hostage.

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More than 100 people are still being held in Gaza, although Israeli officials have said that not all are believed to be alive. Relatives of hostages holding pictures of their loved ones gathered on Monday outside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s home in Jerusalem, where they held a minute’s silence.

In response to Hamas’s attack, Israel launched a massive assault on Gaza, which has killed almost 42,000 people, according to Palestinian officials, displaced most of its 2.3mn inhabitants and fuelled a humanitarian catastrophe in the enclave.

On Sunday, Israeli forces launched a fresh offensive in Jabalia, bombarding and then encircling the neighbourhood in northern Gaza, with officials saying Hamas was regrouping in the area, where Israel has carried out several large operations throughout the war.

Despite the uptick in fighting in Gaza, in recent weeks, Israel has increasingly focused its forces on its border with Lebanon, where it has been trading fire with Hizbollah since the militant group began launching rockets at Israel in support of Hamas last October.

Flames and smoke rise from an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut, Lebanon
Smoke rises in Beirut following an Israeli air strike on Sunday night © Bilal Hussein/AP

Last week, Israel began a ground offensive against Hizbollah, following a devastating bombing campaign that has decimated the group’s chain of command — including killing its leader Hassan Nasrallah — left more than 1,000 people dead and displaced hundreds of thousands.

Overnight, Israeli forces bombed more targets in Beirut, following a round of strikes on Sunday that data from Acled, which has been mapping the attacks, suggested was the most intense night in Israel’s two-week air campaign.

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In an indication that Israel was also stepping up its ground offensive in Lebanon, the Israeli military said on Monday that soldiers from a third division — the 91st — had joined the fighting.

Meanwhile, Israeli paramedics said they had treated 10 people for injuries and anxiety after rockets launched from Lebanon landed in Haifa and Tiberias on Sunday night.

The spiralling hostilities have also drawn in Iran, which last week launched 180 ballistic missiles at Israel in a barrage that it said was a response to Nasrallah’s assassination and the killing of Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July.

Netanyahu has vowed retaliation for the missile attack, and the country’s defence minister, Yoav Gallant, said on Sunday that the response would come “in the manner of our choosing, at the time and place of our choosing”.

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Hurricane Milton 2 AM Update

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Hurricane Milton 2 AM Update

SARASOTA, Fla. (WWSB) – The National Hurricane Center’s latest cone shows Milton’s track has stayed on course.

Here is what is new from the update: The 2 a.m. advisory from the National Hurricane Center reports Milton continues to intensify. It has the center of Hurricane Milton moving to the east at 6 mph. Sustained wind speeds remain at 90 mph and the pressure has dropped by 2 mb to 975 mb.

The track remains nearly the same, but the satellite view shows the eye beginning to develop. Milton is expected to become a category 4 storm in the far Gulf waters before running into shear. That should weaken it to a category 3 hurricane by the time it makes landfall on the west coast of Florida on Wednesday, as a major hurricane capable of life-threatening impacts.

Milton Satellite 2 AM(station)

All preparations should be completed no later than Tuesday afternoon.

Areas of heavy rain will impact Florida in advance of the storm’s arrival. Hazards include storm surge, dangerous winds, heavy rains, possible tornadoes, and more.

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Expect watches and warning to be issued for Florida later today. Mandatory evacuations will begin after 2 p.m. for level A and B in Manatee County, level A in Sarasota County, and all mobile homes and recreational vehicles in both counties.

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Israel marks first anniversary of Hamas attacks

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Israel marks first anniversary of Hamas attacks

This article is an on-site version of our The Week Ahead newsletter. Subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Sunday. Explore all of our newsletters here

Hello and welcome to the working week.

It is going to be a difficult start to the next seven days for many as Israel marks the first anniversary of the Hamas attacks when more than 1,200 people were killed and 251 people were taken hostage. Benjamin Netanyahu’s government and military leaders hit back and the conflict has escalated over the past 12 months.

But on Monday, people will stop to remember. Thousands of Israelis are expected to pay their respects at the Nova Music Festival memorial, the location of a rave where Hamas killed 364 and kidnapped 44 partygoers and staff a year ago. Others will travel to Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, where families and supporters have campaigned for the release of those taken. Memorials will be held in various communities that lost neighbours and relatives in the attacks, notably Kibbutz Be’eri, where more than 100 people were killed and 32 taken hostage.

On a more uplifting track, this week will bring rolling announcements on the winners of this year’s six Nobel Prizes. Given the war in the Middle East and beyond, interest in the Peace Prize, announced on Friday, is likely to be high.

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The corporate world takes up a lot of the news diary slack this week as we find ourselves deep in the earnings season. The big moment will be the Wall Street banks, which begin reporting on Friday. I’m not sure they will be mentioning this, but I’d recommend reading the excellent analysis of the rise of secretive trading firms such as Jane Street and Citadel Securities by US banking editor Joshua Franklin.

And then there is the long-awaited Robotaxi launch event by Tesla in Los Angeles on Thursday. What will they cost? When will they be ready to hit the streets? And does this mean Tesla owners can list their cars to be used for ride-hailing? All important questions.

Economic data is on the thin side this week, with US and German inflation figures and a UK monthly GDP estimate about the best of it. More details below.

One more thing . . . 

The matter of Parkrun is also a cause of division, but thank you to everyone who got in contact about it to share your passion for getting your running shoes on or about other group outdoor pursuits. Saturday will bring an outdoor event I could get into: The Peckham Conker Championships. Organisers are promising a 22-carat golden conker — I think it may be spray painted — but it does sound fun.

I’m interested in your priorities for the week ahead. Drop me a line at jonathan.moules@ft.com or, if you are reading this from your inbox, hit reply. And have a good week.

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Key economic and company reports

Here is a more complete list of what to expect in terms of company reports and economic data this week.

Monday

  • Germany: August manufacturing, new orders and sales index

  • UK: Halifax House Price Index

  • Results: Ferrexpo Q3 production report, Grainger trading statement, Repsol trading statement, Shell Q3 quarterly update

Tuesday

  • October Prime Day, a global ecommerce shopping event by Amazon, offering deals to its Prime members in 19 countries

  • Germany: August industrial production index

  • UK: British Retail Consortium-KPMG Retail Sales Monitor

  • Results: Imperial Brands pre-close trading update, OMV Q3 trading update, PepsiCo Q3, S&U HY, Unite Group trading update, XP Power Q3 trading update

Wednesday

  • Witan Investment Trust hold a second general meeting of shareholders to vote on the proposed winding-up of the company and combination with Alliance Trust. If approved, the deal is expected to complete shortly after the meeting by means of a voluntary liquidation of the company and combination of the two companies to create Alliance Witan

  • US: Federal Open Market Committee meeting minutes published

  • Results: CMC Markets HY pre-close trading update, Marston’s trading update

Thursday

  • Tesla due to unveil its Robotaxi, a launch event postponed, according to post on X (formerly Twitter) by chief executive Elon Musk, because of a design change

  • UK: Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors Residential Market Survey

  • US: September consumer price index (CPI) inflation rate data

  • Results: Delta Air Lines Q3, Domino’s Pizza Q3, Fast Retailing FY, Liontrust Asset Management HY trading update, Seven & i Holdings Q2, Tata Consultancy Services Q2, Treatt FY trading update, Volution Group FY

Friday

  • Germany: final September CPI and Harmonized Consumer Price Index inflation rate measures

  • UK: August GDP estimate

  • US: September producer price index (PPI) inflation rate data. Plus, University of Michigan consumer sentiment index

  • Results: Bank of New York Mellon Q3, BlackRock Q3, Hays Q1 trading update, JPMorgan Chase Q3, Jupiter Fund Management Q3 trading update, Wells Fargo Q3

World events

Finally, here is a rundown of other events and milestones this week.

Monday

  • Israel: first anniversary of the Hamas attacks on Israel that caused more than 1,200 deaths with hundreds taken hostage

  • Laos: Asean Business and Investment Summit bringing together more than 1,000 CEOs and senior executives with world leaders begins, running alongside the Asean Summit

  • Philippines: South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol meets President Ferdinand Marcos Jr for bilateral talks in Manila. The two are expected to sign an agreement and issue joint statements after the meeting

  • Sweden: Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine announced, the first of several science prizes that will be given out over the coming todays. Tomorrow is physics, followed by chemistry on Wednesday

Tuesday

  • Luxembourg: Economic and Financial Affairs Council (Ecofin) meeting of EU finance ministers.

  • UK: Alexander Darwall and his wife Diana Darwall bring an appeal against the decision of the UK Court of Appeal that the Dartmoor National Park Authority can allow wild camping in the national park. The Darwalls own the 4,000-acre Blachford Estate in Dartmoor and previously won a High Court case ruling that there was no right to wild camp on Dartmoor without the landowner’s permission. The Court of Appeal overturned that decision

  • US: Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump participates in a town hall presented by Spanish-language network Univision

Wednesday

  • 150th anniversary of the Universal Postal Union under the Treaty of Bern, which unified a complex maze of postal services and regulations into a single postal territory and allowed for the growth of global post deliveries

  • Mozambique: presidential and parliamentary elections

  • UK: Conservative MPs start voting to determine the final two candidates vying to become the party’s next leader, after Rishi Sunak announced his resignation in the wake of the party’s heavy general election defeat. The outcome is announced tomorrow. Party members will then vote on these two options

Thursday

  • World Mental Health Day, raising public awareness about mental health issues

  • Sweden: Nobel Prize for Literature announced

  • UK: Unleashed, a memoir of former prime minister Boris Johnson, is published. The pre-publication publicity promises revelations on campaigning for Brexit, how he nearly died from Covid-19, bikes, buses and the London Olympics

  • US: President Joe Biden begins trip to Germany and Angola

  • US: Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris participates in a town hall presented by Spanish-language network Univision

Friday

  • Greece: government due to present a revised national climate plan, with more ambitious targets for the share of renewable power in its electricity mix and lower carbon emissions

  • Sweden: Nobel Peace Prize winner announced

Saturday

  • Spain: National Day, aka Dia de la Hispanidad, commemorating the day in 1492 when Christopher Columbus caught sight of the New World. Includes annual military parade in Madrid

  • UK: Peckham’s annual conker championship returns

Sunday

  • China: publishes September CPI and PPI inflation rate figures

  • Lithuania: parliamentary elections

  • UK: Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s first 100 days in office

  • US: John Donahoe retires as Nike president and chief executive. Elliott Hill succeeds him tomorrow

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