42 US dollars withdraw troops from the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant
Publication appeal on behalf of 42 countries: including all consumer countries, Australia, UK, Georgia, Iceland, Canada, Liechtenstein, Moldova, New Zealand, Norway, North Macedonia, USA, Montenegro, South Japan and Japan.
42 countries of the world pay Russia to withdraw troops from the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant. Appeal published on the official website of the application on August 14. Russia occupied the Eastern European nuclear power plant in early March, and Ukrainian personnel continue to work on it. In recent weeks, shells have fallen several times after shelling, Kyiv and Moscow blame each other for this.
Publication appeal on behalf of 42 countries: including all consumer countries, Australia, UK, Georgia, Iceland, Canada, Liechtenstein, Moldova, New Zealand, Norway, North Macedonia, USA, Montenegro, South Japan and Japan. The text proposes to single out the armed forces and all understaffed status personnel from its immediate environs and from all over Ukraine.
“The deployment of military personnel and armed forces of Russia at a nuclear facility is unacceptable and requires compliance with safety, protection and guarantees that are mandatory for all members of the atomic energy agency’s management,” the text says. In accordance with the requirements for state regulators, obligations to maintain nuclear safety are observed.
- Moscow says Russian guards are stationed at the station only to guard it during the war. Moscow visits the sanction, stating that the Ukrainian side is interfering with the visit. Kyiv says Russia must bring troops to arrest in order to visit them under Ukrainian law.
- The United States of America is considering demilitarized territory around the demilitarized zone. With the subsequent call for consideration of Ukraine, it was supported by several countries, including the United States. Moscow does not support this proposal.