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Ukraine drone kills chief engineer at Russia-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant

A Ukrainian drone struck a service car near Enerhodar on July 15, killing Oleksandr Yakovlev, chief engineer of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, and his driver; IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi condemned the attack as an 'unacceptable' threat to nuclear safety, while Russia's Rosatom called it a deliberate act of terrorism and urged IAEA action

紛争·エネルギー· active 戦争はどう終わるのか·語られていないこと ·8 論調 · ·rbtfl 更新 2026年7月16日
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報道の分かれ

同じニュースを、各国のニュースルームがどう伝えたか。引用は出典つきで原文にリンク。

Russia (exile)

Meduza

“The chief engineer of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, Alexander Yakovlev, was killed in a Ukrainian drone strike, Rosatom head Alexei Likhachev said.”

Independent Russian-language news in exile; reports the killing on Rosatom's own confirmation, noting Yakovlev and his driver died when the drone struck their vehicle between the plant and Enerhodar原文を読む ↗

Russia

RT

“Moscow has called on the IAEA to respond after a Ukrainian drone strike killed the chief engineer of the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant and his driver.”

Russian state media; frames the strike as requiring an IAEA response and quotes Likhachev's 'deliberate act of terrorism' characterisation; emphasises Russia's call for international accountability原文を読む ↗

United Kingdom

World Nuclear News

“The IAEA said its Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi 'condemns the reported incident which he says represents an unacceptable attack on the plant and its management, seriously threatening nuclear safety.'”

Specialist nuclear industry publication; leads on the IAEA's formal condemnation and Grossi's 'unacceptable attack on the plant and its management' statement, providing the industry response原文を読む ↗

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Summary

A Ukrainian drone struck a service car near Enerhodar on July 15, killing Oleksandr Yakovlev, chief engineer of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, and his driver. Rosatom head Alexei Likhachev confirmed the deaths, describing the strike as a "deliberate act of terrorism by the Kiev regime." Iaea Director General Rafael Grossi condemned the killing as "an unacceptable attack on the plant and its management, seriously threatening nuclear safety," and Russia urged the IAEA to act. Ukraine has not commented publicly. The plant, Europe's largest with six reactors, has been under Russian military control since the early weeks of the 2022 invasion. Its proximity to fighting has made the site one of the most closely watched nuclear facilities in the world throughout the Ukraine Russia War.

The split

Russian state media and Rosatom lead on the "terrorism" framing, calling for international accountability and IAEA intervention. Meduza and The Moscow Times report the same confirmed facts, attributing them to Rosatom without adopting the terrorism label. The IAEA's condemnation is the most widely cited element outside Russia, as it gives independent weight to the nuclear-safety concern. Ukrainian sources focus on Grossi's language and the international oversight argument, steering clear of any acknowledgement of operational intent.

By the numbers

  • 2, people killed: the plant's chief engineer and his driver
  • 6, reactors at the Zaporizhzhia NPP, Europe's largest nuclear station
  • 2022, year Russia seized the plant in the first weeks of its invasion of Ukraine

Why it matters

The Zaporizhzhia plant sits in an active war zone and has been the subject of repeated IAEA safety missions since 2022. Killing the plant's chief engineer raises the immediate question of who now manages day-to-day nuclear safety at a facility where the IAEA has consistently flagged power supply and staffing risks. The incident also gives Russia a fresh argument for international pressure on Ukraine at a moment when Kyiv is expanding its drone campaign.

What to watch

  • Whether Ukraine publicly acknowledges or denies the strike
  • The IAEA's next inspection mission and any formal request to Kyiv on plant-perimeter operations
  • Whether Russia uses the killing as grounds for escalating its own strikes or for a diplomatic push at the UN Security Council

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