Russian troops have reportedly taken full control of the area around the Chernobyl nuclear power station, including the plant itself, according to Ukraine’s prime minister.
“Unfortunately, we are obliged to inform that as things stand the Chernobyl Zone, the so-called ‘Exclusion Zone’ and all the Chernobyl nuclear power station have been taken under the control of the Russian armed groups,” prime minister Denis Schmygal told UNIAN, Ukraine’s main news wire.
A senior defense official said they couldn't confirm reports that Russian troops seized control. "We do believe with some confidence that some Russian soldiers have moved through that area and may still be in that area, but we can't confirm ... that they've taken control," the official said.
The Chernobyl power plant, the site of the world's worst nuclear accident, is located about 60 miles north of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. The Chernobyl exclusion zone begins almost immediately below Ukraine's border with Belarus.
The nuclear facilities at Chernobyl are "operating safely and securely," Ukraine's regulatory body informed the United Nations nuclear watchdog.
The International Atomic Energy Agency expressed alarm at the fighting around Chernobyl, but in a note to the IAEA, Ukraine confirmed that "unidentified armed forces" have taken control of all facilities, and that there were no casualties or destruction at the industrial site, the IAEA said.
Still, any attack on nuclear facilities is considered a "violation of the principles of the United Nations Charter, international law, and the Statue of the Agency," the IAEA's members agreed in 2009.
-ABC News' Patrick Reevell, Conor Finnegan