Zelensky Marks 40th Anniversary of Chornobyl with Call to End Russian Nuclear Terrorism

President Zelensky warned that Russian-Iranian drone attacks near the station’s confinement structure are pushing the world toward a new man-made disaster.

President Volodymyr Zelensky marked the 40th anniversary of the Chornobyl nuclear disaster on Sunday, April 26, by urging the international community to take decisive action against ongoing Russian nuclear terrorism.

In a statement released on Telegram, Zelensky honored the victims and liquidators of the 1986 explosion, which remains the largest man-made disaster in human history. He emphasized that the safety of the New Safe Confinement structure, built with the support of more than 40 countries, is currently under direct threat from Moscow’s aggression.

“Russian-Iranian Shahed drones constantly fly over the station, and one of them hit the confinement last year,” Zelensky noted, warning that Russia is once again placing the world on the brink of a technical accident.

The p stressed that maintaining the integrity of the Chornobyl site is in the global interest and that the only way to ensure safety is to force Russia to “stop its mad attacks.” This warning follows a major aerial assault on Saturday, where Russia launched 666 missiles and drones at Ukraine, including strikes that targeted civilian infrastructure in Dnipro and Kharkiv.

International observers have echoed these concerns. Recently, UK Deputy Ambassador James Ford told the OSCE that Russia’s war has revived acute nuclear safety risks, undermining the governance and safety norms established after the 1986 catastrophe.

As Ukraine commemorates those who gave their lives to contain the radiation four decades ago, Kyiv continues to call for the immediate implementation of the 21st EU sanctions package to curb the production of the very drones and missiles currently endangering the continent’s nuclear stability.