Irish Charity Founder Warns of 'Nuclear Terrorism' After Chornobyl Drone Attack

Adi Roche condemns drone attack on Chornobyl nuclear storage, calling it 'nuclear terrorism' and demanding Nuclear Power Plants be declared No War Zones.

Irish Charity Founder Warns of 'Nuclear Terrorism' After Chornobyl Drone Attack

Adi Roche, Founder and Voluntary CEO of Irish charity Chornobyl Children International, has condemned a drone attack on a nuclear waste storage facility at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine, calling it "nuclear terrorism" and demanding that Chornobyl and all nuclear power plants be declared 'No War Zones'.

Appealing on behalf of all humanity, and as a first step towards peace negotiations, Roche called for the Hague Convention to be invoked, which defines any attack on a nuclear facility as a 'war crime'.

Adi Roche, Founder and Voluntary CEO of Chornobyl Children International:

"This weekend, we woke up to the disturbing news that a nuclear waste storage facility at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant has been attacked and that, once again, highly dangerous nuclear facilities were used as a weapon of war.

Recent whispers of potential peace-talks and ceasefire in Ukraine have been potentially scuppered by this ultra-provocative and unprecedented attack. It undermines and is contrary to everything that we have been trying to achieve."

Roche highlighted the grave dangers posed by the site, which holds thousands of tons and gallons of highly radioactive material, vast silos of nuclear waste and water, and hundreds of shallow 'nuclear graves' scattered throughout the Exclusion Zone.

She continued:

"My greatest fear in this conflict is that the next Chornobyl will be Chornobyl itself. This sacred area, an area of utter vulnerability and danger, a special area of human tragedy, could once again, have deadly radioactive contamination released which would spread everywhere.

This weaponising of nuclear power signifies to the world that the nature of modern warfare has changed forever, and brings with it a sense of foreboding for wars of the future.

Never before in the history of the atomic age have nuclear stations been used as weapons of war. They should remain globally 'off limits' because of their lethal potential to destroy the planet. The weaponising of nuclear facilities has resulted in a collision between warfare and nuclear power, which is a whole new threat with potentially devastating, unimaginable consequences for humankind for centuries to come. This is nuclear terrorism."

She added:

"Every day that peace in Ukraine is denied, we are rolling a dice. If allowed to continue, one day our luck will run out. We are staring down a barrel of a loaded gun. Any potential explosion or meltdown at Chornobyl, or any other Nuclear Power Plant, by accident or design would cause irreversible damage to the environment and human life that will last for thousands of years."

Roche closed with a direct appeal:

"In the name of humanity, in the name of the children, please stop this war and declare Chornobyl and all Nuclear Power Plants as 'No War Zones' as a starting point.

40 years on, Chornobyl has become a symbol, a potent enduring metaphor for catastrophe…a 'cautionary tale' we need to heed of, making sure never again. We neglect Ukraine at our peril."

The statement was issued by Chornobyl Children International.

Note: 'Chornobyl' is the Ukrainian-language spelling of the site, ratified by the United Nations in December 2025.

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