Chernobyl workers' 12-day ordeal under Russian guardpublished at 22:37 Greenwich Mean Time 7 March 2022
Ben Tobias
BBC News
More than 100 workers at Ukraine's Chernobyl nuclear power plant - the site of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986 - have been stuck there for more than 12 days, unable to leave after Russian forces seized the facility on the first day of the invasion.
Another 200 Ukrainian guards, who'd been in charge of security at the time of the assault, also remain trapped.
Russia says it has secured the site jointly with the Ukrainian national guard, but Ukraine disputes this and says Russian troops have full control.
Workers continue to go about their duties and the atmosphere is said to be calm, but the BBC has been told that the conditions inside are difficult, with food and medicine limited.
Because the workers don't know how long they will be there for, they are limiting themselves to one meal a day (prepared by cooks who are also stuck), and the food is said to be basic - mainly bread and porridge.
There are also growing concerns that stress could be affecting their ability to carry out their duties at the nuclear site.
"The situation is complicated and tense," Yuri Fomichev, Mayor of Slavutych, told the BBC. "It is difficult for them morally, psychologically and physically."
Read the full story here.