as the cost of living crisis deepens, we look at different approaches adopted in some european countries to ease the pain for consumers. we start in ukraine. a team of united nations inspectors has visited the zaporizhia nuclear power plant, which has been under russian control for six months. this is the moment they arrived. it wasn t an easy journey. this area is close to the front line and the inspectors were forced to stop a checkpoint for over three hours. the inspectors are from the un s international atomic energy agency, the iaea. some have already left, including the director general. here s what he said. we are not going anywhere. the iaea is now there, it s at the plant and it s not moving. it s going to stay there. we are going to have a continued presence there at the plant with some of my experts and of course now we have with my team a lot of work in terms of a detailed analysis of some of the more technical aspects of what we saw. this map shows you just how c
they say we don t have the mandate to identify those responsible but they will be shown all the traces left by the ukrainian bombings and strikes. our insistence was to have ballistics experts be part of the mission so hopefully we will learn something, or rather we know everything, but i hope the world community will also get this opportunity. ukraine s state nuclear power company has made its position clear. it s calling for nuclear power plant demilitarization. and this is what the country s energy minister had to say. we are trying to stop this crazy fight. they are fighting some ukrainian soldiers who appear, that s madness. we have helicopters and now we stop unit number five because of the shelling. this was the russian defense ministry s response to that.