The creator and writer of the acclaimed HBO miniseries "Chernobyl" chastised tourists for taking selfies — including some that critics found tasteless — at the location of the 1986 nuclear disaster.

"If you visit, please remember that a terrible tragedy occurred there," Craig Mazin tweeted Tuesday night, noting he had seen some of the photos. "Comport yourselves with respect for all who suffered and sacrificed."

It's wonderful that #ChernobylHBO has inspired a wave of tourism to the Zone of Exclusion. But yes, I've seen the photos going around.



If you visit, please remember that a terrible tragedy occurred there. Comport yourselves with respect for all who suffered and sacrificed. — Craig Mazin (@clmazin) June 11, 2019

The success of the miniseries, a five-part dramatization of the events surrounding the world's worst nuclear accident, has helped inspire a wave of tourism to the site of the former Soviet-era power plant in Ukraine.

At least one Chernobyl tour agency has reported a 40 percent increase in trip bookings since the series debuted on HBO and Sky Atlantic in May, according to Reuters.

Another tour company told Reuters it has seen a 30 percent spike.

Mazin's tweet comes after social media users shared several photos of tourists and influencers posing in front of ruins in the plant workers' city of Pripyat and the 1,000-square-mile area known as the Zone of Exclusion.

Twitter user Bruno Zupan on Tuesday posted a round-up of Instagram screenshots. In perhaps the most provocative image, a topless woman wears a half-zipped hazmat suit that shows her thong underwear.

The World Health Organization's cancer research arm has suggested some 9,000 people will die due to Chernobyl-linked cancer and leukemia. But the eventual death toll is subject to dispute.

The uproar over the Chernobyl-set photos recalls similar recent flashpoints over tourism at locations considered sensitive or sacred.

Officials at the Auschwitz memorial in Poland tweeted a reminder to visitors in March, telling them to avoid taking light-hearted photos at the former Nazi concentration camp where more than one million people were killed.

"There are better places to learn how to walk on a balance beam than the site which symbolizes deportation of hundreds of thousands to their deaths," the museum tweeted, referring to train tracks at the camp.