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Ukraine races to restore power as Russian missiles batter grid

Volodymyr Zelensky said electricity had been restored to almost six million people.

Civilians take shelter inside a metro station during air raid alert in the centre of Kyiv on Friday night. Picture: AFP
Civilians take shelter inside a metro station during air raid alert in the centre of Kyiv on Friday night. Picture: AFP

Ukraine worked late on Saturday to restore electricity and water supplies after Russia’s latest wave of attacks pitched multiple cities into darkness and forced people to endure sub-zero temperatures without heating or running water.

The volley of missiles unleashed on Friday came as President Vladimir Putin held meetings with the military top brass overseeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, where Moscow has stepped up bombardments.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said late on Saturday electricity had been restored to almost six million people, but noted ongoing problems with heat and water supplies, and “large-scale outages” in many ­regions.

“The main thing today is ­energy,” he said in his nightly ­address. “There is still a lot of work to do to stabilise the system.”

In the capital Kyiv, the metro had stopped running so that people wrapped in winter coats could take shelter at underground stations, but Mayor Vitali Klitschko said late on Saturday the service had resumed.

Water supply had also been ­restored and 75 per cent of the city’s population had their heating supply back.

In the eastern city of Kharkiv, power had also been fully ­returned, regional governor Oleg Sinegubov said on Saturday, after the strikes had left Ukraine’s second city without electricity.

Ukraine’s national energy provider Ukrenergo had imposed emergency blackouts in response to the strikes, warning the extent of the damage in the north, south and centre of the country meant it could take longer to restore supplies than after previous attacks.

The country’s energy system “continues to recover”, it said on Saturday.

In Russia, Mr Putin sought proposals from his military commanders on how to proceed with the Ukraine offensive, according to the Kremlin. The Kremlin released footage on Friday of Mr Putin presiding over a round-table meeting with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov among other top brass.

Vladimir Putin meets commanders involved in Russia's military operation in Ukraine in an undisclosed place in Russia on December 17. Picture: AFP
Vladimir Putin meets commanders involved in Russia's military operation in Ukraine in an undisclosed place in Russia on December 17. Picture: AFP

After a series of humiliating battlefield defeats, Russia since October has pursued an aerial campaign against what Moscow says are military-linked facilities.

But the EU has said the suffering inflicted on freezing civilians constitutes war crimes, with the bloc’s foreign policy chief calling the bombings “barbaric”.

Russia’s defence ministry said on Saturday the strikes had targeted Ukraine’s military and energy facilities, also disrupting “the transfer of weapons and ammunition of foreign production”.

“All assigned targets were hit,” the ministry said in its daily briefing. Russia fired 74 – mainly cruise – missiles on Friday, 60 of which were shot down by anti-aircraft defences, according to the Ukrainian army.

Ukraine’s military command said: “The enemy continues to focus its efforts on conducting ­offensive actions in the Bakhmut and Avdiivka directions,” referring to two cities in the eastern Donetsk. Russian troops were also trying to regain lost ground around Lymanskyi, in the south.

Mr Zelensky said the strikes hit power and water supplies in Kyiv and 14 regions. Regional officials said their air defence forces had shot down 37 out of 40 missiles.

In the central city of Kryvyi Rig, where Mr Zelensky was born, Friday’s air strikes hit a residential building. The missiles killed a 64-year-old woman and a young couple with a son, governor Valentyn Reznichenko said on Saturday, wounding 13 others.

In the south, fresh Russian shelling in Kherson, recently ­recaptured by Ukraine, killed a 36-year-old man and injured a 70-year-old woman, governor Yaroslav Yanushevich said on Saturday morning. A separate strike hit a geriatric centre in the village of Stepanivka just north of Kherson, he added later, but there were no casualties reported.

Kherson has been subjected to persistent Russian shelling since Moscow’s forces retreated in ­November, and power was cut in the city last week. Moscow has said the strikes on Ukrainian ­infrastructure are a response to an explosion on the Kerch bridge connecting the Russian mainland to the Crimean peninsula, annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

Ukrainian defence officials said last week that their forces had downed more than a dozen Iranian-made attack drones launched at Kyiv, a sign that Western-supplied systems were having an impact. The country’s military leaders have also warned Moscow is preparing for a major winter ­offensive, including a fresh ­attempt to take Kyiv.

Russia, meanwhile, on Saturday accused Moldova of “political censorship” after it suspended the broadcasting licence of six television channels over accusations of misinformation.

AFP

Read related topics:Russia And Ukraine Conflict

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/ukraine-races-to-restore-power-as-russian-missiles-batter-grid/news-story/b560ee9706fa965b5da59801ea28311e