Ukraine: kyiv prepares for a winter without heating or electricity

Kyiv, Ukraine –

The mayor of Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, is warning residents to prepare for the worst this winter if Russia continues to hit the country’s energy infrastructure – and that means he is not out of the question. having no electricity, water or heating in the freezing cold.

“We are doing everything to avoid this. But let’s be frank, our enemies are doing everything so that the city is without heat, without electricity, without water, in general, so we will all die. And the future of the country and the The future of each of us depends on how prepared we are for different situations,” Mayor Vitali Klitschko told state media.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address to the nation on Sunday that around 4.5 million people were without power. He called on Ukrainians to endure the hardships and “we have to get through this winter and be even stronger in the spring than today.”

Russia has been focused on striking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure over the past month, causing power shortages and blackouts across the country. kyiv had hourly power outages on Sunday in parts of the city and the surrounding region.

Continued power cuts were also expected in Chernihiv, Cherkasy, Zhytomyr, Sumy, Kharkiv and Poltava regions, Ukraine’s state-owned energy operator, Ukrenergo, said.

Kyiv plans to deploy around 1,000 heating points, but it’s unclear whether that would be enough for a city of 3 million.

As Russia intensifies its attacks on the capital, Ukrainian forces advance south. Residents of the Russian-occupied Ukrainian city of Kherson have received warning messages on their phones urging them to evacuate as soon as possible, the Ukrainian military said on Sunday. Russian soldiers warned civilians that the Ukrainian army was preparing for a massive attack and told people to leave immediately towards the right bank of the city.

Russian forces are preparing for a Ukrainian counteroffensive to retake the southern city of Kherson, which was captured early in the invasion. In September, Russia illegally annexed Kherson along with three other regions and then declared martial law in all four provinces.

The Kremlin-installed administration in Kherson has already moved tens of thousands of civilians out of the city.

Russia is “occupying and evacuating” Kherson simultaneously, trying to convince the Ukrainians to leave when in fact they are digging, Nataliya Humenyuk, spokeswoman for Ukraine’s Southern Forces, told state television.

“There are defense units that dug in quite powerfully, some equipment was left behind, firing positions were set up,” she said.

Russian forces are also digging into a bitterly disputed region to the east, worsening already difficult conditions for residents and the defending Ukrainian military following the illegal annexation of Moscow and the declaration of martial law in the Donetsk province.

The attacks almost completely destroyed power plants that serve the town of Bakhmut and the nearby town of Soledar, said Pavlo Kyrylenko, Ukrainian governor of the region. The shelling killed one civilian and injured three, he reported on Saturday evening.

“The destruction is daily, if not hourly,” Kyrylenko told state television.

Moscow-backed separatists controlled part of Donetsk for nearly eight years before Russia invaded Ukraine in late February. Protecting the self-proclaimed republic from separatists was one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s justifications for the invasion, and his troops spent months trying to capture the entire province.

Between Saturday and Sunday, Russia launched four missiles and 19 airstrikes hitting more than 35 villages in nine regions, from Chernihiv and Kharkiv in the northeast to Kherson and Mykolaiv in the south, according to Zelenskyy’s office. The strikes killed two people and injured six.

In the Donetsk town of Bakhmut, 15,000 remaining residents were living under daily shelling and without water or electricity, according to local media. The city has been under attack for months, but shelling resumed after Russian forces suffered setbacks during Ukrainian counter-offensives in the Kharkiv and Kherson regions.

The front line is now on the outskirts of Bakhmut, where mercenaries from the Wagner Group, a shadowy Russian military company, are said to be leading the charge.

Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the group that has generally remained under the radar, plays a more visible role in the war. In a statement on Sunday, he announced the funding and establishment of “militia training centers” in Russia’s southwestern regions of Belgorod and Kursk, saying locals were best placed to “fight against sabotage” on Russian soil. The training centers are in addition to a military technology center that the group has announced to open in Saint Petersburg.

In Kharkiv, officials were working to identify bodies found in mass graves after the Russians withdrew, Dmytro Chubenko, spokesman for the regional prosecutor’s office, told local media.

DNA samples have been taken from 450 bodies discovered in a mass grave in the town of Izium, but the samples must be matched with relatives and so far only 80 people have participated, he said .

Among the good news, the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has been reconnected to the Ukrainian power grid, local media reported on Sunday. Europe’s largest nuclear power plant needs electricity to maintain vital cooling systems, but it has been running on backup diesel generators since Russian bombing cut its external connections.

Comments are closed.