Her en MiG-31 med Kinzhal hypersonisk missil:
Russian missile barrage
slams into cities across Ukraine
By HANNA ARHIROVA and ELENA BECATOROS2
minutes ago
KYIV,
Ukraine (AP) — Russia unleashed “a massive rocket attack” that hit critical
infrastructure and residential buildings in 10 regions of Ukraine, the
country’s president said Thursday, with officials reporting at least six deaths
in the largest such nighttime attack in three weeks.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the barrage
that came while many people slept and knocked out power in cities across the
country was an attempt by Moscow “to intimidate Ukrainians again.”
“The occupiers
can only terrorize civilians. That’s all they can do,” Zelenskyy said in an
online statement.
The war has largely ground to a battlefield
stalemate over the winter. The Kremlin’s forces started targeting Ukraine’s
power supply last October in an apparent attempt to demoralize the civilian
population and compel Kyiv to negotiate peace on Moscow’s terms. The attacks
later became less frequent, with analysts speculating Russia may have been
running low on ammunition. The last major bombardment took place on Feb. 16.
Overall, Russia launched 81
missiles and eight exploding Shahed drones Thursday, according to Ukraine’s
chief commander of the armed forces, Valerii Zaluzhnyi. Thirty-four cruise
missiles were intercepted, as were four drones, he said.
The Russian defense ministry said the attacks were
in retaliation for an alleged
incursion into the Bryansk region of
western Russia a week earlier by what Moscow claimed were Ukrainian saboteurs.
Ukraine denied the claim and warned that Moscow could use the allegations to
justify stepping up its own attacks.
The Russian defense ministry said Thursday’s
“massive retaliation” hit military and industrial targets in Ukraine “as well
as the energy facilities that supply them.”
Private electricity operator DTEK reported that
three of its power stations had been hit, causing severe damage and bringing
preventive emergency power cuts in the Kyiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk and Odesa
regions.
The strikes left almost half of consumers in Kyiv
without heating, with temperatures at around 9 C (48 F). Kharkiv, Ukraine’s
second-largest city, was left without running water, heating, trams and
trolleybuses after 15 missiles hit the region, mayor Ihor Terekhov told the
Ukrainian public broadcaster.
Around 150,000 households
were left without power in Ukraine’s northwestern Zhytomyr region. In the
southern port of Odesa, emergency blackouts occurred due to damaged power
lines.
In southern Ukraine, the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear
Power Plant, which is occupied by Russian forces, lost power as a result of the
missile attacks, according to nuclear state operator Energoatom.
It’s the sixth time that Europe’s largest nuclear
plant has been in a state of blackout since it was taken over by Russia months
ago, forcing it to rely on diesel generators that can run the station for 10
days. Nuclear
plants need constant power to run
cooling systems and avoid a meltdown, and fears remain about the possibility of
a catastrophe at Zaporizhzhia.
The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog expressed
alarm at the latest blackout, saying he was “astonished by the complacency” of
members of the organization he leads, the International Atomic Energy Agency.
“What are we doing to prevent this happening? We
are the IAEA, we are meant to care about nuclear safety,” IAEA Director-General
Rafael Mariano Grossi told its board of directors in a meeting Thursday,
according to an IAEA statement.
“Each time we
are rolling a dice,” he said. “And if we allow this to continue time after
time, then one day our luck will run out.”
The agency has placed teams of experts at all
four of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants to reduce the risk of severe accidents.
Power supply to the plant can be restored “within
a day or two,” Leonid Oleinyk, a press secretary at Energoatom, told The
Associated Press by telephone. He said emergency repairs have already begun.
Air raid sirens wailed through the night across
Ukraine, including the capital, Kyiv, where explosions occurred in two western
areas of the city. Defense systems were activated around the country.
Viktor Bukhta, a 57-year-old
resident of Kyiv’s Sviatoshynski district, where officials said three people
were wounded and apartment windows were shattered, said a missile landed nearby
at about 6:45 a.m. (0445 GMT).
“We went into
the yard. People were injured, they helped, first-aid kits were handed out from
the cars,” he told The Associated Press. “Then the cars caught fire. We tried
to extinguish them with car fire extinguishers. And I got a little burnt.”
Ukrainian air force spokesman Yurii Ihnat said he
couldn’t recall such an onslaught, with Moscow launching a broad variety of
missiles, including six hypersonic Kinzhal cruise missiles.
Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba was scathing about
the attack, tweeting: “No military objective, just Russian barbarism.”
Kyiv’s city administration said the capital was
attacked with both missiles and exploding drones. Many were intercepted, but
its energy infrastructure was hit.
Smoke could be seen rising from a facility in
Kyiv’s Holosiivskyi district and police had cordoned off all roads leading to
it.
The alarm in Kyiv was lifted
just before 8 a.m. (0600 GMT), with the air raid sirens falling silent after
around seven hours.
Three men and two women were killed in the Lviv
region after a missile struck a residential area, Lviv Gov. Maksym Kozytskyi
said. Three buildings were destroyed by fire, and rescue workers were combing
through rubble looking for more possible victims, he said.
A sixth person was killed and two others wounded
in multiple strikes in the Dnipropetrovsk region that targeted its energy
infrastructure and industrial facilities, Gov. Serhii Lysak said.
Aside from the hail of missiles, Russian shelling
killed six other civilians from Wednesday to Thursday, Ukrainian officials
said, including three people at a bus stop in Kherson.
In the south, Odesa Gov. Maksym Marchenko said
missiles struck residential buildings and several power lines were damaged in
strikes on his region. He said six missiles and one drone were shot down.
Ukrainian Energy Minister Herman Halushchenko
condemned the missile strikes as “another barbaric massive attack on the energy
infrastructure of Ukraine,” saying in a Facebook post that facilities in Kyiv,
Mykolaiv, Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, Odesa, Dnipropetrovsk and Zhytomyr regions had
been targeted.
Ukrainian Railways reported power outages in
certain areas, with 15 trains delayed.
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Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine: https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
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