The Herald on Sunday

Ukrainian power plant destroyed

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A MASSIVE missile and drone attack has destroyed one of Ukraine’s largest power plants and damaged others, officials have said.

The Trypilska plant, which was the biggest energy supplier for the Kyiv, Cherkasy and Zhytomyr regions, was struck numerous times, destroying the transforme­r, turbines and generators and leaving the plant ablaze.

As the first drone approached, workers hid in a shelter which saved their lives, said Andrii Gota, chairman of the supervisor­y board of the state company that runs the plant, Centrenerg­o.

They watched the plant burn, surrounded by dense smoke and engulfed in flames.

“It’s terrifying,” said Mr Gota. Hours later, rescuers were still dismantlin­g the rubble.

Speaking in Moscow, Russian president Vladimir Putin cast the attacks on Ukrainian energy facilities as a response to Ukrainian strikes that targeted Russian oil refineries.

The Trypilska plant supplied electricit­y to three million customers – but none lost power because the grid was able to compensate since demands are low at this time of year.

Still, the consequenc­es of the strikes could be felt in the coming months, as air conditioni­ng use ramps up during the summer.

At least 10 other strikes overnight damaged energy infrastruc­ture in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city.

Foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said more than 200,000 people in the region, which has been struck repeatedly, were without power.

Ukraine’s largest private energy operator, DTEK, described the slew of strikes as one of the most powerful attacks this year, while energy minister Herman Halushchen­ko told reporters it was a “large-scale, enormous, missile attack that affected our energy sector very badly”.

Russia has recently renewed strikes on Ukrainian energy facilities, and attacks last month blacked out large parts of the country – a level of darkness not seen since the first days of the full-scale invasion in 2022.

The volume and accuracy of the attacks have alarmed the country’s defenders and left officials scrambling for better ways to protect energy assets.

The strikes have also tested Ukraine’s ability to make quick repairs.

Ukraine’s leaders have pleaded for more air defence systems to ward off such attacks, but those supplies have been slow in coming.

More details have also emerged about American Russell Bentley, who is missing in the Russian-controlled Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine.

Online news outlet Mash said he disappeare­d on April 8 after a district in the city of Donetsk was shelled by Ukrainian forces.

Mash cited his wife as saying he had gone to see if anyone needed help but had not returned.

Mr Bentley joined pro-Russian fighters in eastern Ukraine in 2014.

According to Russian news outlet RIA, he later swapped his gun for journalism and worked with state-run news outlet Sputnik.

This large scale, enormous, missile attack affected our energy sector very badly

 ?? Picture: AP Photo/ Andrii Marienko ?? Left, the damaged thermal power plant, one of the country’s largest, which was recently destroyed by Russian missiles is seen in near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Friday
Picture: AP Photo/ Andrii Marienko Left, the damaged thermal power plant, one of the country’s largest, which was recently destroyed by Russian missiles is seen in near Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Friday

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