Western Mail

Power supply targeted in new Russian missile wave

- SUSIE BLANN Associated Press newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

RUSSIA has unleashed strategic bombers, killer drones and rockets in a barrage of attacks on Ukrainian targets.

The assault comes as a Russian military push that Kyiv says has been brewing for days appeared to pick up pace ahead of the one-year anniversar­y of the invasion of Ukraine.

Russian forces launched 71 cruise missiles, 35 S-300 missiles and seven Shahed drones since late Thursday, Ukraine’s military chief, Gen Valerii Zaluzhnyi said.

Ukrainian forces downed 61 cruise missiles and five drones, he said.

The cruise missiles were launched by Russian Tu-95 strategic bombers and from Russian navy ships in the Black Sea, Gen Zaluzhnyi added, while the S-300 missiles were launched from the Belgorod region just inside Russia and the occupied part of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzh­ia region.

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said Moscow once again targeted the power supply in “another attempt to destroy the Ukrainian energy system and deprive Ukrainians of light, heat, water”.

He added: “We have sustained damage to high-voltage infrastruc­ture and generation in the western, central and eastern regions, which may cause power outages.”

The Kremlin’s forces focused their bombardmen­ts on Ukraine’s industrial east, especially the Luhansk and Donetsk provinces, the Ukrainian military said.

Moscow-backed separatist­s have been fighting Ukrainian forces there since 2014.

But the barrage went further, taking aim at the capital, Kyiv, and Lviv, near Ukraine’s Western border with Poland. It also struck critical infrastruc­ture in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city in the north-east.

Seven people were wounded there, two of them seriously, regional governor Oleh Syniehubov said.

Air raid sirens went off across much of the country.

The bombardmen­ts could be an effort by Russia to soften up Ukraine’s defences ahead of a ground assault, which Kyiv believes Moscow is planning in the east. There has been little change in battlefiel­d positions for weeks.

Kyiv officials had anticipate­d a new Moscow thrust, especially in the east, as the Kremlin strives to secure areas it has illegally annexed and where it claims its rule is welcomed.

High-voltage infrastruc­ture facilities were hit in the eastern, western and southern regions, Ukraine’s energy company Ukrenergo said, resulting in power outages in some areas.

It was the 14th round of massive strikes on the country’s power supply, the company said. The last one occurred on January 26 as Moscow sought to demoralise Ukrainians by leaving them without heat and water in the bitter winter.

Zaporizhzh­ia city council secretary Anatolii Kurtiev said the city had been hit 17 times in one hour, which he said made it the most intense period of attacks since the beginning of the fullscale invasion on February 24 2022.

The Ukraine Air Force said Russia launched up to 35 S-300 anti-aircraft guided missiles on the Kharkiv and Zaporizhzh­ia provinces. Those missiles cannot be destroyed in mid-air by air defences but they have a relatively short range so the Russians have used them for attacks on regions not far from Russiancon­trolled territory.

The Khmelnytsk­yi province in Western Ukraine was also attacked with Shahed drones, according to regional governor Serhii Hamalii.

 ?? LIBKOS/AP/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? > Local residents warm up in a shelter in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine
LIBKOS/AP/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK > Local residents warm up in a shelter in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine

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