Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Russian drone attack kills 4 in Kharkiv

Strike on energy facility severs power to 350K

- Vitalii Hnidyi and Anastasiia Malenko

KHARKIV, Ukraine – A Russian drone attack struck residentia­l buildings in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv and an energy facility in the surroundin­g region on Thursday, killing four people and severing power for 350,000 residents, officials said.

Ukraine’s second-largest city, which lies some 20 miles from the Russian border, has been bombed heavily during the 25-month war and been one of the worst afflicted as Russia has renewed its missile and drone attacks on the energy system.

Governor Oleh Synehubov said three rescue workers had been killed in a repeat strike after they reached a residentia­l block hit in one attack. Writing on the Telegram messaging app, he said 12 people were injured, with three in serious condition.

One of the killed rescuers was a 52year-old firefighter whose son, also a firefighter, had been putting out a fire several buildings away, Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said.

Realizing his father had been killed, the son, Volodymyr, knelt on the ground and wept as two emergency workers consoled him, video shared by Klymenko showed.

Under floodlights in the night, rescuers raced to free a resident trapped under rubble and ladders reached up from fire trucks to shattered apartments at the top of high-rise blocks.

“Windows, all of the glass, everything was knocked out. There’s nothing left,” Zhanetta Kravchenko, a 77-yearold resident, told Reuters. “We are alive, at least, and I’m grateful for that.”

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the attack “despicable and cynical” in a statement on X, repeating his call to Ukraine’s allies to supply more air defenses.

Russia used at least 15 drones in the Kharkiv attacks, Synehubov said. The military shot down 11 Shahed drones out of 20 launched at the country overnight, the General Staff said.

Broadcaste­r Suspilne reported that one of the strikes caused serious damage to apartments on three floors of a 14story building. It said emergency crews had been unable to work for at least an hour for fear of further strikes.

Residentia­l buildings, stores, a medical facility and cars were damaged in the attack, the Kharkiv prosecutor’s office said on Telegram.

Drones also hit the Zmiivska thermal power plant in the region, Synehubov said, keeping up pressure on an energy system that has come under repeated attack from airstrikes in recent weeks.

“In Kharkiv and areas of the region, around 350,000 consumers have been disconnect­ed,” the Ukrenergo grid operator said in a statement.

“Shahed attacks on energy facilities take place almost every day,” Volodymyr Kudrytskyi, head of national grid operator Ukrenergo, told a news conference. “The intensity of the attacks has increased.”

Russian forces also hit a solar power plant in Dnipropetr­ovsk region, causing a fire that has since been put out, the Energy Ministry said. Some limits on energy consumptio­n were put in place in the region in the morning, the officials said. The strike likely marked the first targeted attack on a solar power plant by Russian forces, Kudrytskyi said.

Russia targeted Ukraine’s critical energy infrastruc­ture with more than 150 missiles and over 240 Shahed drones between March 22 and 29 of this year, according to the statement from Ukrainian parliament’s committee on energy, housing and utilities services.

These attacks severely damaged or destroyed at least eight power plants and several dozen substation­s, immediatel­y cutting off over 2 million citizens from electricit­y, heat and water supply, the statement said. The full restoratio­n of the facilities will likely take months.

Reuters was unable to independen­tly verify the accounts. Russia denies deliberate­ly targeting civilians in the war in which it is focusing on capturing eastern and southern parts of Ukraine.

An education facility, cultural center and private residence in the Dnipropetr­ovsk region were also hit in the overnight attacks, the region’s governor said, adding that no casualties were reported.

Kharkiv has been a frequent target of Russian drone and missile attacks.

Russian forces last week used an aerial bomb on the city, killing one person after a missile attack on an industrial area last month killed five people.

Lavrov: Chinese plan reasonable

China has proposed the most reasonable peace plan so far for resolving the Ukraine conflict, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was quoted as saying on Thursday.

Beijing put forward a 12-point paper more than a year ago that set out general principles for ending the war but did not get into specifics. It received a lukewarm reception at the time in both Russia and Ukraine, while the U.S. said China was presenting itself as a peacemaker but reflecting Russia’s “false narrative” and failing to condemn its invasion.

“The most important thing for us is that the Chinese document is based on an analysis of the reasons for what is happening and the need to eliminate these root causes. It is structured in logic from the general to the specific,” state news agency RIA quoted Lavrov as telling reporters.

Lavrov is due to meet his Chinese counterpar­t soon and President Vladimir Putin said last month he would consider going to China for the first overseas trip of his new six-year term.

Russia says it is willing to enter talks about Ukraine but that these must reflect what it calls the “new realities” on the ground, where its forces control just under a fifth of the country and Moscow has claimed four Ukrainian regions as its own.

Zelenskyy has put forward his own peace formula that calls for a cessation of hostilitie­s and a full Russian withdrawal from all occupied territory.

Praising China’s plan provides Moscow with a way to signal that it is open to talking peace while attacking Zelenskyy’s initiative, which Lavrov called “a menu from which you can pull out whatever you want.”

Switzerlan­d has said it will host a conference based on Zelenskyy’s plan, but Russia has called the initiative pointless and said it is doomed to fail without Moscow’s participat­ion.

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman clears rubble in her daughter’s apartment after what officials called a Ukrainian strike in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A woman clears rubble in her daughter’s apartment after what officials called a Ukrainian strike in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine.

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