Toronto Star

Russia strikes illegally annexed area

UN watchdog grows worried as fighting inches closer to the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant

- ADAM S CHRECK

A series of explosions rocked the eastern Ukraine city of Kharkiv early Saturday, sending towering plumes of illuminate­d smoke into the sky and triggering a series of secondary explosions.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

The blasts came hours after Russia concentrat­ed attacks in its increasing­ly troubled invasion of Ukraine on areas it illegally annexed, while the death toll from earlier missile strikes on apartment buildings in the southern city of Zaporizhzh­ia rose to 14.

Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov said on Telegram that the earlymorni­ng explosions were the result of missile strikes in the centre of the city. He said that the blasts sparked fires at one of the city’s medical institutio­ns and a nonresiden­tial building.

Putin this week illegally claimed four regions of Ukraine as Russian territory, including the Zaporizhzh­ia region that is home to Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, whose reactors were shut down last month.

Fighting near the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant has alarmed the UN’s atomic energy watchdog, which on Friday doubled to four the number of its inspectors monitoring plant safeguards. An accident there could release 10 times more potentiall­y lethal radiation than the world’s worst nuclear disaster at Chernobyl in Ukraine 36 years ago, Ukrainian Environmen­tal Protection Minister Ruslan Strilets said Friday.

“The situation with the occupation, shelling and mining of the Chernobyl and Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plants by Russian troops is causing consequenc­es that will have a global character,” Strilets told The Associated Press.

The UN watchdog, the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, reported more trouble at the plant, saying Friday on Twitter that external power had again been cut off to one of Zaporizhzh­ia’s shutdown reactors, necessitat­ing the use of emergency backup diesel generators to run safety systems.

The city of Zaporizhzh­ia is located 53 kilometres away from the nuclear plant as a crow flies and remains under Ukrainian control. To cement Russia’s claim to the region, Russian forces bombarded the city with S-300 missiles on Thursday, with more attacks reported Friday.

Ukrainian authoritie­s said the death toll from the strikes on apartment buildings rose to 14 on Friday, while 12 people wounded in the bombardmen­t remained hospitaliz­ed.

Missiles also struck the city overnight, wounding one person, Zaporizhzh­ia Gov. Oleksandr Starukh said. Russia also used Iranianmad­e Shahed-136 drones there for the first time and damaged two infrastruc­ture facilities, he said.

With its army losing ground to a Ukrainian counteroff­ensive in the south and east, Russia has deployed unmanned, disposable Iranianmad­e drones that are cheaper and less sophistica­ted than missiles but still can damage ground targets.

The Washington-based Institute for the Study of War said Russia’s use of the explosives-packed drones was unlikely to affect the course of the war.

“They have used many drones against civilian targets in rear areas, likely hoping to generate non-linear effects through terror. Such efforts are not succeeding,” analysts at the think tank wrote.

In other Moscow-annexed areas, Russia’s Defense Ministry reported Friday that its forces had repelled Ukrainian advances near the city of Lyman and retaken three villages elsewhere in the eastern Donetsk region. The ministry also claimed that Russian forces had prevented Ukrainian troops from advancing on several villages in the southern Kherson region.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address Friday that this week alone, his military has recaptured 776 square kilometres of territory in the east and 29 settlement­s, including six in the Luhansk region, which Putin has annexed. In total, Ukrainian forces have liberated 2,434 square kilometres of land and 96 settlement­s since the beginning of its counteroff­ensive, he said.

In Ukraine’s Dnipropetr­ovsk region, Russian troops shelled the city of Nikopol overnight, killing one person, wounding another and damaging buildings, natural gas pipelines and electricit­y systems, the governor reported. Nikopol lies along the Dnieper River across from Russian-held territory near the nuclear power plant. The city has been shelled frequently for weeks.

The trail of Russia’s devastatio­n and death from areas where its troops retreated became clearer Friday. A report by Ukrainian First Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs Yevhen Yenin revealed that 530 bodies of civilians have been found in Ukraine’s northeaste­rn Kharkiv region since Sept. 7.

The residents killed during the Russian occupation included 257 men, 225 women and 19 children, with 29 people unidentifi­ed, Yenin said. Most of the bodies were found in a mass grave in the city of Izium.

Authoritie­s have identified 22 torture sites in parts of the Kharkiv region that Ukrainian forces recently liberated, said Serhiy Bolvinov, a regional police official.

 ?? DIMITAR DILKOFF AFP VI A GETTY I MAGES ?? Volunteers, looking for survivors, clear rubble from a collapsed building after a strike in the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzh­ia on Thursday. Europe’s largest nuclear power plant is only 53 kilometres away from the city.
DIMITAR DILKOFF AFP VI A GETTY I MAGES Volunteers, looking for survivors, clear rubble from a collapsed building after a strike in the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzh­ia on Thursday. Europe’s largest nuclear power plant is only 53 kilometres away from the city.

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