Muscat Daily

Power, water supplies restored in Kyiv

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Kyiv, Ukraine - Water and power supplies were fully restored in Kyiv on Tuesday a day after Russian missile strikes, as grain exports from Ukraine continued despite Moscow pulling out of a deal to let ships through.

Russian authoritie­s meanwhile announced that tens of thousands more civilians would be ‘evacuated’ from the Russianocc­upied southern Ukrainian region of Kherson amid a counter-offensive by Kyiv.

Ukrainian presidenti­al adviser Oleksiy Arestovich said on Monday’s bombardmen­t was ‘one of the most massive shellings of our territory by the army of the Russian Federation’.

Following the strikes, aerial views showed Kyiv plunged in darkness overnight, with the only

lights coming from cars on the road. In a town near Kyiv on Monday, the powerful explosions had woken up Mila Ryabova, 39.

Ryabova told AFP that she and her family were ‘worrying and talking about opportunit­ies to move abroad, because there is a cold winter ahead. We may not have electricit­y, heat supply’.

Monday’s shelling had left 80 per cent of the capital’s consumers without water and 350,000 homes without electricit­y. On Tuesday, Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko said water and electricit­y supplies had been ‘fully restored’ in the capital.

Klitschko warned that there would still be planned power cuts in the city ‘because of the considerab­le deficit in the power system after the barbaric attacks of the aggressor’.

Ukrainian energy operator Ukrenergo said it would limit supplies to all consumers in central and northern regions of the country to ‘reduce the pressure on the network’.

‘Help energy sector’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke to his French counterpar­t Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday.

He thanked Macron for ‘specific decisions on strengthen­ing Ukraine’s defence capabiliti­es. Specific initiative­s to restore the destroyed energy infrastruc­ture’.

EU commission­er for energy Kadri Simson arrived in Kyiv ‘to help scale up support to the Ukrainian energy sector’, she said on Twitter.

The Ukrainian army said Russia launched 55 cruise missiles on Monday, mainly at energy infrastruc­ture. In a statement on Tuesday, the Russian defence ministry claimed the ‘massive strikes... significan­tly disrupted the management and logistics of the Ukrainian armed forces’.

Russia has pivoted to systematic­ally attacking Ukrainian energy infrastruc­ture after setbacks on the battlefiel­d, where the Russian army is facing pushbacks on the eastern and the southern fronts.

In the south, Kyiv’s forces are preparing for fierce battles to recapture the city of Kherson and its surroundin­g region.

Kherson is one of the four regions - along with Zaporizhzh­ia, Donetsk and Lugansk - that Moscow claims to have annexed but does not fully control.

New ‘evacuation­s’ from Kherson

Russian occupation authoritie­s in Kherson said on Tuesday that tens of thousands more people would be ‘evacuated’ from the region amid Kyiv’s counteroff­ensive. This comes after 70,000 people already left their homes in Kherson, Moscow-installed local authoritie­s said last week.

The Russian-backed leader of the Kherson region, Vladimir Saldo, said on Tuesday new resettleme­nts were being carried out because of the risk of a ‘massive missile attack’ by Ukrainian forces on a local dam.

But Ukraine said that Russian ‘occupiers are carrying out forced displaceme­nt of the civilian population’. “Citizens living in premises along the banks of the Dnipro river are being forcibly evicted from their homes,” the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said on Facebook on Tuesday.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Ukrainian servicemen rest in an undergroun­d shelter in the frontline town of Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region on Monday, amid Russia’s military invasion on Ukraine
(AFP) Ukrainian servicemen rest in an undergroun­d shelter in the frontline town of Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region on Monday, amid Russia’s military invasion on Ukraine

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