Oman Daily Observer

UKRAINE BATTLES TO RESTORE POWER AFTER RUSSIAN BARRAGE

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Ukraine struggled on Thursday to repair its battered power and water services after Russia targeted the electricit­y grid with dozens of cruise missiles and temperatur­es plunged.

The Ukrainian energy system is on the brink of collapse and millions have been subjected to emergency blackouts for weeks due to systematic Russian bombardmen­ts of the grid.

The World Health Organisati­on has warned of “life-threatenin­g” consequenc­es and estimated that millions could leave their homes as a result.

Mayor Vitali Klitschko said more than two-thirds of the capital was still cut off on Thursday despite municipal workers in Kyiv restoring some water service overnight.

“Seventy per cent of the capital remains without electricit­y,” Klitschko said. “Energy companies are making every effort to return it as soon as possible,” he added.

Ukraine’s military accused Russian forces of firing around 70 cruise missiles at targets across the country on Wednesday and of deploying attack drones. Moscow’s targeting of Ukrainian power facilities is their latest strategy hoping to force capitulati­on after nine months of war that has seen Russian forces fail in most of their stated territoria­l objectives.

Wednesday’s attacks left multiple people dead, disconnect­ed three Ukrainian nuclear plants automatica­lly from the national grid and even provoked blackouts in neighbouri­ng Moldova, whose energy network is linked to Ukraine.

“So many victims, so many houses ruined,” 52-year-old Iryna Shyrokova said in Vyshgorod on the outskirts of Kyiv after the Russian strikes. “People have nowhere to live, nowhere to sleep. It’s cold. I can’t explain it. What for? We are also human beings,” she said, calling it “the scariest day”. Ukraine’s energy ministry said that all three nuclear facilities had been reconnecte­d by Thursday morning.

The governor of Kharkiv region — home to the country’s second largest city — said the eponymous city was suffering electricit­y supply issues and “emergency power shutdowns”. The head of the central region of Poltava, Dmytro Lunin, said authoritie­s were “working around the clock to restore power”.

“In the coming hours, we will start supplying energy to critical infrastruc­ture and then to the majority of households,” Lunin said. About 50 per cent of central Dnipropetr­ovsk region had electricit­y, governor Valentyn Reznichenk­o said. “The energy supply situation is complicate­d.

So shutdowns will continue in the region to reduce the pressure on the grid as much as possible,” Reznichenk­o warned.

Repair work was ongoing elsewhere, including in the Rivne, Cherkasy, Kirovograd and Zhytomyr regions, officials said.

Moscow announced separately it had issued tens of thousands of Russian passports to residents of four Ukrainian territorie­s, which President Vladimir Putin claimed to have annexed in September.

“More than 80,000 people received passports as citizens of the Russian Federation,” Valentina Kazakova, a migration official with the interior ministry, said in remarks carried by Russian news agencies. In September, Russia held so called referendum­s in Donetsk, Lugansk, Zaporizhzh­ia and Kherson and claimed residents had voted in favour of becoming subjects of Russia.

Putin formally annexed the territorie­s at a ceremony in the Kremlin later that month, even though his forces have never had full control over them. —

WHO has warned of “life-threatenin­g” consequenc­es and estimated that millions could leave their homes as a result ...................

 ?? Reuters ?? A local resident carries a kitten found in her flat in a residentia­l building destroyed by a Russian missile attack in the town of Vyshhorod, near Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. —
Reuters A local resident carries a kitten found in her flat in a residentia­l building destroyed by a Russian missile attack in the town of Vyshhorod, near Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. —

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