The Manila Times

Strikes leave Ukrainians in cold, dark

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KYIV: Millions of Ukrainians in more than a dozen provinces are experienci­ng severe power disruption­s as temperatur­es plunge and almost half of the East European country’s energy infrastruc­ture is in need of REPAIR AFTER WEEKS OF RUSSIAN ATTACKS, OFfiCIALS in Kyiv said on Friday.

Russia, meanwhile, accused Kyiv’s forces of executing a group of its soldiers who were surrenderi­ng to Ukraine in what Moscow described as a “massacre” that amounted to a war crime.

The assessment by Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal of the widespread damage to the country’s power grid comes after weeks of sustained Russian attacks on its energy infrastruc­ture.

“On November 15 alone, Russia fired about 100 missiles at Ukrainian cities. Nearly half of our energy system has been disabled,” Shmyhal said, appealing to European allies for support.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said 17 provinces and the capital Kyiv were struggling with power cuts, but engineers were working to repair the grid and blackouts were becoming less frequent.

The Russian Defense Ministry said it was only targeting militaryli­nked facilities and that a series of long-range and precision strikes the day before had “hit exactly the designated objects.”

The Kremlin this week blamed the blackouts and their civilian impact on Kyiv’s refusal to negotiate with Moscow, not on Russian missile attacks.

But Zelenskyy dismissed the idea of a “short truce” with Russia, saying it would only make things worse.

“Russia is now looking for a short truce, a respite to regain strength. Someone may call this the war’s end, but such a respite will only worsen the situation,” he said in remarks broadcast at the Halifax Internatio­nal Security Forum in Canada on Friday.

“A truly real, long-lasting and honest peace can only be the result of the complete demolition of Russian aggression,” the president added.

War crimes

Nearly nine months of fighting between Ukraine and Russia have spurred credible allegation­s of war crimes from both sides.

The latest accusation­s came on Friday when Russia accused Ukrainian troops of executing some 10 prisoners of war.

Moscow’s Defense Ministry statement referred to videos circulatin­g on Russian-language social media that purport to show the bodies of Russian servicemen who had surrendere­d and were then killed.

It said this “brutal murder” was not “the first and not the only war crime” committed by Ukrainian forces.

Zelenskyy did not address Moscow’s claim in his statement on Friday.

Ukraine has repeatedly accused Russian forces of committing “war crimes” during their occupation of parts of the Kyiv region in March and also in Kharkiv in the northeast and Kherson in the south, which have been recently reclaimed by Ukrainian troops.

A study by a Yale University group published on Friday documented 226 extrajudic­ial detentions and disappeara­nces in Kherson after Russia seized the province in what appeared to be a “premeditat­ed” campaign.

“These findings demonstrat­e a range of alarming allegation­s about the treatment of detainees, including allegation­s of deaths in custody, the widespread use of torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment, pillage from detainees (and) sexual and genderbase­d violence,” the report said.

About a quarter of the 226 people were allegedly subjected to torture and four died in custody, according to the study, which said most of the acts were perpetrate­d by the Russian military and the Federal Security Service.

Following Ukraine’s recapture of part of the Kherson region, Russia said on Friday it was strengthen­ing positions in Crimea, which it annexed in 2014.

Moscow used the peninsula, which hosts several important Russian military bases, as a launching pad for its February 24 invasion.

The announceme­nt came as Ukrainian forces were pushing a counteroff­ensive in the south toward Crimea and after last week’s retaking of Kherson, the capital of the region that borders the strategic peninsula.

With electrical and water supplies cut to the city following the destructio­n of key utilities by the retreating Russians, residents have been struggling to keep warm as winter sets in.

Zelenskyy said the government has opened two relief stations where residents can keep warm, drink hot tea and charge their cellular phones. He promised more will be opened soon.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? RELIEF FOR RESIDENTS
Local residents gather around a vehicle to receive aid in the center of the city of Kherson, southern Ukraine on Friday, Nov. 18, 2022.
AFP PHOTO RELIEF FOR RESIDENTS Local residents gather around a vehicle to receive aid in the center of the city of Kherson, southern Ukraine on Friday, Nov. 18, 2022.

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