Gulf News

YOUNG AND DARING

SWEDISH INVESTIGAT­ORS FIND TRACES OF EXPLOSIVES AT SITES WHERE GAS PIPELINES WERE RUPTURED

- STOCKHOLM — Reuters

■ Young military cadets dance after a ceremony to receive their shoulder marks in Kyiv, Ukraine, yesterday. Ukraine said that almost half of its power infrastruc­ture was in need of repair after weeks of Russian attacks that have disrupted electricit­y supplies to millions as temperatur­es plunge.

Investigat­ors have found traces of explosives at the site of the damaged Nord Stream gas pipelines, confirming sabotage had taken place, a Swedish prosecutor said yesterday.

Swedish and Danish authoritie­s are investigat­ing four holes in the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines which link Russia and Germany via the Baltic Sea and have become a flashpoint in the Ukraine crisis as gas supplies in Europe run short.

Denmark last month said a preliminar­y investigat­ion had shown that the leaks were caused by powerful explosions.

“Analysis that has now been carried out shows traces of explosives on several of the objects that were recovered,” the Swedish Prosecutio­n Authority said in a statement, adding that the findings establish the incident as “gross sabotage”.

Looking deeper

It said the continued probe would determine whether it would be possible to identify those responsibl­e.

Cooperatio­n with authoritie­s in Sweden as well as in other countries was going very well, lead prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist said.

The prosecutor’s office declined to give further comment, including on which explosives were believed to have been used to damage the pipelines.

Russia will wait until a full damage assessment is done before deciding on repairs, if any, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said yesterday.

“The very fact that data has already begun to come in, in favour of confirming a subversive act or a terrorist act ... once again confirms the informatio­n that the Russian side has,” Peskov told his daily call with reporters.

“It is very important not to stop, it is very important to find the one behind this explosion.” Neither Gazprom, nor the Nord Stream 1 and 2 replied to Reuters requests for comment.

Seismic episode

Seismologi­sts in Denmark and Sweden previously said they had registered tremors in the immediate vicinity of the leaks and that the signals did not resemble those from earthquake­s.

Danish police declined to comment on the Swedish findings. The September 26 ruptures of the seabed pipelines, spewing gas into the ocean that bubbled to the surface in the week that followed, triggered warnings of public hazard and fears of environmen­tal damage.

A section measuring at least 50 metres is missing from Nord Stream 1, Swedish daily Expressen reported on October 18 after filming what it said were the first publicly released images of the damage.

Russia’s defence ministry last month said that British navy personnel blew up the pipelines, a claim that London said was false and designed to distract from Russian military failures in Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has said 10 million people are without power after a fresh wave of missile strikes by Russia. At least seven people were killed in the strikes, with the number expected to rise. “We are doing everything to normalise the supply,” Zelensky said in his nightly address.

Ukraine’s air defence managed to shoot down six cruise missiles and five drones, Zelensky added.

On Thursday, Russia pounded Ukraine with a fresh missile barrage, hitting more energy installati­ons and civilian buildings less than two days after one of its heaviest bombardmen­ts yet.

This has been a recent Russian tactic following setbacks on the battlefiel­d, and its impact is starting to be felt more acutely.

 ?? AFP ??
AFP
 ?? ?? An Ukrainian soldier fires an anti-tank missile at an undisclose­d location in the country’s Donetsk region, on Thursday.
An Ukrainian soldier fires an anti-tank missile at an undisclose­d location in the country’s Donetsk region, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates