The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
Ukrainians start winter evacuation
Ukrainian authorities have started evacuating civilians from the recently-liberated areas of the Kherson region and the neighbouring Mykolaiv province, fearing that damage to infrastructure is too severe for people to endure in the coming winter.
Residents of the two southern regions, which have been regularly shelled in the past months by Russian forces, have been advised to move to safer areas in the central and western parts of the country, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister Iryna Vereshchuk said.
The Ukrainian government will provide transportation, accommodation and medical care, she added.
The evacuations come just over a week after Ukraine retook the city of Kherson and areas around it. While the liberation of the area marked a major battlefield gain, the evacuations highlight the difficulties Ukraine is facing following heavy Russian shelling of its power infrastructure as winter weather sets in.
Russia has been pounding Ukraine’s power grid and other infrastructure from the air, causing widespread blackouts and leaving millions of Ukrainians without heat, power or water as frigid cold and snow blankets the capital, Kyiv and other cities.
More than 40% of the country’s energy facilities were damaged by Russian missile strikes in recent weeks.
On Sunday, powerful explosions from shelling shook the Zaporizhzhia region, the site of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant.
The IAEA, the global nuclear watchdog, called for “urgent measures to help prevent a nuclear accident” in the Russianoccupied facility.
Kyiv and Moscow blamed each other for the shelling that came after weeks of relative calm in the area that has been the site of fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces since Russia invaded on February 24.
The fighting has raised the spectre of nuclear catastrophe ever since Russian troops occupied the plant during the early days of the war.
In fighting elsewhere, at least four civilians were killed and eight more were wounded in Ukraine over the past 24 hours, deputy head of the country’s presidential office Kyrylo Tymoshenko said.
A Russian missile strike in the northeast Kharkiv region on Sunday night killed one person and left two more wounded, according to Kharkiv governor Oleh Syniehubov.
The strike hit a residential building in the Shevchenkove village, Syniehubov said, killing a 38-year-old woman.
One person was wounded overnight in the Dnipropetrovsk region, where Russian forces shelled the city of Nikopol and areas around it.