The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Shelling cuts off power again in liberated city of Kherson

- INNA VARENYTSIA

Russian shelling has cut off power in the recently liberated Ukrainian city of Kherson, days after it was retaken, amid Moscow’s drive to destroy key civilian infrastruc­ture as freezing weather sets in.

In Kyiv, mayor Vitali Klitschko warned the capital’s millions of residents they should stock up on water and preserved food to see them through a winter that could prove miserable if more energy infrastruc­ture is damaged.

He also urged people to consider leaving the city to stay with friends or family elsewhere, if possible.

“Trying months lie ahead. The enemy still possesses substantia­l resources,” defense minister Oleksiy Reznikov said, but he added that “signs are accumulati­ng that (Russia) needs a pause at all costs”.

Ukraine has faced an onslaught of Russian artillery fire and drone attacks since early October.

The shelling has been especially intense in Kherson since Kremlin forces withdrew and Ukraine’s army reclaimed the southern city almost three weeks ago.

Ukraine’s presidenti­al office said yesterday that at least two civilians had been killed and six wounded nationwide by the latest Russian shelling.

In Kherson, a 70-year-old woman was killed in her apartment and a 64-yearold man was wounded on the street. A 15-year-old boy died when a hospital in the north-eastern town of Bilopillia was hit, the presidenti­al office said.

In the eastern Dnipropetr­ovsk region, Russian forces fired “from evening till morning” at Ukrainian-held towns facing the Russianocc­upied Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant across the Dnieper River, the regional governor said.

“Eight shelling attacks per night. The Russians from evening till morning struck the Nikopol area with (multiple rocket launchers) and heavy artillery. Two districts – Marhanets and Chervonohr­yhorivka – came under enemy fire,” governor Valentyn Reznichenk­o wrote.

Elsewhere in eastern Ukraine, Russian forces continued their attempts to encircle the Donetsk region city of Bakhmut, focusing on several villages around it and trying to cut a key highway.

Andriy Yermak, head of Ukraine’s presidenti­al office, said Russia released 50 Ukrainian prisoners of war and Ukraine turned over the same number yesterday as the fighting continued.

In Berlin, Nato secretaryg­eneral Jens Stoltenber­g praised the “heroic

resistance of the Ukrainian people” against Russia’s attacks, saying that with the help of allies “Ukraine has made significan­t gains” on the battlefiel­d.

“But we should not underestim­ate Russia,” he warned in a speech at the Berlin Security Conference.

“Russian missiles and drones continue to rain down on Ukrainian cities, civilians and critical infrastruc­ture, causing enormous human suffering as winter sets in.”

The Nato chief said Russian President Vladimir

Putin had made “two big strategic mistakes” when he invaded Ukraine in February: underestim­ating Ukraine and underestim­ating the support Nato and its allies were willing to provide so the country could defend itself.

 ?? ?? Relatives of Elizaveta, 94, transport her to the evacuation train in Kherson.
Relatives of Elizaveta, 94, transport her to the evacuation train in Kherson.

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