Western Mail

Russia shells Ukrainian city hit by dam collapse

- VASILISA STEPANENKO & JAMEY KEATEN Associated Press reporters newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

RUSSIAN forces have shelled a southern Ukrainian city that was inundated in a catastroph­ic dam collapse, Ukrainian officials said, forcing a suspension of some rescue work hours after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy travelled to the area to assess the damage.

At least five people have died, many are homeless and tens of thousands are without drinking water after the Kakhovka dam’s destructio­n.

Ukraine accused Russia of blowing up the facility, which Moscow’s forces controlled, while Russia said Ukraine bombarded it.

The ensuing flooding has ruined crops, displaced land mines, wrought widespread environmen­tal damage and set the stage for long-term electricit­y shortages.

In Kherson city, the largest municipali­ty affected, repeated Russian shelling echoed overhead early yesterday afternoon not far from a square where emergency crews and volunteers were dispensing aid.

Some evacuation points in the city were hit, wounding eight people, according to Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs.

As shells landed in floodwater­s, rescue workers temporaril­y suspended efforts to retrieve stranded residents and pets in an area that Mr Zelenskyy had visited only hours earlier.

“The strikes began during evacuation of the residents, whose houses were flooded,” the ministry said.

“Russia has abandoned people in calamity in the occupied part of the Kherson region. It continues to prevent Ukraine from saving the most valuable – human lives.”

The dam lay along Dnieper River, a pivotal waterway that forms part of the frontline between Russian and Ukrainian forces.

In recent weeks, Ukraine intensifie­d shelling of Russian positions, signalling a long-expected counteroff­ensive could finally be getting underway. Kyiv has been silent about the start of any such campaign.

Amid the fighting, both sides were coping with the fallout from the burst dam.

Yesterday, Ukrainian rescue workers stepped up efforts to get drinking water, medical care and other support to beleaguere­d residents.

Mr Zelenskyy travelled to Kherson to see the efforts firsthand. He visited an aid distributi­on point and a medical facility and ordered Ukrainian officials to provide a “fair valuation” of the devastatio­n to help compensate residents, his office said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin “has no plans at the current moment” to visit the affected Moscow-occupied areas, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalist­s.

Five residents of the Russian-occupied city of Nova Kakhovka have died, its Kremlin-appointed mayor said yesterday.

Vladimir Leontyev said on Russian state TV two other people who had gone missing have been found.

The collapse of the Kakhovka hydroelect­ric dam and emptying of its reservoir on the river have added to the misery that the region has suffered for more than a year from artillery and missile attacks.

The United Nations and local authoritie­s say access to fresh water and avoidance of contact with water contaminat­ed by explosives, chemicals from industrial sites were among the most immediate concerns.

Officials say more than 6,000 people have been evacuated from dozens of inundated cities, towns and villages on both sides of the river.

The true scale of the disaster is yet to emerge in an affected area that was home to more than 60,000 people.

In areas that they administer, Russian-appointed authoritie­s said nearly two dozen people have been admitted to hospital, 4,280 people have been evacuated and some 14,000 buildings have been flooded.

Russian officials say the destructio­n of the dam, which created a giant reservoir of water used for irrigation and drinking water, will eventually halt fresh water supplies to Russiancon­trolled Crimea, even though the peninsula has enough fresh water for now – with its reservoirs 80% full.

Ukrainian authoritie­s cut off fresh water supplies to Crimea after Moscow’s illegal annexation of the peninsula in 2014, and Mr Putin cited the need to restore them among the main reasons for his decision to invade Ukraine.

Regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin said the average level of flooding yesterday morning in the region was more than 18 feet and roughly 231 square miles of the region were submerged – more than two-thirds of that on the Russian-controlled eastern bank.

“People are tired ... (they) have no desire to flee to other regions of Ukraine,” Mr Prokudin said.

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted to say the destructio­n of the dam was an “attack” and an “atrocious act” without saying who is to blame. Paris said it was sending aid including water purifiers, 500,000 water purificati­on tablets and hygiene kits to help people displaced by the disaster.

Ukrainian officials have accused Russia of purposely destroying the dam.

President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, a key ally of Mr Putin, backed the Russian claim that Ukraine blew up the dam to distract attention from what it described as a botched Ukrainian attempt to launch a counteroff­ensive.

Ukrainian authoritie­s have largely kept quiet about recent developmen­t on the battlefiel­d amid growing reports of intensifie­d fighting that could add up to the long-awaited counteroff­ensive.

In the eastern region of Donbas, the battle for Bakhmut was continuing with Ukrainian troops advancing on the flanks of the city, which was devastated in months of fighting – one of the epicentres of the war.

Ukraine’s 3rd Separate Assault Brigade, in a Telegram post yesterday, said Ukrainian forces have advanced three-quarters of a mile.

 ?? Alex Babenko/Getty Images ?? > A local resident floats on a raft near his house yesterday in Kherson, Ukraine, after the city was flooded following the collapse of the Kakhovka dam
Alex Babenko/Getty Images > A local resident floats on a raft near his house yesterday in Kherson, Ukraine, after the city was flooded following the collapse of the Kakhovka dam

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