Los Angeles Times

Glimmer of hope in Kyiv

Ukrainians shrug off city’s blackouts, celebrate Russian pullback

- By Laura King

KYIV, Ukraine — As night fell, a lone street performer in a pool of lantern light raised her voice in song. In an inky pedestrian underpass, the only illuminati­on was a flower seller’s display of blooms, backlit by LED lights. Dog walkers carefully affixed glowsticks to their pets’ collars. Passersby picked their way over rough cobbleston­es, wielding cellphone flashlight­s as they went.

With winter’s gloom beginning to settle over the country, Ukraine’s capital is plunged nightly into neardarkne­ss by rolling power cuts meant to help preserve an energy infrastruc­ture devastated in recent weeks by Russian drone and missile strikes.

As the war nears its ninemonth mark, President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused his Russian counterpar­t, Vladimir Putin, of “energy terrorism” — trying to break his compatriot­s’ spirits by plunging them into cold and darkness.

Instead, morale has soared. On Friday, rejoicing broke out across Ukraine as a Russian pullback from the strategic southern city of Kherson — and the entry of a vanguard of Ukrainian troops into the city — marked the latest in a string of humiliatin­g defeats for Moscow’s forces.

Although Ukrainian officials warn that it could take days or weeks to clear remaining Russian troops and booby traps, the impending recapture of Kherson, the

only regional capital Russia had managed to seize, marked a “historic day,” Zelensky said in his nightly address.

In Kherson, locals greeted arriving Ukrainian troops with cheers, tears and ecstatic embraces. Hundreds of miles away in Kyiv, the main square erupted in celebratio­n — in darkness broken only by television news crew lights.

Putin’s government has alternated between declaring that the electrical grid that powers cities and towns is a legitimate military target and denying that it deliberate­ly takes aim at civilian infrastruc­ture. Kremlinlin­ked propagandi­sts, meanwhile, have openly gloated over the prospect of sowing hardship in a capital that Russian forces tried and failed to seize early in the war — a city where life had resumed many trappings of normality in the late summer and early fall.

Although civilian infrastruc­ture across the country has taken heavy hits throughout the conflict, the campaign to starve Ukraine of power came to a head last month, with a blitz of missile and drone strikes hitting Kyiv and its environs. Nationwide, energy-production capacity was cut by about 40%, leaving millions facing outages.

In Kyiv and elsewhere, that has led to regular rolling blackouts meant to stabilize the grid. In some districts, scheduled cutoffs lasting four hours at a time leave people without power for up to 12 hours a day. Even in neighborho­ods that have electricit­y, closed stores turn off their lights and extinguish most neon signage. Entire office towers and apartment blocks go dark.

In many cafes and restaurant­s, dining by candleligh­t is a matter of practical necessity rather than romance. A plethora of city landmarks usually proudly spotlighte­d — the golden spires of centurieso­ld cathedrals, the soaring column commemorat­ing Ukraine’s 1991 independen­ce — are ghostly silhouette­s, dark outlines against a darker sky.

Dusk falls hard and early, with the sun setting a bit after 4 p.m. But earlier this week in a Kyiv park, a couple strolling hand-in-hand stood in the evening chill, gazing at a luminous full moon. Against a dark hillside backdrop, the tilting, lit-up windows of passing buses resembled some kind of avant-garde mobile art installati­on. Headlights pierced the murk, and just as swiftly faded.

Although the lack of power disrupts daily lives — commerce curtailed, homeschool­ing knocked offline, homemade meals left halfbaked when the electric oven suddenly shuts down — Kyiv residents tend to stress their awareness that people living in battle zones in the country’s south and east suffer far harsher privations.

“There are grannies in cold cellars, kids who’ve forgotten what toys even look like,” said Olena Tymchenko, a 63-year-old single mother of a teenager. “How can I complain? We’re managing.”

With streetligh­ts few and far between, a busy multilane road leading into the city turns into a whiteknuck­le speedway at nightfall. The accident rate has risen by a fifth; police implore pedestrian­s to wear a safety vest or carry a flashlight, and for drivers to stay below the speed limit.

“You need to remember that you need enough time to stop the car,” regional Police Chief Andriy Nebytov said at a briefing last week. “Please remember that it is dark on the streets!”

The biting cold of Ukrainian winter is still weeks away, although lowering gray skies, chilly fog and temperatur­es dipping into the 40s are a harbinger. The Kyiv municipali­ty aims to set up 1,000 shelters that will be able to offer not only protection against bombs, but a place to warm up.

Kyiv municipal authoritie­s caused a stir last week when they said that if the grid were to break down completely, the city of some 3 million people might have to be evacuated, primarily because water taps and sewage treatment depend on electricit­y. But they quickly tempered that warning with upbeat assurances that hundreds of foreign-donated generators were arriving, and repairs to airstrike damaged power installati­ons were proceeding as quickly as possible.

Even so, authoritie­s urged people to think about a countrysid­e sojourn, if they could.

“If you have extended family or friends outside Kyiv, where there is autonomous water supply, an oven, heating, please bear in mind the possibilit­y of staying there for a while,” said Vitali Klitschko, the heavyweigh­t boxer turned mayor.

Earlier this week, Yaroslav Boydyanski and his girlfriend, Yulia Khumara, both 20, were inspecting a popular attraction: a display of wrecked, captured Russian military vehicles set up by authoritie­s in the square fronting the sky-blue monastery of St. Michael.

Visiting from the central city of Dnipro, the two wanted to fit in some sightseein­g before dark. They weren’t bothered by the recent missile strikes or ongoing power outages, they said.

“We’re a strong people,” Boydyanski said. “We’ll survive this, and everything else.”

“We will,” Khumara said. “But you look at these things” — she gestured toward a ruined, rusted tank turret — “and you don’t forget that war is always close by.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? VLAD KHLOPENKO takes a work break at dusk Wednesday in Kyiv, Ukraine, which has faced rolling blackouts due to Russian attacks on the energy grid. “How can I complain?” one mother says. “We’re managing.”
Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times VLAD KHLOPENKO takes a work break at dusk Wednesday in Kyiv, Ukraine, which has faced rolling blackouts due to Russian attacks on the energy grid. “How can I complain?” one mother says. “We’re managing.”
 ?? ?? PEOPLE VISIT St. Sophia Cathedral square in Kyiv. President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday hailed a “historic day” as troops began to retake Kherson city.
PEOPLE VISIT St. Sophia Cathedral square in Kyiv. President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday hailed a “historic day” as troops began to retake Kherson city.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? THE MOON shines brightly over downtown Kyiv, helping fend off darkness in Ukraine’s capital Wednesday. The city has faced rolling blackouts to protect an energy infrastruc­ture damaged by Russian missile strikes.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times THE MOON shines brightly over downtown Kyiv, helping fend off darkness in Ukraine’s capital Wednesday. The city has faced rolling blackouts to protect an energy infrastruc­ture damaged by Russian missile strikes.

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