Springfield News-Sun

Ukraine to civilians: Leave liberated areas before winter

- By John Leicester

KYIV, UKRAINE — Ukrainian authoritie­s are evacuating civilians from recently liberated sections of the Kherson and Mykolaiv regions, fearing that a lack of heat, power and water due to Russian shelling will make conditions too unlivable this winter. The move came as rolling blackouts on Monday plagued most of the country.

Authoritie­s urged residents of the two southern regions, which Russian forces have been shelling for months, to move to safer areas in the central and and western parts of the country, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Monday. The government will provide transporta­tion, accommodat­ions and medical care, she added.

The evacuation­s are taking place more than a week after Ukraine recaptured the city of Kherson, on the western bank of the Dnieper River, and surroundin­g areas in a major battlefiel­d gain. Since then, heading into the winter, residents and authoritie­s alike are realizing just how much power and other infrastruc­ture the Russians destroyed before retreating or damaged just in the last week.

Ukraine is known for its brutal winter weather, and snow has already covered Kyiv, the capital, and other parts of the country.

Russian forces are fortifying their defense lines along Dnieper River’s eastern bank, fearing that Ukrainian forces will push deeper into the region. In the weeks before Ukraine’s successful counteroff­ensive, Russian-installed authoritie­s encouraged and helped tens of thousands of Kherson city residents to evacuate to Russian-held areas.

On Monday, Russian-installed authoritie­s urged other residents to evacuate an area on the river’s eastern bank that Moscow now controls, citing intense fighting in Kherson’s Kakhovskiy district.

Russia has been pounding Ukraine’s power grid and other infrastruc­ture from the air for weeks, causing widespread blackouts and leaving millions of Ukrainians without electricit­y, heat and water.

To cope with the power shortages, four-hour or longer power outages were scheduled Monday in 15 of Ukraine’s 27 regions, according to Volodymyr Kudrytsky, head of Ukraine’s state grid operator Ukrenergo. The latest available estimate is that more than 40% of the country’s energy facilities have been damaged by Russian missile strikes.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday repeated his calls for NATO nations and other allies to recognize Russia as a terrorist state, saying that its shelling of energy supplies was tantamount “to the use of a weapon of mass destructio­n.” Zelenskyy also again urged stricter sanctions against Russia and appealed for more air defense aid.

“The terrorist state needs to see that they do not stand a chance,” he told NATO’S 68th Parliament­ary Assembly meeting in Madrid in a video address.

Also Monday, Zelenskyy and his wife made a rare joint public appearance to observe a moment of silence and place candles at a Kyiv memorial for those killed in Ukraine’s pro-european Union mass protests in 2014. As bells rang in a memorial tribute, Ukraine’s first couple walked under a gray sky and on streets dusted with snow and ice up to a wall of stone plaques bearing the images and names of fallen protesters.

Their visit coincided with fresh reminders of more death and destructio­n on Ukrainian soil.

At least four civilians were killed and eight more were wounded in Ukraine over the past 24 hours, the deputy head of the country’s presidenti­al office, Kyrylo Tymoshenko, said Monday.

A Russian missile strike in the northeast Kharkiv region on Sunday night killed one person and wounded two, according to Kharkiv’s governor, as it hit a residentia­l building in the village of Shevchenko­ve.

One person was wounded overnight in the Dnipropetr­ovsk region, where Russian forces shelled the city of Nikopol and surroundin­g areas, Gov. Valentyn Reznichenk­o said. Nikopol lies across the river from the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant.

In the eastern Donetsk region, which Moscow partially controls, Russian forces shelled 14 towns and villages, the region’s Ukrainian governor said.

Heavy fighting was taking place near the Ukrainianh­eld city of Bakhmut, where a school was damaged. In Makiivka, which is under Russian control, an oil depot was hit and caught fire, local Moscow-installed authoritie­s said.

Russian-installed authoritie­s said more than 105,000 people in the province’s capital, Donetsk, were left without electricit­y on Monday after Ukrainian shelling damaged power lines. One person was killed, officials said, and 59 miners were trapped undergroun­d after power was cut to four coal mines.

In the neighborin­g Luhansk region, most of which is under Russian control, the Ukrainian army is advancing towards the key cities of Kreminna and Svatove, where the Russians have set up a defense line, according to Luhansk’s Ukrainian Gov. Serhiy Haidai.

“There are successes and the Ukrainian army is moving very slowly, but it will be much more difficult for Russians to defend themselves after Svatove and Kreminna (are retaken),” Haidai told Ukrainian television.

 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE/AP ?? Residents of the recently liberated city of Kherson collect water from the Dnipro river bank, near the frontline, southern Ukraine, Monday.
BERNAT ARMANGUE/AP Residents of the recently liberated city of Kherson collect water from the Dnipro river bank, near the frontline, southern Ukraine, Monday.

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