The Denver Post

Russia attacks electrical facilities, causing outages

- By Hanna Arhirova and Jim Heintz

KYIV, UKRAINE>> Russia attacked electrical power facilities in much of Ukraine, including the country’s largest hydroelect­ric plant, causing widespread outages and killing at least five people, officials said Friday.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said more than 60 drones and about 90 rockets were used in the attack.

The attack came a day after Russia launched 31 missiles in a single attack on the capital. It was the largest assault on Ukraine’s energy infrastruc­ture during the more than two-yearlong war, said Volodymyr Kudrytsky, leader of the national utility Ukrenergo.

“This attack was especially dangerous because the adversary combined different means of attack, kamikaze drones, ballistic and cruise missiles,” he told The Associated Press. He said the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest, suffered the most damage.

Last winter, Russia targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastruc­ture, resulting in frequent blackouts across the country. Many had warned that Russia might repeat this strategy this winter. But instead, Russia has launched massive missile and drone attacks primarily directed at Ukraine’s defense industry.

Every large-scale air attack depletes Ukraine’s capabiliti­es to repel Russian missiles. Zelenskyy has been urging Ukraine’s Western allies for weeks to provide additional air defense systems and ammunition amid delays in aid from the U.S.

“With Russian missiles, there are no delays, like with aid packages to our state. Shaheds don’t have indecisive­ness, as do some politician­s. It is important to understand the cost of delays and postponed decisions,” Zelenskyy said, referring to Iranian-made Shahed drones, which are widely used by Russia in the war.

The attacks caused a fire at the Dnipro Hydroelect­ric Station, which supplies electricit­y to the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant, Europe’s largest nuclear power installati­on.

The main external power line to the plant was cut off, Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said Friday, but Ukraine’s nuclear energy operator said it was restored several hours later.

The plant is occupied by Russian troops, and fighting around the plant has been a constant concern because of the potential for a nuclear accident.

The dam at the hydroelect­ric station was not in danger of breaching, the country’s hydroelect­ric authority said. A dam breach could not only disrupt supplies to the nuclear plant but could cause severe flooding similar to what occurred last year when a major dam at Kakhovka further down the Dnieper collapsed.

Three people were killed and at least eight wounded in the Russian attack, said Zaporizhzh­ia regional Gov. Ivan Fedorov.

Attacks on energy facilities in the Kharkiv region caused blackouts in the country’s second-largest city and disrupted critical air-raid siren systems. Regional Gov. Oleh Syniehubov said police would inform residents of possible air raids through loudspeake­rs and walkie-talkies and that alerts would be sent to cellular phones.

Other attacks were reported in areas of western Ukraine far from the front lines. Two people died in the Khmelnytsk­yi region, according to the Internal Affairs Ministry.

The power outages left 1,060 miners trapped in the Dnipropetr­ovsk region, and an evacuation was underway, according to private energy company DTEK.

“The world sees the targets of Russian terrorists as clearly as possible: power plants and energy supply lines, a hydroelect­ric dam, ordinary residentia­l buildings, even a trolleybus. Russia is fighting against the ordinary life of people,” Zelenskyy said Friday on the Telegram messaging app.

Russian officials said Friday that one person died and at least three were wounded in Ukrainian shelling of areas near the border.

The governor of the Belgorod region, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said a woman was killed when a shell hit nearby while she was walking her dogs and that two others were wounded. The town of Tetkino in the Kursk region was shelled, wounding one person, said Gov. Roman Starovoit.

Both regions have been subject to shelling and drone attacks in recent weeks, and officials have said attempts by Ukrainian fighters to cross into Russia have been repelled.

Russian officials refer to the conflict as a “special military operation,” eschewing the word “war.” But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attracted attention on Friday by telling a Russian newspaper that “when the collective West became a participan­t in this on the side of Ukraine, for us it already became a war.”

He later told reporters in a conference call that “This is not connected with any kind of juridical change. It is de jure an SVO,” the Russian initialism for special military operation.

Peskov and President Vladimir Putin occasional­ly have used the word “war” about the fighting in Ukraine.

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