Russia strikes cities across Ukraine, targeting energy infrastructure

28 November 2024, 09:24

An Su-34 bomber of the Russian air force drops bombs on Ukrainian positions
Russia Ukraine. Picture: PA

Emergency power outages are being implemented nationwide, Ukrainian officials said.

Russia is engaged in a massive missile and drone attack against Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, officials said, as fears mount about Moscow’s intentions to devastate the country’s power generation capacity before winter.

Energy Minister Herman Halushchenko posted on Facebook: “Attacks on energy facilities are happening all over Ukraine.”

He added that emergency power outages are being implemented nationwide.

Explosions were reported in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Rivne, Khmelnytskyi, Lutsk, and many other cities in central and western Ukraine.

The head of Ukraine’s presidential office, Andrii Yermak, said in a Telegram post that Russia had stockpiled missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure and wage war against civilians during the cold season.

“They were helped by their crazy allies, including from North Korea,” he wrote.

One strike happened in the northern Volyn region. Power supply has been limited there, said Ivan Rudnytskyi, the regional military head.

Ukrainian officials have warned that Russia is stockpiling cruise and ballistic missiles, presumably for another pre-winter aerial campaign against Ukraine’s power grid. Ukrainian officials have in the past accused Russia of “weaponising winter”.

Around half of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure has been destroyed during the almost three years of war with Russia, and rolling electricity blackouts are common.

Kyiv’s Western allies have sought to help Ukraine protect power generation with air defence systems and funds for rebuilding.

Fellow soldiers carry a coffin of leading actor Petro Velykiy, 48, who was killed in a battle with the Russian troops in Russia’s Kursk region, during farewell ceremony in the music and drama theatre in Chernyhiv, Ukraine
Leading actor Petro Velykiy, 48, was killed in a battle with the Russian troops in Russia’s Kursk region (AP)

In previous years, Russia has targeted Ukraine’s electricity generation, aiming to deny civilians critical heating and drinking water supplies during the bitter winter months and break Ukrainian spirits.

The attacks also seek to hobble Ukraine’s defence industry as it seeks to produce missiles, drones and armoured vehicles, among other military assets.

The war has been going in Russia’s favour in recent months as its bigger army uses its advantages in manpower and equipment to push Ukrainian forces backwards in eastern areas, though its offensive has been slow and costly.

Western governments and South Korea say North Korea has intensified its military support for Russia in recent months.

The head of the Lviv region in western Ukraine, Maksym Kozytskyi, said the attack left more than half a million households without electricity.

Over 280,000 households in the north-western Rivne region were without electricity because of the attack, according to regional governor Oleksandr Koval.

Pilots of an Su-34 bomber of the Russian air force fly at an undisclosed location in Ukraine
Russian forces are targeting Ukrainian infrastructure as the typically bitter winter sets in (Russian Defence Ministry Press Service photo via AP)

Running water supplies were also patchy in affected areas. Some schools in Rivne city switched to online classes.

There were also strikes on the bordering Volyn region, where 215,000 households had no electricity, regional head Ivan Rudnytskyi said. All critical infrastructure that lost power was switched to generators.

Energy infrastructure was also targeted in the western Ivano-Frankivsk region, local officials said. Air defences were activated there, and emergency power outages were introduced.

Local officials ordered the opening of “points of invincibility” – shelter-type places where people can charge their phones and other electrical devices and get refreshments during blackouts.

In Kyiv, where the air raid alert lasted over nine hours, missile debris fell in one neighbourhood, local officials said. No casualties were reported.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Rescuers use heavy machine to clear mud from a road following a landslide that hit several vehicles and killed multiple people in Deli Serdang, North Sumatra

Rains trigger deadly landslide on Indonesia’s Sumatra island

A police car outside the Ramsey house in January 1997

Police deny sitting on evidence as Netflix doc examines JonBenet Ramsey killing

Candace Owens smiles and flashes a peace symbol

Conservative US influencer Candace Owens barred from New Zealand

Senior Constable Kristian White arrives at the New South Wales Supreme Court, in Sydney

Australian police officer who Tasered 95-year-old woman guilty of manslaughter

Mark Zuckerberg wearing tech glasses

Meta chief Zuckerberg dines with Trump at Mar-a-Lago

Arizona man charged after 'threatening to kill Donald Trump' and family in series of 'sinister' videos

Arizona man charged after 'threatening to kill Donald Trump' and family in series of 'sinister' videos

New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon

Police car crashes into New Zealand PM’s limousine, but no-one hurt

Exclusive
LBC's Henry Riley went to the Netherlands to find out more about assisted dying

Why are women in their twenties opting for assisted dying in the Netherlands? LBC went to find out

President-elect Donald Trump speaks

Trump says Mexican president has ‘agreed to stop migration’

Camp Century

Secret 'city under the ice' nuclear base rediscovered by Nasa in Greenland

Sean Combs (Ian West/PA)

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs denied bail a third time as he awaits sex trafficking trial

Donald Trump gestures while speaking

FBI investigating ‘numerous bomb threats’ against Trump administration nominees

Ukrainian soldiers taking part in training

White House urges Ukraine to lower draft age to help increase size of military

Unidentified drones seen over US military bases in UK as 'sinister' sightings continue

Unidentified drones seen over US military bases in UK as 'sinister' sightings continue

Norway’s Marius Borg Hoiby with his mother, Crown Princess Mette-Marit

Son of Norway’s crown princess released from custody amid rape allegations

Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he makes a televised statement

Israel plans to appeal against ICC arrest warrants for alleged Gaza war crimes