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Kyiv hit, situation ‘critical’ as Russian airstrikes rock Ukraine

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Waves of Russian airstrikes have rocked Ukraine from east to west, prompting authorities to announce emergency blackoutsafter attacks on energy and other facilities knocked out power and, in the capital, struck residential buildings.

A senior Ukrainian official, Kyrylo Tymoshenko, described the situation on Tuesday as “critical” and urged Ukrainians to cut back on their power usage and “hang in there”.

Power provider DTEK announced emergency blackouts in the capital and authorities announced similar steps elsewhere, too.

A damaged building seen at the scene of Russian shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, November 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Andrew Kravchenko) (AP)

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said authorities found a body in one of the residential buildings struck there.

The barrage of strikes — including with missiles — came as air raid alerts were issued across Ukraine. At least 10 regions and cities reported that they were targeted.

Windows of an apartment building are illuminated during a blackout in central Kyiv, Ukraine, Monday, November 14, 2022. (AP Photo/Andrew Kravchenko) (AP)

As its battlefield losses mount, Russia has in recent months increasingly resorted to targeting Ukraine’s power grid, seemingly hoping to turn the approach of winter into a weapon by leaving people in the cold and dark.

Among regions where officials reported strikes were Lviv, Zhytomyr, Khmelnytskyi and Rivne in the west, and Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city in the northeast. Several missile strikes also hit Kryvyi Rih, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s native city, according to its mayor, Oleksandr Vilkul.

In Kyiv, video published by a presidential aide showed a five-storey, apparently residential building on fire, with flames licking through apartments. The city mayor said three residential buildings were struck and that air defence units shot down other missiles.

Residents gather during a visit of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kherson, southern Ukraine, Monday, Nov. 14, 2022. Ukraine’s retaking of Kherson was a significant setback for the Kremlin and it came some six weeks after Russian President Vladimir Putin annexed the Kherson region and three other provinces in southern and eastern Ukraine in breach of international law and declared them Russian territory. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue) (AP)

Klitschko added on his Telegram social media channel that medics and rescuers are being scrambled to the sites of the attacks.

Ukraine had seen a period of comparative calm since previous waves of drone and missile attacks several weeks ago.

The strikes came as authorities were already working furiously to get Kherson back on its feet and beginning to investigate alleged Russian abuses there and its surrounds.

The southern city is without power and water and the head of the UN human rights office’s monitoring mission in Ukraine, Matilda Bogner, on Tuesday decried a “dire humanitarian situation” there.

The retaking of Kherson was one of Ukraine’s biggest successes in the nearly nine months since Moscow’s invasion. (AP)

Speaking from Kyiv, Bogner said her teams are looking to travel to Kherson to try to verify allegations of nearly 80 cases of enforced disappearances and arbitrary detention it has turned up in the area and “understand whether the scale is in fact larger than what we have documented already”.

The head of the National Police of Ukraine, Igor Klymenko, said authorities are to start investigating reports from Kherson residents that Russian forces set up at least three alleged torture sites in now-liberated parts of the wider Kherson region and that “our people may have been detained and tortured there”.

“Mine clearance is currently underway. After that, I think, today, investigative actions will begin,” he said on Ukrainian TV.

The retaking of Kherson was one of Ukraine’s biggest successes in the nearly nine-month-old Russian invasion and dealt another stinging blow to the Kremlin. But large parts of eastern and southern Ukraine remain under Russian control and fighting continues.

Zelenskyy on Tuesday likened the recapture of the Kherson to the Allied landings in France on D-Day in World War II, saying both were watersheds on the road to eventual victory.

The liberation of Kherson — the only provincial capital that Moscow had seized — has allowed families to be reunited for the first time in months. But as winter approaches, the city’s remaining 80,000 residents are without heat, water or electricity, and short on food and medicine.

In the village of Tsentralne, Ukrainian family members reunite for the first time since Russian troops withdraw from the Kherson region, southern Ukraine, Sunday, Nov. 13, 2022. Ukraine’s retaking of Kherson was a significant setback for the Kremlin and it came some six weeks after Russian President Vladimir Putin annexed the Kherson region and three other provinces in southern and eastern Ukraine in breach of international law and declared them Russian territory. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue) (AP)

Still, US President Joe Biden called it a “significant victory” for Ukraine.

In his address to the G20, Zelenskyy called for the creation of a special tribunal to try Russian military and political figures for the crime of aggression against Ukraine, and the creation of an international mechanism to compensate Kyiv for wartime deaths and destruction.

Zelenskyy referred to the G20 meeting as “the G-19 summit,” adhering to Kyiv’s line that Russia should be excluded from the grouping.

Retribution against ‘collaborators’ after Ukrainian city liberated

“Everywhere, when we liberate our land, we see one thing — Russia leaves behind torture chambers and mass burials. … How many mass graves are there in the territory that still remains under the control of Russia?” Zelenskyy pointedly asked.

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