Russia targets Ukrainian energy infrastructure during Christmas Day attack
CBC
Russia launched a massive missile and drone barrage targeting Ukraine's energy infrastructure on Wednesday, striking a thermal power plant and prompting Ukrainians to take shelter in metro stations on Christmas morning.
The strikes on Ukrainian fuel and energy sources included 78 air-, ground- and sea-launched missiles as well as 106 Shaheds and other types of drones, Ukraine's air force said. It claimed to have intercepted 59 missiles and 54 drones, with 52 more drones being jammed.
"Putin deliberately chose Christmas for an attack. What could be more inhumane?" Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on X. "They continue to fight for a blackout in Ukraine."
In Russia, meanwhile, one woman died and three people were wounded after falling debris from a downed drone sparked a fire in a shopping mall in the city of Vladikavkaz.
The head of Russia's republic of North Ossetia-Alania, Sergey Menyaylo, said security footage showed that the explosion took place outside the Alania Mall Wednesday morning.
At least one person was killed in Russia's attack on Ukraine's Dnipro region, Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba said on messaging app Telegram, adding that heating was disrupted for 155 residential buildings in the Ivano-Frankivsk region. He also said 500,000 recipients or 2,677 buildings in Kharkiv region were without heat.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said one Russian missile passed Moldovan and Romanian airspace.
Ukrainian Energy Minister Herman Halushchenko said Russia again "massively attacks energy infrastructure," in a Facebook statement. Ukraine's Air Force alerted multiple missiles fired at Kharkiv, Dnipro and Poltava regions east of the country.
Halushchenko said the power distributor took the necessary measures to limit consumption. "As soon as the security situation allows, energy workers will establish the damage caused," he said.
The Russian Defence Ministry said on Wednesday it had conducted a "massive strike" on what it said were critical energy facilities in Ukraine that support the work of Kyiv's military-industrial complex.
"The aim of the strike was achieved. All facilities have been hit," the ministry said in a statement, adding that Russian forces had also taken control of the settlement of Vidrodzhennia in eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine's biggest private energy company, DTEK, said Russia struck one of their thermal power plants Wednesday morning, making it the 13th attack on Ukraine's power grid this year.
"Denying light and warmth to millions of peace-loving people as they celebrate Christmas is a depraved and evil act that must be answered," Maxim Timchenko, CEO of DTEK, wrote on his X account.
Ukrainian state energy operator, Ukrenergo, applied preemptive power outages across the country, due to a "massive missile attack," leading to electricity going out in several districts of the capital, Kyiv.
Every night for half of her life, Ghena Ali Mostafa has spent the moments before sleep envisioning what she'd do first if she ever had the chance to step back into the Syrian home she fled as a girl. She imagined herself laying down and pressing her lips to the ground, and melting into a hug from the grandmother she left behind. She thought about her father, who disappeared when she was 13.