Putin says power grid strikes in Ukraine were in response to Crimea drone attack
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Kyiv plunged into darkness following a military strike that partially brought down the power infrastructure on Oct 31.
PHOTO: AFP
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KYIV - President Vladimir Putin said Russian strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure and a decision to freeze participation in a Black Sea grain export programme drone attack on Moscow’s fleet in Crimea
Mr Putin told a news conference on Monday that Ukrainian drones had used the same marine corridors that grain ships transited under the UN-brokered deal.
Kyiv has not claimed responsibility for the attack and denies using the grain programme’s security corridor for military purposes. The United Nations said no grain ships were using the Black Sea route on Saturday when Russia said its vessels in Crimea were attacked.
Meanwhile, on the 250th day of a war that has ground on since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb 24,
Russian forces shelled infrastructure in at least six Ukrainian regions on Monday, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said in a statement on Facebook.
“That’s not all we could have done,” Mr Putin said at the televised news conference, indicating more action could follow.
Ukrainian officials said energy infrastructure, including hydroelectric dams, was hit, knocking out power, heat and water supplies.
Mr Oleh Synehubov, the governor of the north-eastern Kharkiv region, said on Telegram that about 140,000 residents were without power after the attacks, including about 50,000 residents of Kharkiv city, the second largest city in Ukraine.
Ukraine’s military said it had shot down 44 of 50 Russian missiles. But strikes left 80 per cent of Kyiv without running water, the authorities said. Ukrainian police said 13 people were injured in the latest attacks.
Late on Tuesday, Kyiv’s mayor said water and electricity supplies have been restored in the capital, a day after being knocked out by Russian missile strikes.
“Water supplies to the homes of Kyiv residents have been fully restored.... Electricity supplies in Kyiv have also been restored,” Mr Vitali Klitschko said on social media.
But Mr Klitschko said there would still be planned power cuts in the city “because of the considerable deficit in the power system after the barbaric attacks of the aggressor”.
A damaged power substation in Vyshhorod, north of Kyiv, on Oct. 31, 2022.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
Presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovich on Tuesday called the bombardment “one of the most massive shellings of our territory by the army of the Russian Federation”.
But he noted that thanks to improved air defences, including with Western aid, “the destruction is not as critical as it could be”.
Ukraine says Russian strikes over the past month have destroyed around a third of its power stations and has urged Ukrainians to save on electricity as much as possible.
For the past three weeks, Russia has attacked Ukrainian civil infrastructure using expensive long-range missiles and cheap Iranian-made “suicide drones” that fly at a target and detonate.
Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said 18 targets, mostly energy infrastructure, were hit in missile and drone strikes on 10 Ukrainian regions on Monday.
Wheat prices jump
Moscow announced the suspension on Saturday of its role in the grain programme after accusing Ukraine of using air and maritime drones to target vessels in the Bay of Sevastopol. It suggested one of the drones may have been launched from a civilian vessel chartered to export food from Ukrainian ports.
“Ukraine must guarantee that there will be no threats to civilian vessels or to Russian supply vessels,” Mr Putin said on Monday, noting that under the terms of the grain deal Russia is responsible for ensuring security.
Ukrainian and UN officials said 12 ships carrying grain sailed from Ukrainian ports on Monday despite Moscow’s move. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said his country would continue implementing the programme, brokered by the United Nations and Turkey in July and aimed at easing global hunger.
“We understand what we offer the world. We offer stability on the food production market,” Mr Zelensky told a news conference. He earlier said Moscow was “blackmailing the world with hunger”. Russia denies that is its aim.
Ukrainian and UN officials said 12 ships carrying grain sailed from Ukrainian ports on Oct 31.
PHOTO: REUTERS
The US State Department said on Monday that food prices rose because of uncertainty around the Black Sea grain deal and that Russia’s suspension of its participation was having “immediate, harmful” impacts on global food security.
The news that Moscow was pulling out of the deal had sent global wheat prices soaring by more than 5 per cent on Monday morning.
Nevertheless, the continued flow of grain exports from Ukrainian ports suggested a new world food crisis had been averted for now.
Ukraine and Russia are both among the world’s largest exporters of food. For three months, the UN-backed deal has guaranteed Ukrainian exports can reach markets, lifting a Russian de facto blockade.
The ships that sailed on Monday included one hired by the UN World Food Programme to bring 40,000 tonnes of grain to drought-hit Africa.
Local residents fill jugs and bottles at a public water well after a Russian missile attack in Kyiv on Oct 31, 2022.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
Also on Monday, the Russian Defence Ministry said Moscow had completed the partial military mobilisation announced by Mr Putin in September and no further call-up notices would be issued.
Mr Putin announced Russia’s first mobilisation since World War II on Sept 21, one of a series of escalatory measures in response to Ukrainian gains on the battlefield.
Defence Minister Shoigu said at the time that some 300,000 additional personnel would be drafted. But the mobilisation has proceeded chaotically and thousands have fled Russia to avoid being drafted. REUTERS

