Russia declared terror state by EU lawmakers, batters Ukraine grid

Russia declared terror state by EU lawmakers, batters Ukraine grid, Fresh Russian airstrikes battered Ukraine’s already decrepit electricity infrastructure, resulting in blackouts throughout the war-torn country and in neighboring Moldova. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky referred to these attacks as “an obvious crime against humanity” in a statement to the UN. After weeks of Russian bombardment, the Ukrainian energy system has been destroyed, causing millions to go without electricity for extended periods of time. The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that the country’s top priority this winter will be “survival.”

Russia declared terror state by EU lawmakers, batters Ukraine grid

 

Russia declared terror state by EU lawmakers, batters Ukraine grid

 

Russian soldiers reportedly used attack drones in addition to firing about 70 cruise missiles at locations throughout Ukraine on Wednesday, according to the Ukrainian military. In addition to affecting power supplies in the country’s southern and eastern areas, the strikes also caused water and electricity outages in Kyiv, the country’s capital. Zelensky told the UN Security Council late on Wednesday via video link, “When we have temperatures below zero and millions of people without access to energy supplies, heating, or water, this is an apparent crime against humanity.”

The strikes killed several people and disconnected three nuclear power stations, officials said. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said the latest Russian salvo was a response to a decision by the European Parliament to recognise Russia as a “state sponsor of terrorism” over its nine-month invasion of Ukraine, and its call for the 27-nation EU to follow. The French Ambassador to the United Nations called the Russian attacks on the Ukrainian energy system “a clear violation of humanitarian law”.

“The objective is clear: in the face of military defeats, to sow terror,” Nicolas de Riviere told the UN Security Council on Wednesday. “The continuation of these reprisals is intolerable.”

– Burnt out cars, corpses –

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko wrote on Telegram that three people were killed in the attacks in the capital, including a 17-year-old girl, and 11 residents were injured. AFP reporters at the scene of one strike in Kyiv saw the burnt out remains of two cars and the bodies of two people killed in the blast. Russia has systematically targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, causing severe damage to around half of the country’s power facilities.

The WHO has cautioned that winter will be “life-threatening” for millions of people as a result. Lviv mayor Andriy Sadovyi said half of the western city was without electricity. Neighbouring Moldova said it was suffering massive blackouts caused by the missile barrage and its EU-friendly president, Maia Sandu, accused Russia of leaving her country “in the dark”.

 

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Ukraine’s nuclear energy operator Energoatom said Wednesday’s strikes had disconnected all three nuclear power plants still under Ukrainian control from the grid and forced the plant in Zaporizhzhia — controlled by Russian forces — to be powered by backup generators.
– ‘Grief fills our hearts’

In Zaporizhzhia earlier on Wednesday, Russian strikes smashed into a hospital in the city of Vilniansk, killing a newborn baby in the maternity ward. Emergency services said a woman and doctor also in the building had survived, as official footage showed workers wearing protective helmets trying to dig out a man trapped waist-deep in rubble. “Grief fills our hearts,” said Oleksandr Starukh, the head of the Zaporizhzhia region, in the wake of the attack.

Vilniansk is around 45 kilometres (28 miles) from the front line, and was targeted in Russian strikes last week that killed 10 people. Moscow claimed to have annexed Zaporizhzhia alongside three other Ukraine regions last month despite not having full control of the territory. On a visit to Armenia Wednesday, spokesman Kremlin Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin had faith in the “success” of its offensive in Ukraine.

In the Kharkiv region, Russian strikes on a residential building and a clinic left two people dead, the governor said.

– ‘Attacks and atrocities’ –

 

Russia declared terror state by EU lawmakers, batters Ukraine grid

 

The WHO has recorded more than 700 attacks on Ukraine’s health facilities since Russia’s invasion began in February, it said this week. Wednesday’s decision by European legislators to recognise Russia as a “state sponsor of terrorism” is a symbolic political step with no legal consequences.

Since Kyiv has been pleading with the world to label Russia a “terrorist state” for months, Moscow will undoubtedly take offense at the Strasbourg parliament’s decision. According to the resolution passed by EU legislators, the purposeful assaults and crimes committed by the Russian Federation against the civilian population of Ukraine, along with other grave violations of human rights and international humanitarian law, “amount to acts of terror.” Zelensky demanded that Russia be “held accountable in order to end its long-standing policy of terrorism in Ukraine and across the globe” as Ukraine applauded the decision.

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