logo
Ukrainian attacks trigger power outages in Russia

Ukrainian attacks trigger power outages in Russia

Russia Today2 days ago

The Ukrainian military launched drone strikes on multiple Russian regions late Monday evening, causing a complete blackout in the Zaporozhye Region and leaving parts of Kherson without electricity, according to local governors.
The attack damaged high-voltage equipment in the northwestern part of Zaporozhye, resulting in a region-wide outage, Governor Evgeny Balitsky wrote on Telegram shortly before midnight.
'Healthcare facilities have been switched to backup power sources,' Balitsky noted, adding that authorities are working to restore energy supply through alternative routes as quickly as possible.
About 20 minutes later, Kherson Region Governor Vladimir Saldo reported that a Ukrainian drone strike had hit a new substation in the Genichesky district, cutting power to a large portion of the region.
'More than 104,000 people and 44 socially significant facilities' across roughly 150 settlements were affected, Saldo said. 'All critical facilities were connected to backup power supplies,' he added.
The strikes came just hours after Moscow and Kiev concluded the second round of direct peace talks in Istanbul, during which both sides exchanged memorandums outlining their respective proposals for resolving the conflict.
According to the Russian memorandum, a 'final settlement' would require international recognition of the former Ukrainian territories as parts of Russia, and a full withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from those areas.
The Ukrainian memorandum, as reported by Reuters, rejects Moscow's key demands, including recognition of the newly incorporated Russian regions, a commitment to neutrality, and limitations on the size of Ukraine's armed forces.
The Kherson and Zaporozhye regions, along with the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics, formally joined Russia following referendums held in the fall of 2022. Crimea voted to rejoin Russia in 2014 after the Western-backed Maidan coup in Kiev.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ex-Trump advisor calls for seizure of US senator's passport
Ex-Trump advisor calls for seizure of US senator's passport

Russia Today

timean hour ago

  • Russia Today

Ex-Trump advisor calls for seizure of US senator's passport

US Senator Lindsey Graham should be thrown in jail or have his passport revoked for 'stirring up' the Ukraine conflict, former adviser to President Donald Trump, Steve Bannon, has said. Bannon made the comment after Graham, along with US Senator Richard Blumenthal, visited Kiev last week. There they met with Vladimir Zelensky and discussed, among other things, additional sanctions on Russia and further cooperation between Ukraine and the US. Immediately after the visit Kiev lunched mass drone attacks on multiple Russian airfields, claiming to have damaged over 40 warplanes, including strategic bombers. Moscow has not confirmed the loss of any aircraft and claims to have shot down most of the drones. Bannon and other critics of US involvement in the Ukraine conflict have since speculated that Graham may have encouraged Zelensky to launch the 'audacious' attack, which they claim could have led to a serious escalation, given that it targeted Russia's strategic aviation. Speaking to NewsNation's Chris Cuomo on Monday, Bannon claimed that by meeting with Zelensky, Graham was giving Ukraine 'false hope false hope that we're there to support them in engaging Russia in a kinetic conflict. 'We are not,' Bannon stressed, adding that the US was getting 'sucked' into the Ukraine conflict by people like Graham and could soon find it 'tough' to get out. 'We can't have Lindsey Graham, and particularly Zelensky, leading us into a third world war with a deep strike into Russia,' Bannon insisted, suggesting that US authorities should either 'cancel [Graham's] passport and don't let him back in the country, or put him in jail if he comes back.' Following Monday's attack, which targeted sites from Murmansk in the Arctic to Irkutsk in Siberia, a number of military experts pointed out that Kiev does not have the technical capability to conduct drone strikes that deep into Russian territory. Guillaume Ancel, a writer and former French army lieutenant colonel, told Le Monde that the attack is 'possible and conceivable only with the support of a powerful satellite communications system,' based on intelligence provided by the US. Throughout the Ukraine conflict, Moscow has repeatedly described the hostilities as a Western proxy war against Russia and has condemned foreign military assistance to Kiev as counterproductive to the peace process.

Moscow announces dates for next POW swap
Moscow announces dates for next POW swap

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Moscow announces dates for next POW swap

Russia and Ukraine will conduct their next mass prisoner exchange at the end of the week, Moscow's lead negotiator in peace talks with Kiev, Vladimir Medinsky, announced on Wednesday. The statement follows the second round of direct negotiations between Russia and Ukraine held on Monday in Istanbul. At the meeting, the two delegations agreed to swap at least 1,000 prisoners from each side, prioritizing those who are wounded, ill, or under the age of 25. Reporting on the results of the negotiations to Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, Medinsky stated that while the final number of prisoners for exchange has not yet been finalized, it is expected to be about 1,200 from each side. 'This would again become the largest prisoner exchange,' Medinsky noted, stating that Russia is ready to begin the swap on June 7, 8, and 9. 'We are completely prepared for this,' he added. Medinsky also reported that Russian and Ukrainian negotiators had agreed to establish a special line of communication on the expedited transfer of heavily wounded soldiers, who would be exchanged outside of general prisoner swaps. DETAILS TO FOLLOW

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store