Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv
Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv/node/2621831/world
Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv
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Updated 39 sec ago
AFP
Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv
Moscow has in recent months escalated its attacks on energy infrastructure in Ukraine, damaging natural gas facilities which produce the main fuel for heating in the country
Updated 39 sec ago
AFP
KYIV: A massive Russian attack hit Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, killing one person and prompting power cuts in several regions, Kyiv authorities said Saturday.
Moscow has in recent months escalated its attacks on energy infrastructure in Ukraine, damaging natural gas facilities which produce the main fuel for heating in the country.
Experts have said Ukraine risks heating outages ahead of the winter months.
“The enemy is massively attacking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure again. Because of this, emergency power outages have been introduced in a number of regions of Ukraine,” Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk wrote on social media, without specifying where.
“Emergency power outages will be canceled after the situation in the energy system stabilizes,” she said. “Despite the enemy’s plans, Ukraine will have light and heat this winter.”
Air raid alerts were triggered across Ukraine overnight, with authorities in northeastern Kharkiv and southern Odesa reporting drones strikes on energy facilities.
A drone strike on the eastern city of Dnipro ripped through a nine-story building, killing one woman and wounding six, including a child, according to emergency services.
In the capital Kyiv, civil and military authorities said falling debris had caused fires in two locations in the central Petchersky district.
- ‘Technological disaster’ -
Russia has targeted Ukraine’s power and heating grid throughout its almost four-year invasion, destroying a large part of the key civilian infrastructure.
Drones also hit energy infrastructure Ukraine’s southern Odesa late Friday evening, the region’s governor Oleg Kiper said on Telegram.
“There was damage to an energy infrastructure facility,” he said, reporting no dead or wounded.
The attacks on energy infrastructure have raised concerns of heating outages in Ukraine as the war enters its fourth winter.
Kyiv’s School of Economics estimated in a report that the attacks shut down half of Ukraine’s natural gas production.
Ukraine’s top energy expert, Oleksandr Kharchenko, told a media briefing Wednesday that if Kyiv’s two power and heating plants went offline for more than three days when temperatures fall below minus 10 degrees Celsius, the capital would face a “technological disaster.”
Ukraine has in turn stepped up strikes on Russian oil depots and refineries in recent months, seeking to cut off Moscow’s vital energy exports and trigger fuel shortages across the country.
On Friday evening, drone attacks on energy infrastructure in southern Russia’s Volgograd region caused power cuts there too, governor Andrei Botcharov said on Telegram.
Taiwan’s vice president calls for closer EU ties in rare address to international lawmakers
Updated 2 sec ago
AP
BRUSSELS: Taiwan’s deputy leader urged the European Union to boost security and trade ties with the self-governing island and support its democracy in the face of growing threats by China, in a rare address to a group of international lawmakers in Brussels on Friday. “Peace in the Taiwan Strait is essential to global stability and economic continuity, and international opposition against unilateral changes to the status quo by force cannot be overstated,” Vice President Bi-Khim Hsiao told lawmakers assembled for a China-focused conference in the European Parliament building. While Hsiao did not formally address the whole EU Parliament — the European trade bloc does not have formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan — her visit drew ire from China. “In an era marked by increasing fragmentation, volatility and rising authoritarianism, this gathering affirms something vital — that democracies, even when far apart, are not alone,” she added to a standing ovation in a small chamber of the European Parliament. Hsiao also called on the lawmakers from countries including Germany and Spain to collaborate more on trusted supply chains and AI technology with Taiwan, the island off China’s east coast that Beijing claims as part of its territory and says must come under its rule. EU members, like most countries including the United States, have no formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan and follow a “One China” policy. But the EU and Taiwan share common democratic values as well as close trade ties, and the bloc opposes any use of military force by China to settle its dispute with Taiwan. Hsiao also drew parallels between Taiwan suffering cyberattacks and having its undersea Internet cables cut by China, and hybrid attacks faced by European nations since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “Europe has defended freedom under fire, and Taiwan has built democracy under pressure,” she said. She said that China’s disruptions of global supply chains — likely a reference partly to Beijing’s throttling of rare earth exports to the EU earlier this year — should push Brussels to forge with Taiwan “a reliable technology ecosystem rooted in trust, transparency and democratic values” like they already have for semiconductor sales. China’s mission to Europe on Saturday criticized the EU parliament for allowing her and other leading “Taiwan independence” figures to carry out “separatist activities” in its building despite China’s opposition. China expressed strong indignation over the matter and already made a solemn representation to the European side, according to a statement on its website “This act seriously harms China’s core interests and violates the one-China principle, while seriously interfering in China’s internal affairs and undermining China-EU political mutual trust,” it said. It added the Taiwan issue, which concerns China’s sovereignty, is a red line that cannot be crossed, urging Europe to stop sending any wrong signals to the “separatist forces.” China routinely states that Taiwan’s independence is a “dead end,” claiming the island as its territory to be annexed by force if necessary. China’s military has increased its encircling of Taiwan’s skies and waters in recent years, holding joint drills with its warships and fighter jets on a near-daily basis near the island. Last month Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te vowed to accelerate the building of the air defense system “T-Dome,” or Taiwan Dome, and boost defense spending to reach 5 percent of Taiwan’s GDP by 2030 amid growing security concerns. Hsiao’s visit was part of a conference organized by the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, a global group of hundreds of lawmakers who want to strengthen coordination on China-related policy and lobby for unified international action on key China challenges. Some 50 lawmakers from about two dozen countries attended Friday’s event in Brussels. The trip and speech were kept under wraps because of high security concerns after reports that Chinese agents plotted to ram Hsiao’s car during her visit to the Czech Republic in March 2024, when she was vice president-elect. Czech officials later said Chinese agents had followed Hsiao and planned to intimidate her physically. Hsiao said at the time that the Chinese Communist Party’s “unlawful activities” will not intimidate her from “voicing Taiwan’s interests in the international community.” Ben Bland, director of the Asia-Pacific program at the London-based think tank Chatham House, wrote in an analysis last month that despite the lack of formal diplomatic relations, the EU and Taiwan can do much more to deepen ties for mutual benefit in the face of worsening US-China rivalry. Any conflict over Taiwan could have far more devastating impact on Europe than Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, given Taiwan’s leading role in semiconductor and electronics supply chains, he wrote. “European nations cannot stop Beijing from squeezing Taiwan harder,” Bland wrote. “But they can help to preserve and even increase Taiwan’s global connections, and share lessons in how to stay resilient.” China and Taiwan split during a civil war that brought the Communist Party to power in China in 1949. The defeated Nationalist Party forces fled to Taiwan, where they set up their own government.