Russia hits Ukrainian energy, defence targets; heavy fighting in east
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[November 18, 2022]
By Max Hunder and Jonathan Landay
KYIV/KHERSON, Ukraine (Reuters) -Russian
forces kept up a barrage of shell and missile attacks on various regions
of Ukraine, many hitting power infrastructure, while heavy fighting
persisted in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions in the east of the country.
With the capital Kyiv seeing its first snow flurries of the winter,
authorities said they were working to restore power nationwide after
Russia earlier this week unleashed what Ukraine said was the heaviest
bombardment of civilian infrastructure of the nine-month-old war.
About 10 million people are without power, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
said in a Thursday evening video address, in a country with a pre-war
population of about 44 million. He said authorities in some areas
ordered forced emergency blackouts.
Russia's defence ministry said on Friday its forces had used long-range
weapons on Thursday to strike defence and industrial facilities,
including "missile manufacturing facilities".
Ukrainian forces in the past 24 hours downed two Russian cruise
missiles, five air-launched missiles and five Iranian-made Shahed-136
drones, Ukraine's military said.
Reuters was unable to verify battlefield reports.
The United Nations has warned of a humanitarian disaster in Ukraine this
winter due to power and water shortages. One of the European
Commission's three vice presidents, Valdis Dombrovskis, arrived in Kyiv
on Friday to discuss emergency EU financial support for Ukraine in the
coming months.
Pope Francis reiterated that the Vatican was ready to do anything
possible to help end the conflict.
"We must all be pacifists," he told Italian daily La Stampa. "Wanting
peace, not just a truce that may only serve to rearm. Real peace, which
is the fruit of dialogue."
'TORTURE CHAMBER'
Investigators in areas of the Kherson region recaptured by Ukraine in a
counter-offensive last week have uncovered 63 bodies bearing signs of
torture after Russian forces left, Ukraine's interior minister was
quoted as saying.
The Ukrainian parliament's human rights commissioner, Dmytro Lubinets,
released a video of what he said was a torture chamber used by Russian
forces in the Kherson region, including a small room in which he said up
to 25 people were kept at a time.
Reuters was unable to verify the claims - which included the use of
electric shocks to secure confessions - made by Lubinets and others in
the video. Russia denies its troops deliberately attack civilians or
have committed atrocities.
Mass burial sites have been found in other parts previously occupied by
Russian troops, including some with civilian bodies showing signs of
torture.
A Reuters witness heard explosions in the centre of Kherson city on
Friday morning and saw black smoke rising from behind buildings. Police
blocked off access but the commotion did not seem to faze hundreds of
people on the central square as they queued for humanitarian aid.
The square had been a frenetic melee of humanitarian aid queues and
displays of patriotism on Thursday as residents celebrated their
liberation from months of Russian occupation but the mood was also one
of deep uncertainty.
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People wait for food aid after Russia's
retreat from Kherson, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues,
Ukraine, November 17, 2022. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
"We're fine, but we don't know what to expect. Nothing is over yet.
On that (east) bank of the river, the (Russian) forces are
gathering. On this side, they are gathering. We are in the middle,"
said Ihor, 48, an unemployed builder.
The deputy head of Ukraine's presidential administration said
Russian forces had "plundered" the Kherson region before they
withdrew last week.
"After a trip to the... Kherson region, one thing became clear - our
people there need a lot of help. The Russians not only killed and
mined but also robbed all the cities and villages. There is
practically nothing there," Kyrylo Tymoshenko said on the Telegram
messaging app.
Russia has moved some troops from Kherson to reinforce its positions
in the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Ukraine's military said
Russian forces had fired artillery on the towns of Bakhmut and
nearby Soledar in the Donetsk region, among others.
Russian fire also hit Balakliya in northeastern Kharkiv region,
which Ukraine recaptured in September, and Nikopol, a city on the
opposite bank of the Kakhovka reservoir from the Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power station, the statement said.
CRISIS
The Ukraine conflict has plunged Russia's relations with the United
States and other Western allies into deep crisis.
In the first known high-level, face-to-face U.S.-Russian contact
since the invasion of Ukraine, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
chief William Burns delivered a cautionary message this week during
talks in the Turkish capital Ankara about the consequences for
Moscow of any use of nuclear weapons.
Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan told Russian leader Vladimir Putin
in a phone call on Friday that the Ankara talks had helped to
prevent "uncontrolled" escalation in the field. Erdogan again called
for diplomatic efforts to end the war.
Russia's deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov said Moscow did not
rule out further high-level meetings with the United States on
"strategic stability", a term used to mean reducing the risk of
nuclear war.
But Ryabkov also said there was nothing to talk about with
Washington on the subject of Ukraine. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov said any summit between Putin and U.S. President Joe Biden
was "out of the question at the moment".
Separately, Interfax quoted Ryabkov as saying on Friday that Russia
hopes it can make a prisoner swap with the United States that would
include convicted Russian arms trafficker Viktor Bout, known as the
"Merchant of Death".
Amid the deadliest war in Europe since World War Two, Russia and the
United States are exploring a prisoner swap that would see
imprisoned Americans including basketball star Brittney Griner
return to the United States in exchange for Bout.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Lincoln Feast and Gareth
Jones; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and William Maclean)
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