Air raid sirens blare in Ukraine as NATO meets to promise aid
Send a link to a friend
[November 29, 2022]
By Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) -Air raid sirens wailed
across Ukraine on Tuesday for the first time this week, as the United
States and NATO allies unveiled new pledges of money and equipment to
help restore power and heat knocked out by Moscow's missile and drone
strikes.
Ukrainians fled the streets for bomb shelters, although there were no
immediate reports of major attacks away from the front. The all-clear
was later sounded in the capital Kyiv, but officials said the threat had
not necessarily lifted.
"Last time, the Russians also disguised the strike as a training
flight... Let's see," said Vitaliy Kim, governor of southern Ukraine's
Mykolaiv region.
Foreign ministers from the NATO alliance were starting a two-day meeting
in Bucharest, looking for ways both to keep millions of Ukrainian
civilians safe and warm, and to sustain Kyiv's military through the
coming winter campaign.
"NATO will continue to stand for Ukraine as long as it takes. We will
not back down," alliance General-Secretary Jens Stoltenberg said in a
speech in Bucharest.
He told reporters Russian President Vladimir Putin was "trying to use
winter as a weapon of war" as Moscow's forces lose on the battlefield,
and that Western allies would step in to help.
U.S. and European officials, briefing ahead of the meeting on condition
of anonymity, described packages of aid including cash, electricity
transmission equipment and more weapons to fight off drones and
replenish diminished ammunition stores.
"It is going to be a terrible winter for Ukraine, so we are working to
strengthen our support for it to be resilient," a senior European
diplomat said.
ACCUMULATING DAMAGE
Russia has been carrying out huge attacks on Ukraine's electricity
transmission and heating infrastructure roughly weekly since October, in
what Kyiv and its allies say is a deliberate campaign to harm civilians,
a war crime.
Moscow says hurting civilians is not its aim but that their suffering
will end only if Kyiv accepts its demands, which it did not spell out.
Although Kyiv says it shoots down most of the incoming missiles, the
damage has been accumulating and the impact growing more severe with
each strike.
The worst attack so far was last Wednesday, leaving millions of
Ukrainians in cold and darkness. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told
Ukrainians at the start of this week to expect another soon that would
be at least as damaging.
There are no political talks to end the war. Moscow has annexed
Ukrainian territory which it says it will never relinquish; Ukraine says
it will fight until it recovers all occupied land.
In Kyiv, snow fell and temperatures were hovering around freezing as
millions in and around the capital struggled to heat their homes. After
a week of trying to restore electricity from the last attacks, national
grid operator Ukrenergo said the system was still producing a shortfall
of 30% of needed power.
[to top of second column]
|
A view shows remains of MLRS shells used
by Russian troops for military strikes of the city and collected by
sappers in Kharkiv, Ukraine November 29, 2022. REUTERS/Vitalii
Hnidyi
Near the frontline in the eastern town of Siversk, Viktor Syabro,
68, and his wife Ludmila, 61, have been living underground since
power was cut off in April as Russian assaults shattered their
hometown. Without water or gas, the couple hope to install a
wood-burning stove.
In Kherson city, which has lacked electricity and heat since Russian
forces abandoned it earlier this month, regional Governor Yaroslav
Yanushevych said that 24% of customers now had electricity,
including partial power in the city centre.
NEW PHASE
Along front lines in eastern Ukraine, the onset of winter is
ushering in a new phase of the conflict with intense trench warfare
along heavily fortified positions, posing new challenges for both
sides after several months of Russian retreats.
With Russian forces having pulled back in the northeast and
withdrawn across the Dnipro River in the south, the front line on
land is only around half the length it was a few months ago. That
will make it harder for Ukrainian forces to find weakly defended
stretches to attempt new breakthroughs.
Both sides will have to keep troops supplied and healthy in cold,
wet trenches for the first long winter of the war, a bigger
challenge for the Russians as an invading force with longer and more
vulnerable supply lines.
Ukraine's armed forces General Staff said late on Monday that
Russian forces were heavily shelling towns on the west bank of the
Dnipro River, including Kherson.
Russia kept up heavy shelling of key targets Bakhmut and Avdiivka in
Donetsk province, and to the north bombarded areas around the towns
of Kupiansk and Lyman, both recaptured recently by Kyiv, the
Ukrainian military said.
Ukrainian forces had damaged a rail bridge north of the
Russian-occupied southern city of Melitopol that has been key to
supplying Russian forces dug in there.
Reuters could not independently verify battlefield reports.
Russia launched what it calls its "special military operation" on
Feb. 24 claiming it aimed to demilitarise its neighbour and protect
Russian speakers. Ukraine and Western nations dismissed this as a
baseless pretext for invasion.
(Reporting by Reuters bureauxWriting by Peter Graff; Editing by Nick
Macfie)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |