Image ID 2M0RBBR Two chimneys were seen emitting smoke in Kyiv 01122022 CREDIT ZUMA Press, Alamy Stock Photo EXP 16122023.jpg
"The attack on the capital continues," Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko wrote on Telegram (Picture: Zuma Press/ Alamy Stock Photo).
Ukraine

Russia launches 'major missile attack' on Ukrainian energy facilities

Image ID 2M0RBBR Two chimneys were seen emitting smoke in Kyiv 01122022 CREDIT ZUMA Press, Alamy Stock Photo EXP 16122023.jpg
"The attack on the capital continues," Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko wrote on Telegram (Picture: Zuma Press/ Alamy Stock Photo).

Russia has launched a "major missile attack" on Ukrainian energy facilities and infrastructure with explosions reported in at least three cities.

Local authorities reported blasts in the capital, Kyiv, southern Kryvyi Rih and north-eastern Kharkiv as authorities sounded air raid alarms across the country warning of a new devastating barrage of Russian strikes that have happened intermittently since mid-October.

Kharkiv mayor Ihor Terekhov said on Telegram that the city is without electricity.

Kharkiv regional governor Oleh Syniehubov reported three strikes on the city's critical infrastructure.

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, a senior official in President Volodymyr Zelensky's office, reported a strike on a residential building in Kryvyi Rih, warning on Telegram: "There may be people under the rubble."

He said emergency services were on site.

Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko reported explosions in the north-eastern Desnianskyi and western Holosiivskyi district, urging residents to go to shelters.

"The attack on the capital continues," he wrote on Telegram.

Earlier this week, Kyiv mayor reported multiple explosions in the Ukrainian capital for the first time in weeks.

Mr Klitschko wrote in a post on Telegram at the time, that there were explosions in a central district of the capital that is home to many government agencies and buildings.

Watch: IISS Strategic Survey editor Dr Nigel Gould-Davies told Forces News "Ukraine is, relatively speaking, stronger than Russia".

Subway services in the capital were suspended as residents flocked inside its tunnels deep underground to seek shelter.

Ukrzaliznytsia, the national railway operator, said power was out in a number of stations in the eastern and central Kharkiv, Kirovohrad, Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions due to damage to the energy infrastructure.

Trains continued to run by switching from electric power to steam-engine power, which had been readied as a backup.

Such strikes targeting energy infrastructure have been part of a new Russian strategy to try to freeze Ukrainians into submission after key battlefield losses by Russian forces in recent months.

Some analysts and Ukrainian leaders say such an onslaught has only strengthened the resolve of Ukrainians to face up to Russia's invasion that began on 24 February.

The previous round of massive Russian air strikes across the country took place on 5 December. Ukrainian authorities have reported some successes in intercepting and downing incoming missiles, rockets and armed drones.

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