A Russian raid targeting a major power plant in Kyiv

A Russian raid targeting a major power plant in Kyiv

According to the Associated Press, Olexi Coleba, the governor of the Kyiv region, claimed that neither anybody was killed nor injured as a result of the strike.
While claiming that the repair units are attempting to restore electrical current, the Okrago Electricity Transmission Company issued a warning to the locals of the potential for “attacks.”

During the nighttime peak hours, Kirillo Timoshenko, vice-president of the Ukrainian president’s office, residents of the Kyiv region, and residents in three other districts, have pledged to reduce their energy use.
The bridge that connects Russia and the Crimea was destroyed by a vehicle bomb that burst a week earlier, prompting the Russian army to execute what it claimed to be the largest coordinated missile attacks since the commencement of combat operations in Ukraine.

Ukrainian reports stated that the attacks that took place this week hit residential buildings, killing dozens, as well as the destruction of civil infrastructure such as power plants near Kyiv and other cities far from the front lines of the war.
Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, stated on Friday that while Moscow does not feel the need to conduct any additional massive operations, his army would continue to conduct targeted strikes.

Seven of the 29 targets that the Russian army planned to destroy in this week’s attacks, according to him, were unaffected and would be gradually taken out.
The (War Study Institute), a research institute based in Washington, interpreted Putin’s remarks as an attempt to criticise pro-war Russian bloggers.

Putin “understood that he would not be able to continue directing high-density missile strikes for a long time due to the declining high-resolution missile arsenal,” according to the Research Center.

a Russian strike on a significant Kyiv power facility

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