Critical infrastructure across Ukraine was pounded by more than a dozen Russian missiles on Saturday, the Ukrainian air force said, with several regions reporting strikes on energy facilities and power outages.
Ukraineโs air force command reported that 33 missiles had been fired at Ukraine on Saturday morning, and that 18 of those had been shot down.
Since Oct. 10, Russia has launched a series of devastating salvos at Ukraineโs power infrastructure, which have hit at least half of its thermal power generation and up to 40% of the entire system.
Shortly after daybreak on Saturday, local officials in regions across Ukraine began reporting strikes on energy facilities and power outages as engineers scrambled to restore the ruined network. Governors advised residents to stock up on water in case of cut-offs.
Presidential advisor Kyrylo Tymoshenko said that as of Saturday afternoon, more than a million people across Ukraine were without power, with 672,000 of those in the western region of Khmelnytskyi alone.
After the first wave of missiles hit early in the morning, air raid sirens rang out again nationwide at 11.15 a.m. local time (0815 GMT).
Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak said Moscow wanted to create a new wave of refugees into Europe with the strikes, while foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said they constituted genocide.
โDeliberate strikes on Ukraineโs critical civilian infrastructure are part of Russiaโs genocide of Ukrainians,โ Kuleba wrote on Twitter.
Moscow has acknowledged targeting energy infrastructure but denies targeting civilians.
State grid operator Ukrenergo said the attacks targeted transmission infrastructure in western Ukraine, but that power supply restrictions were being put in place in ten regions across the entire country, including in the capital, Kyiv.
โThe scale of damage is comparable or may exceed the consequences of the attacks (between) October 10-12,โ Ukrenergo wrote on the Telegram app, referring to the first wave of strikes on Ukraineโs power system last week.
Meanwhile, the deputy head of Kyivโs city administration, Petro Panteleev, warned Russian strikes could leave Ukraineโs capital without power and heat for โseveral days or weeksโ.
โThis possibility existsโฆwe have to understand and remember this,โ he told Ukrainian outlet Ekonomichna Pravda.