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More than 1,000 Kyiv apartment blocks still without heat after Russian strike

More than 1,000 apartment buildings in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv are still without heat following a  devastating Russian attack  earlier this week, local authorities said on Sunday.

Missile strike on Friday left virtually the entire city without power, heat amid cold snap

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Dark city towers are seen against a purple and blue sky.
Residential buildings sit in the dark during a power blackout in Kyiv, Ukraine's capital, on Saturday after critical civil infrastructure was hit by recent Russian missile and drone attacks. (Yan Dobronosov/Reuters)

More than 1,000 apartment buildings in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv are still without heat following a devastating Russian attack earlier this week, local authorities said on Sunday.

Russia has intensified bombardments of Ukraine's energy system since it invaded its neighbour on Feb. 24, 2022.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia had launched 1,100 drones, more than 890 guided aerial bombs and over 50 missiles, including ballistic, cruise and medium-range weapons, against Ukraine over the past week.

On Friday, a missile strike on Kyiv left virtually the entire city without power and heat amid a sharp cold snap, and it was not until Sunday that authorities restored water supplies and partially restored electricity and heat.

Zelenskyy said Russia deliberately waited for freezing weather to make things worse for the Ukrainian people, and this was "a cynical Russian terror specifically against civilians." Moscow made no immediate response.

A boy pulls a sled along a frozen body of water in a frozen urban landscape.
A boy pulls a sled in the snow on a freezing day in central Kyiv on Saturday. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

Grid suffering from accumulated damage

The war's fourth winter could be the coldest and darkest yet, with the accumulated damage to the grid bringing utilities to the brink and temperatures, already below –12 C, set to plunge to –20 C later this week.

"Restoration work is ongoing. However, the energy supply situation in the capital remains very difficult," Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on the Telegram messaging service.

"According to forecasts, the severe frosts are not expected to subside in the coming days. Therefore, the difficult situation in the capital will continue."

Two women sit near a Ukrainian flag below which several phones are charging.
Women charge their devices inside a Point of Invincibility centre, a government-run shelter that offers basic services and heat during blackouts, in Kyiv on Saturday. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

Ukraine's Energy Ministry said Russian forces had attacked the country's power system again during the night, briefly cutting off electricity to the southeastern Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia regions.

"Not a single day passed this week without attacks on energy facilities and critical infrastructure. A total of 44 attacks were recorded," Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said on Telegram.

Svyrydenko said the restoration of heat and electricity supplies was proceeding at a record pace, noting significant improvements in Kyiv would require time but could be reached by Thursday.

An older man sits in a room in front of a bucket filled with snow.
Sergiy Przhistovskiy sits in his living room with a bucket of snow he intends to melt after his apartment was left without water when a Russian drone struck the building, in Kyiv on Saturday. His building has also been without heat and gas. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)