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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Warren Murray with Guardian writers and agencies

Ukraine war briefing: ‘massive missile attack’ hits Dnipro hydroelectric dam and affects nuclear plant

Russian anti-Putin fighters at their press conference in Kyiv
Russian anti-Putin fighters at their press conference in Kyiv. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
  • The Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was on the verge of blackout after a “massive missile attack on Ukraine” on Friday morning cut one of its power lines, the Ukrainian military administration for the region said. “The external overhead line of PL-750kV Dniprovska was disconnected.” The line supplies the power station with outside electricity – essential to maintaining its safety systems. “Currently, the ZNPP is connected to the Ukrainian power system by the PL-330kV Zaporizhzhia TPP Ferosplavna transmission line, which was repaired by Ukrainian energy workers only last week after another Russian shelling,” the Ukrainian military administration said.

  • The Russian-controlled management of the plant, the largest nuclear power station in Europe, also said one of the two high-voltage lines supplying it with electricity was down. The occupying forces have been accused of courting disaster by removing Ukrainian staff from the plant, allegedly rigging it with explosives and entangling it with the frontline of the war. On 15 March, the International Atomic Energy Agency’s director general, Rafael Grossi, wrote: “The power situation at the Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant continues to be extremely fragile and vulnerable to further disruptions. I remain deeply concerned about the nuclear safety and security situation at this major nuclear facility.”

  • Ukraine’s state hydropower company said the DniproHES hydroelectric dam in Zaporizhzhia was hit in Friday morning’s Russian airstrikes but there was no risk of a breach. “There is currently a fire at the station. Emergency services and energy workers are … dealing with the consequences of numerous airstrikes,” the utility said. Pictures on social media showed burning and damaged infrastructure, as well as a burning bus. An official from the exiled administration for the region said a trolleybus carrying civilians was hit; there was no immediate word on casualties.

  • In the US, the Republican congressman Ken Buck has become the first of his party to sign a discharge petition that would force the Ukraine aid bill to a vote. Buck is retiring but his signature will remain valid after he appeared on Thursday as the 188th signatory out of 218 needed on the Democratic petition to override the House speaker, Mike Johnson, who is obstructing the bill, which would put about $60bn into Ukraine’s defence against the Russian invasion.

  • The International Monetary Fund has confirmed it will pay out $880m to Ukraine in the third phase of a $15.6bn aid package to support the war-torn Ukrainian economy.

  • About 15 blasts were heard in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Friday morning, said the mayor, Ihor Terekhov, and Russian missile strikes appeared to be targeting the city’s power supply, causing partial blackouts. Terekhov did not report any casualties. He said some of the city’s water pumps stopped because of the attacks.

  • In central Ukraine, the Kryvyi Rih mayor, Oleksandr Vilkul, said blasts were heard but provided no details. In another central Ukrainian city, Vinnytsia, a “critical infrastructure object” was damaged, according to the mayor, Serhiy Borzov. The administration of the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia also reported eight missile strikes and said some people had been wounded.

  • EU leaders at their Brussels summit yesterday agreed in principle to commandeer a large majority of the profits generated from frozen Russian assets and give them to Ukraine – around €3bn this year. Potentially the first transfer would be in July. Ursula Von der Leyen, head of the European Commission, also revealed the EU is looking at increasing tariffs on Russian grain, including stolen Ukrainian grain, entering into the EU market.

  • The summit in Brussels came as Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, dealt with the aftermath of a massive missile attack. Russia fired more than 30 missiles at Kyiv early on Thursday. Ukraine’s air force said it shot them all down; regardless, 17 people were wounded in the city and surrounding region by falling debris. A later strike on the southern city of Mykolaiv killed one woman and injured six, Ukraine’s emergency services said.

  • A coalition of Russians fighting for Ukraine has vowed to continue cross-border raids into Russia. The anti-Putin fighters held a press conference in Kyiv after carrying out armed attacks in Russia’s Belgorod and Kursk border regions. “It’s probably no exaggeration to say we’ve opened up a second front, taking full-scale military action into the enemy territory,” said Denis Nikitin, leader of one of the groups involved, the Russian Volunteer Corps (RDK). The avowed nationalist nicknamed “White Rex” has links to the far right and football hooliganism.

  • The RDK has allied with the Freedom of Russia Legion, which says it has a more moderate conservative agenda and is seeking to recruit followers of the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny. They are also fighting alongside the recently created Siberian Battalion, made up of members of the region’s ethnic minorities as well as leftwing activists.

  • Nikitin and his allies claim their raids forced Russia to divert troops from frontlines to defend the border regions and foiled a planned advance timed to coincide with Russian elections. Last summer, RDK and Freedom of Russia Legion jointly entered the Bryansk region of Russia on foot. They said the latest operation is much more serious and backed by Ukraine, which provides reconnaissance support and ammunition. Nikitin admitted they were “not strong enough” to seize territory long-term. “We are not in the phase where we are ready to seize district centres and towns and hold on to them.”

  • Nato’s military committee chief Rob Bauer, visiting Kyiv on Thursday, said allies should not be too pessimistic about Ukraine’s ability to repel Russian troops and called for important aid to be delivered quickly. Bauer led the first official visit to Kyiv by a Nato military delegation since the February 2022 invasion. “Time in Ukraine is not measured in days, weeks or months. It is measured in human lives,” said Bauer. Bauer also met Ukraine’s commander in chief, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, who said ammunition supplies and air defences were discussed.

  • The EU and allies are considering steps including further sanctions to address the export from China of goods that could help Russia’s military, according to the EU’s sanctions coordinator, David O’Sullivan. “We see increasing focus on Hong Kong, China as the source of these products. And we also see western production hubs in south-east Asia as a source of supply,” he said.

  • Russia’s defence ministry claimed on Thursday to have captured the village of Tonenke in east Ukraine, around 10km from the city of Avdiivka, which fell to Russian forces in February.

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