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Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Russia unleashes terror on Ukraine as West rebukes Putin

“In case of continuation of attempts to carry out terrorist attacks on our territory, the responses from the Russian side will be harsh,” Mr Putin warned.

• October 11, 2022
Ukraine war
Ukraine war

Russian President Vladimir Putin described the barrage of missile fire on numerous Ukrainian cities on Monday as a response to “terrorist attacks” on Russian territory and warned that even tougher strikes could come.

Mr Putin’s remarks at a Russian Security Council meeting came as the months-long war saw a dramatic escalation with the targeting of city centres and infrastructure across Ukraine.

According to Ukraine’s Interior Ministry on Monday evening, the attacks killed 14 people and injured 97 across the country. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, in his evening address, put the toll at 12 deaths and more than 80 injuries.

International condemnation was swift, with world leaders using words such as “terrorism” and “war crimes.”

Russia fired more than 80 missiles across Ukrainian cities, the government in Kyiv said, with air defence systems intercepting about half of them. At least 36 were injured in the capital alone, and deaths were reported, officials said.

Moscow’s rockets followed a weekend explosion that damaged the bridge connecting the annexed Crimean peninsula to mainland Russia. Mr Putin blames Kyiv for the attack on the infrastructure used to supply Russian troops in Ukraine. Kyiv has not taken responsibility.

“In case of continuation of attempts to carry out terrorist attacks on our territory, the responses from the Russian side will be harsh – and in their scale will correspond to the level of threat to the Russian Federation,” Mr Putin warned.

The Russian attacks by air, ground and sea, which Moscow’s Defence Ministry said achieved their goals, were an “act of terror” according to Mr Zelensky.

Kyiv’s air raid alert was lifted in the early afternoon, after five hours and 37 minutes, the longest since the war began on February 24. City Mayor Vitali Klitschko urged residents to remain cautious.

Ukraine’s capital has been hit by Russian missiles several times since the beginning of the war, although Monday’s was the worst incident of its kind and the first attack on Kyiv in months.

It followed Ukraine winning back territory lost earlier in the war as part of a counter-offensive. Putin’s attempt to change the narrative also comes amid problems with Moscow’s partial mobilization of new troops, with Mr Putin saying on Monday that mistakes must be dealt with.

Russian rocket attacks were also reported in other parts of Ukraine, from Lviv in the far west to areas of the contested east. Power failed in parts of the eastern city of Kharkiv following three Russian air attacks, with one targeting energy infrastructure, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said on the Telegram messaging app.

Parts of Lviv were also without power after damage to the energy infrastructure. Ukraine called on all citizens to switch off electrical appliances in the evening to not overload the power grid.

Authorities reported four deaths due to a missile strike in the eastern Ukrainian city of Sloviansk in the Donetsk region, Mayor Vadim Lyakh said.

“Ukraine cannot be intimidated. We united even more instead,” Mr Zelensky said in his evening video address, which was recorded by a damaged road junction near a Kyiv university rather than his well-secured presidential office as is usually the case.

Mr Zelensky said there were only civilian targets in and around a park in front of the university and no military installations, which Russia said it had hit.

“The occupiers cannot confront us on the battlefield, and that is why they resort to this terror,” Mr Zelensky said.

U.S. President Joe Biden condemned the Russian missile strikes on Ukrainian cities as having “no military purpose.”

“They once again demonstrate the utter brutality of Mr Putin’s illegal war on the Ukrainian people,” Mr Biden said.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg reiterated the alliance’s support for Ukraine after speaking to Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.

Mr Stoltenberg “condemned Russia’s horrific [and] indiscriminate attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine,” while UN Secretary-General António Guterres was “deeply shocked,” and India said it was “deeply concerned.”

European Council President Charles Michel tweeted, “These indiscriminate attacks on civilians are war crimes.”

After the latest escalation in the war, G7 leaders plan to hold a video call with the Ukrainian leader on Tuesday.

(NAN)

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