Ukraine strikes Crimea, cuts power in Sevastopol

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Ukrainian strikes in Crimea left parts of Sevastopol without power as cross-border drone attacks killed civilians in Russia and Ukraine.

Why this matters

The strikes highlight Ukraine’s effort to disrupt Russian military logistics in Crimea, a peninsula Russia annexed in 2014 and views as strategically vital. They also show how attacks are increasingly affecting civilians and infrastructure far from the front line.

Ukrainian strikes on Russian-occupied Crimea triggered power outages in Sevastopol, the peninsula’s largest city, according to statements from both sides, as Kyiv increased attacks on the region Russia annexed in 2014.

Crimea also suspended fuel sales to the public as Ukraine’s military targeted Russian logistics to the peninsula and struck oil refineries and depots across southern Russia that supply it.

Sevastopol’s Moscow-installed governor, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said Ukraine attacked energy facilities there, causing power cuts. He urged residents on Wednesday to help vulnerable neighbors, conserve phone batteries for emergencies, and avoid overloading the grid.

“The enemy is once again striking treacherously, attempting to deprive us of normal living conditions and sow panic,” he posted.

He said some parts of the city, where temperatures were approaching 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit), would remain without power until at least Wednesday evening.

Razvozhayev said trolleybuses in Sevastopol would not operate on Wednesday and asked parents to keep children at home.

Russian-held parts of Ukraine’s nearby Kherson region were also partly or fully cut off from power, Moscow-installed Gov. Vladimir Saldo said. He provided no further details.

Separate Ukrainian drone attacks killed two people in Russia’s Nizhny Novgorod region, hundreds of kilometers from the front line, and one person in the border region of Belgorod, local governors said.

In Ukraine, a Russian drone attack killed a 56-year-old woman in the border region of Kharkiv, authorities said.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said its forces destroyed more than 300 Ukrainian drones overnight. Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 101 drones at Ukraine overnight and that 95 were destroyed.

Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov said last week that his forces were “isolating Crimea with drones.”

“It looks like in the nearest time, Crimea will become an island. This could lead to some very unexpected consequences for Russians,” Fedorov said on a blogger’s YouTube channel.

U.S.-led talks on ending Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II remained effectively frozen, with Washington’s attention focused on the Middle East since it launched strikes on Iran in late February.

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