https://www.dw.com-Missile attacks on Ukraine’s battered power grid are an “obvious crime against humanity,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has told the UN Security Council. DW has the latest.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appealed to the United Nations Security Council on Wednesday to take action to stop Russian airstrikes targeting vital infrastructure that have once again plunged Ukrainian cities into darkness and cold as winter sets in.
“Today is just one day, but we have received 70 missiles. That’s the Russian formula of terror,” Zelenskyy said via video link to the Council chamber in New York.
He said hospitals, schools, transport infrastructure and residential areas had all been hit.
“When we have the temperature below zero, and millions of people without energy supplies, without heating, without water, this is an obvious crime against humanity,” he told the meeting in New York.
In his speech, Zelenskyy called for the adoption of a UN resolution condemning energy terror. Ukraine is waiting to see “a very firm reaction” to Wednesday’s airstrikes from the world, he added.
The Council is unlikely to take any action in response to the appeal since Russia is a member with veto power. However, Zelenskyy called for Russia to be denied a vote on any decision concerning its actions.
“We cannot be hostage to one international terrorist,” he said. “Russia is doing everything to make an energy generator a more powerful tool than the UN Charter.”
Russia’s UN ambassador Vasily Nebenzya responded by complaining that it was against Council rules for Zelenskyy to appear via video and rejected what he called “reckless threats and ultimatums” by Ukraine and its supporters in the West.
Here are the other main headlines from the war in Ukraine on Thursday, November 24
EU lawmakers back €18 billion loan to Ukraine
European Union lawmakers on Thursday backed an €18 billion ($18 billion) loan for Ukraine to help keep its public services going.
European Parliament President Roberta Metsola wrote on Twitter the loan was approved “in record speed,” proof, she says that the EU’s support for Ukraine is only growing stronger.
In a statement, the European Parliament said the money would be used to support essential public services including hospitals, schools and provide housing for relocated people. It would also help ensure macroeconomic stability and the restoration of critical infrastructure destroyed in Russian attacks.
“The €18 billion will cover roughly half of the estimated €3-4 billion monthly funding Ukraine needs in 2023,” it said.
The loan must still be approved by the European Council, which represents the EU’s 27 national governments.
Since the start of the war, the EU and its member states have provided €19.7 billion to support Ukraine.
Poland urges Germany to send Patriot missile launchers to Ukraine
Poland has asked Germany to send air-defense systems it offered to Warsaw to Ukraine.
“After further Russian missile attacks, I asked Germany to have the Patriot batteries offered to Poland transferred to Ukraine and deployed at its western border,” Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Blaszczak wrote on Twitter.
“This will protect Ukraine from further deaths and blackouts and will increase security at our eastern border.”
Ukrainian Ambassador to Warsaw Vasyl Zvarych thanked Blaszczak, saying on Twitter that Ukraine needs as many air defense weapons as it can get.
German Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht said on Monday that Berlin offered Eurofighters and Patriot missiles to Warsaw to help secure its airspace.
But following Russia’s heavy barrage of Ukraine on Wednesday, Polish leaders said it would be better if the defense systems were placed in western Ukraine.
“It would be best for Poland’s security if Germany handed the equipment to the Ukrainians, trained Ukrainian teams, with the caveat that the batteries would be placed in Ukraine’s west,” the head of Poland’s ruling party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, said, seemingly referring to the Patriot missiles.
EU working ‘at full speed’ on 9th set of sanctions against Russia
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU is currently working on its 9th set of sanctions against Russia for its war in Ukraine.
“We are working hard to hit Russia where it hurts to blunt even further its capacity to wage war on Ukraine and I can announce today that we are working full speed on a 9th sanctions package,” von der Leyen told a news conference on Thursday.
“We will not rest until Ukraine has prevailed over [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and his unlawful and barbaric war,” added.
Ukraine expects nuclear power plants back on line
Ukraine is expecting three of its nuclear power plants that were shut off due to Russian missile attacks on Wednesday to resume operations by Thursday evening, Reuters reported citing Energy Minister German Galushchenko.
“We expect that by evening the nuclear power plants will start working, providing energy to the network, and this will significantly reduce the (energy) deficit,” he said in remarks on national television.
Power restored in some regions
Emergency technicians were able to partially restore power in 15 administrative regions of Ukraine, the deputy head of the presidential office, Kyrylo Tymoshenko, said on Wednesday night.
In Kyiv, services like hospitals were back online. Tymoshenko said power would be restored to private customers next.
Around 2,750 so-called “invincibility centers” went into operation across the country, providing heating, electricity, water, internet and telephone services for citizens free of charge.
UN welcomes prisoner swap
A recent prisoner exchange between Kyiv and Moscow is a welcome development amid a sea of “dark news,” the UN’s political affairs chief Rosemary DiCarlo said on Wednesday night.
DiCarlo told the UN Security Council that both sides should continue to release prisoners and follow international humanitarian law in relation to prisoners of war.
Her comments came as Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian presidential office, shared a photo of 35 Ukrainian soldiers and one civilian returning from Russian custody.
Kyiv residents spend the night without power
Around 80% of households in Kyiv were without electricity and running water on Wednesday night following Russia’s bombardment of civilian infrastructure.
“Today’s rocket attacks have led to nuclear power plants being disconnected from the majority of heating and water plants,” the Energy Ministry said on Facebook
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said that “all municipal services were working to restore power and water supply to Kyiv as soon as possible.”
Kyiv is home to more than 3 million people.
American twins ‘rescued’ from Russia
An American group announced on Wednesday that it “rescued” two babies born who were born to a surrogate mother in St. Petersburg.
The mother previously lived in the Donbas but fled to Russia after the invasion of Ukraine. She gave birth in St Petersburg in early September.
Florida-based Project Dynamo — which was founded to help evacuate American troops and allies from Afghanistan last year — said the American parents contacted them after they were unsuccessful in getting the twins home from a Russian orphanage.
Project Dynamo told the AFP news agency that the US embassies in Moscow and Tallinn assisted with the operation but did not provide further details. The US State Department confirmed it is “aware of this information” but chose not to comment for privacy reasons.
US citizenship is automatically granted to children of American couples, including children born abroad to surrogate mothers, provided at least one parent is biologically related to the baby.
German deputy foreign minister accuses Russia of ‘state terrorism’
German Minister of State for Europe and Climate Anna Lührmann has told DW that Russia’s missile attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure amounted to “state terrorism.”
“It’s clear that Putin wants Ukraine to sink into cold and darkness this winter,” she told DW’s Nick Connolly during a visit to Kyiv amid the recent spate of Russian airstrikes.
“Ukrainians are facing up to all this with great bravery and we’re here to help them meet these challenges,” she said.
Lührmann, one of three deputies under Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, said she had come to Ukraine with an additional €55 million ($57.3 million) worth of support, including generators that will arrive in the next few days.
“Ukraine has our full solidarity. I believe that it’s not only Ukraine that would benefit for membership in the EU, the EU will be a better place with Ukraine as a member,” she added.
Macron: Russian strikes constitute ‘war crimes’
French President Emmanuel Macron has joined the chorus of European leaders and high-ranking officials in condemning Russia’s latest attacks on energy infrastructure.
“Every strike against civilian infrastructure constitutes a war crime and must not go unpunished,” Macron said.
He announced an aid conference to be held in Paris in December to raise money for the winter months. It follows a similar conference to raise money for Moldova earlier this week.
The French president said he intends to establish a direct line of contact regarding the fate of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. Ukraine is struggling to meet electricity demands and continued threats to the facility pose a serious health and environmental risk.
Macron added: “The Russian strategy is to dishearten people on the ground.”
More coverage of the war in Ukraine
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has said it was clear Russia was fighting a losing battle in Ukraine. Meanwhile, France’s Emmanuel Macron is preparing to resume “direct contact” with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
Germany’s “ring exchange” of tanks to avoid directly arming Ukraine got off to a slow start. But some experts see it as the prelude to a shift in German security policy.
lo,zc, dh/rt (AP, AFP, dpa, Reuters)