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CNN reporter walks through Ukrainian power plant at risk of another Russian attack
Ukraine’s advance in the?eastern Luhansk region?is “not going as fast as we would like,” a local official said, citing the weather and thousands of mobilized Russian reservists.
Emergency power outages continued Friday in Kyiv after “significant damage”?caused by Russian attacks. It will take weeks to repair the system, the city’s mayor said.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu reported Friday that the call for mobilization has been completed and the target goal of 300,000 mobilized citizens has been fulfilled.
Russia’s invasion has plunged Europe into an era of insecurity, Germany’s President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said: “Harder years, rough years are coming.”
31 Posts
Our live coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news here or read through the updates below.?
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UN secretary-general urges renewal of crucial grain deal
From CNN's Richard Roth
United Nations Secretary-General?António Guterres?called for the renewal of the Black Sea grain initiative between Ukraine and Russia which potentially runs out in three weeks.
“The impact of the agreement signed in Istanbul has been clearly demonstrated. Exports of grains and other food products under the Black Sea Grain Initiative have surpassed 9 million tonnes,” Guterres said in a statement Friday.
Some background: In July, Ukraine and Russia agreed to the deal that allowed the resumption of?vital grain exports?from Ukrainian Black Sea ports, a major diplomatic breakthrough at the time, aimed at easing a global food crisis sparked by the war.
Ministers from both countries signed an agreement brokered by the United Nations and Turkey in Istanbul. It came after months of negotiations and promises to unblock ports on the Black Sea to allow the safe passage of grain and oilseeds – some of?Ukraine’s most important exports.
Guterres underlined the urgency to renew the deal on Nov. 19.
“If food and fertilizers do not reach global markets now, farmers will not have fertilizers at the right time and at a price they can afford as the planting season begins,?endangering crops in all regions of the world in 2023 and 2024, with dramatic effect on food production and food prices worldwide.?The current crisis of affordability will turn into a crisis of availability,” the statement said.
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UN humanitarian convoy delivers aid to community in eastern Ukraine
From CNN's Richard Roth and Jennifer Hauser
A United Nations humanitarian convoy delivered aid to more than 8,000 people in the community of Borova in eastern Ukraine which was recently retaken by Ukrainian forces.
UN partners delivered supplies like hygiene kits, bedding and kitchen sets which will help over 8,000 people as winter approaches, according to Dujarric.
Houses and key infrastructure are heavily damaged and “most of the 12,000 civilians who remain in the area are facing tremendous difficulties in accessing water gas and electricity,” Dujarric said, adding that millions more across the country are also struggling with the same problem.
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Poland to work with US on new nuclear power program to counter energy crisis caused by war in Ukraine
From CNN’s Pierre Meilhan and Maija Ehlinger?
Poland announced Friday it?will work with the United States to kickstart its nuclear power program in an effort to diversify its energy supply as Europe faces an energy crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.?
Following talks with Vice President Kamala Harris and US Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, Poland’s Prime Minister?Mateusz Morawiecki announced?on Twitter?that?his country’s?“nuclear energy project will use the reliable, safe technology” from Westinghouse Electric — a Pennsylvania-based, nuclear-focused technology?company.?
The project is valued at $40 billion and will “create or sustain” more than 100,000 American jobs, according to a tweet from Granholm.??
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Zelensky says Russia's?mobilized?troops are poorly trained and equipped
From CNN's?Yulia?Kesaieva and Jennifer Hauser
While Russia touts the hundreds of thousands of reservists that have bolstered its forces in recent weeks, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Friday that the new troops are ill-prepared for battle.
He added that Ukraine is preparing for Russian leadership to look for more opportunities to prolong the conflict.
The mobilization order got off to a rocky start and proved controversial in Russia, sparking protests and concerns from rights groups that ethnic minorities were disproportionately targeted for deployment.
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Canada announces new sanctions on Russian officials and funding of winter supplies for Ukraine
From CNN's Jennifer Hauser
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced several new measures to assist Ukraine on Friday.
Canadians will be able to purchase government-backed Ukraine Sovereignty Bonds, which will help fund the Ukrainian government.
Canada is also sanctioning “35 senior officials of energy entities, and six energy sector entities, involved in Russia’s illegal invasion. We intend to impose sanctions on members of the Russian justice and security sectors, too,” Trudeau said in a tweet Friday.
In preparation for winter, Canada is allocating funding to help provide shelter, blankets, clothing and heating appliances. There will also be funding for de-mining efforts.
“As the Russian regime continues its unwarranted and unjustifiable aggression against Ukraine, we’ll continue to support the Ukrainian government and people,” Trudeau tweeted.
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UN nuclear watchdog frustrated by slow progress on protection zone for Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant
From CNN’s Xiaofei Xu
Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is seen from a distance in the Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukraine, Monday, October 17.
Leo Correa/AP
Progress at establishing a protection zone for?Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant is going too slowly, according to?Rafael Grossi, the head of the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog agency.
Grossi, who serves as director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, added that he is “very frustrated.”
Russia, which controls the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, detained two staff members there on Oct. 17, which caused “great concern” for Grossi.
Some background: The plant is the largest nuclear power facility in Europe and has been under Russian control?since the beginning of the war, though it is still operated mostly by Ukrainian technicians.
Ukraine’s military alleged this month that plant employees are subjected to “moral and psychological pressure” to obtain Russian passports and sign employment contracts with Russia’s nuclear agency.
Grossi has repeatedly called for a nuclear safety zone around the plant “as soon as possible,” citing the threat that fighting over the facility could cause a nuclear accident.
It all comes at an increasingly fragile time for Ukraine’s energy supply. In recent weeks, Russian missile and drone attacks have targeted?Ukraine’s power plants and electrical grid leading to rolling blackouts and water supply disruptions.
CNN’s Olga Voitovych and Joshua Berlinger contributed to this report.
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Ammunition for rocket systems included in $275 million additional US security assistance for Ukraine
From CNN's Barbara Starr and Ellie Kaufman
The Pentagon announced an additional $275 million of security assistance for Ukraine through presidential drawdown authority, deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters during a briefing at the Pentagon Friday. The package includes additional ammunition for high mobility artillery rocket systems, or HIMARS, that have been a key weapon helping Ukraine counter Russia in the ongoing conflict.
The package also includes “500 precision guided 155 artillery rounds; 2,000 155mm rounds of remote anti-armor mine systems, more than 1,300 anti-armor systems, 125 Humvees, small arms and more than 2.75 million rounds of small arms ammunition and four satellite communications antennas,” Singh said.?
The package is the 24th?presidential drawdown authority package, Singh said.?
The US has committed “more than $18.5 billion dollars in security assistance to Ukraine” since the beginning of the Biden administration, Singh added.
Singh also said that a Defense Department training program for Ukrainians to operate the National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS) “will conclude soon.”
“Once it has been completed, the system will be ready for delivery to Ukraine,” she said.
CNN’s Michael Conte and Oren Liebermann contributed reporting to this post.
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Ukrainian foreign minister demands Iran stop supplying Russia with weapons against Ukraine
From CNN's Jennifer Hauser
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks at UN headquarters in New York, on September 22.?
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket/Getty Images
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he spoke with his Iranian counterpart Friday and demanded Iran halt supplying Russia with weapons.
“Today, I received a call from Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian, during which I demanded Iran to immediately cease the flow of weapons to Russia used to kill civilians and destroy critical infrastructure in Ukraine,” Kuleba said in a tweet Friday.
Iran has repeatedly denied it is sending weapons to Russia for use in Ukraine. CNN has not seen a statement as of this writing from the Iranian foreign minister on this topic.
Some context: Ukraine said Friday it has shot down more than 300?Iranian-made Shahed-136?drones?that Moscow is using to cripple infrastructure, according to Yurii Ihnat, spokesperson of the Air Force Command of Ukrainian Armed Forces.
CNN first reported in August that the US believed Russian officials began training on drones in Iran during the summer.
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Kyiv mayor says fixing electricity infrastructure could take 2 to 3 weeks
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Xiaofei Xu
It will take the Ukrainian capital at least two to three weeks to repair its power system damaged by Russian attacks, Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said on Friday as emergency power cuts have been implemented in the city.
“If there are no emergency accidents, ‘Ukrenergo’ (electricity company) specialists hope to eliminate the deficit caused by the attacks of Russian barbarians on critical infrastructure facilities within 2-3 weeks,” he said on his official Telegram channel.
Power supply is cut temporarily across all districts of Kyiv “due to a significant shortage of electricity - from 20 to 50% - today,” Klitschko added.
He called on residents and businesses to reduce electricity consumption to avoid potentially worse blackouts.
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It's evening in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know.
An apartment building is seen ruined?in Kherson, Ukraine, on October 26.
Wolfgang Schwan/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Progress hasn’t come easily in recent days for Ukrainian troops in the eastern part of the country, while the nation’s capital deals with another day of power outages brought on by Russian strikes.
If you’re just joining us, here’s what you need to know about the war in Ukraine today:
Kyiv’s power held hostage: Emergency power outages continue in Kyiv as the city struggles to repair?“significant damage”?from attacks on energy infrastructure. The deputy head of Russia’s Security Council threatened that energy stability was only possible through recognizing Moscow’s demands, including its recent annexations, which are condemned by the United Nations and other international bodies.
Ukrainian counteroffensive slows in the east: The advance of Ukrainian troops in the?eastern Luhansk region?is “not going as fast as we would like,” according to a regional official, due to weather and thousands of mobilized Russian reservists. Luhansk is one of four Ukrainian regions Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed to have annexed last month.
The battle for Kherson: The southern Kherson region is a focal point in the war, after weeks of gains raised the possibility that Ukraine could retake the regional capital from Russian forces. Moscow sent as many as 1,000 mobilized personnel to help hold the west bank of the Dnipro River, Ukraine’s military said, and Russia reported a more stable situation, with less artillery fire and no Ukrainian counterattacks. CNN’s Frederik Pleitgen visited the frontline.
An update on Iran’s drones: Ukraine has shot down more than 300 of the Iranian-made drones that Moscow is using to cripple infrastructure since Sept. 13, according to a Ukrainian Air Force spokesperson. Iran has denied supplying the self-detonating weapons. Here’s a diagram explaining how the unmanned vehicles work.
More investigators tasked with pipeline probe: Sweden will launch further investigations into?gas leaks in two Russian pipelines?in the Baltic Sea, on top of the ongoing probe into what Swedish authorities call “gross sabotage.” The rare, unexplained leaks in Nord Stream 1 and 2 tighten energy supply in Europe, Russia’s biggest consumer of natural gas. Check out this map of how gas reaches Europe.
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Kherson is "tense" as more Russian soldiers are on streets than locals, Ukrainian official?says
From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London?
The situation in the Russian-occupied southern city of Kherson is “tense,” with Russia stationing a large number of Russian soldiers there, a city official told Ukrainian TV on Friday.?
“People in the occupied territories with whom I communicate say that there are more Russian soldiers on the city streets than the local residents,” said Halyna Luhova, a member of Kherson’s city council.?
The UK’s defense ministry in its?daily intelligence update on Friday?said it was “likely” that “mobilized reservists” had been sent to reinforce Russian troops in the regional capital and Dnieper river’s west bank.
Serhii Khlan, an adviser to the governor of the Kherson region, told Ukrainian television that occupying forces had looted local businesses and civilians who remained in the city had been forced to become self-sufficient.?
Yuriy Sobolevskyi, a member of the Kherson regional council, posted photos on his Telegram account on Friday that he said showed near-empty shelves in the occupied region’s grocery stores.
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One Chechen unit lost more than 20 fighters in Kherson this week, leader says
From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London
A Chechen unit fighting in the southern Ukrainian region of Kherson suffered significant losses this week,?pro-Kremlin leader of the Chechen Republic Ramzan Kadyrov?said in a Telegram post late on Thursday.?
“At the beginning of this week, one of the Chechen units was shelled. This happened in the Kherson region. 23 soldiers were killed and 58 wounded,” he said.?
The Chechen Republic is a region in Russia’s North Caucasus. Kadyrov, a prominent ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has sent many of his troops to fight for Moscow in Ukraine.
Addressing his service members, he said, “If you are destined to fall in a holy war, then this is an honor and a great joy for every true Muslim.”?
In a separate Telegram post, an adviser to the Ukrainian governor of the Kherson region said that the Chechen fighters were shelled as they crossed the Dnieper river to the east bank. “They disclosed their location on their social networks like TikTok,” Serhii Khlan said.?
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Putin says adjustments to military needed after defense minister announces mobilization target reached
From CNN's Uliana Pavlova and Radina Gigova
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at a press conference on October 14, in Astana, Kazakhstan.
Contributor/Getty Images
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told President Vladimir Putin during a meeting on Friday that the call for mobilization in Russia has been completed and the target goal of 300,000 mobilized citizens has been fulfilled, with no additional mobilization plans ahead.?
“The dispatch of citizens called for mobilization was completed today. Draft notifications to citizens have been discontinued. The task set by you — to mobilize 300,000 people — has been fulfilled. No additional tasks are planned,” Shoigu told Putin during the televised meeting.?
In his address, Shoigu also told Putin that out of those who were mobilized, 82,000 recruits are already in the conflict zone, with 218,000 recruits still in training.
Putin is the only official in Russia who can officially end mobilization in the country by issuing a decree.
Putin told?Shoigu that “adjustments to all components of the Armed Forces” are needed for what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine.
“Based on the experience of conducting a special military operation, we need to think over and make adjustments to all components of the Armed Forces, including the Ground Forces,” Putin told Shoigu, asking the defense ministry to work out the details.
“Let’s agree that in December at the annual board after all this work, I repeat once again, including at the expert level, you will report proposals which could be accepted,” Putin said.?
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Sweden to further investigate Nord Stream pipeline leaks
From CNN's Amy Cassidy and Henrik Pettersson in London
Sweden will launch further investigations into gas leaks in two Russian pipelines in the Baltic Sea, prosecutors announced Friday, on top of the ongoing probe into what Swedish authorities call “gross sabotage.”
“I have decided, together with the Security Service, to carry out a number of supplementary investigations at the crime scene,” senior public prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist announced in a statement from the Swedish Prosecution Authority.
The Swedish Armed Forces will assist with the initial ongoing investigation into the leaks, Ljungqvist announced. A spokesperson for Sweden’s Prosecution Authority said it was unable to provide CNN with more detail.?
Remember: The initial investigation was launched after rare unexplained leaks were detected last month in the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines, which are designed to pump gas from Russia to Europe and are central to Europe’s energy crisis.
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Medvedev says power supply may be restored if Kyiv recognizes Russian demands
From CNN's Uliana Pavlova and Jennifer Hauser
Former Russian President and Prime Minister and current deputy head of Russia's Security Council Dmitry Medvedev speaks during a meeting on the military-industrial complex at the Kremlin, on September 20, in Moscow, Russia.
Contributor/Getty Images
Former Russian President and Prime Minister and current deputy head of Russia’s Security Council Dmitry Medvedev said the power supply situation in Ukraine could improve if Kyiv would recognize “Russia’s demands.”
Ukraine and the United Nations General Assembly have condemned?Russia’s attempted?annexations of four Ukrainian zones, saying it is illegal and not valid.
Emergency power outages in Kyiv continued on Friday morning as the city struggled to repair “significant damage” caused by an attack on energy infrastructure the previous day, according to the energy company DTEK.?Russia has been striking key energy infrastructure across Ukraine in recent weeks, causing blackouts and leading to warnings that those living in the country could face a difficult winter period.
Ukrainian Energy Minister?German Galushchenko told CNN Friday that Medvedev’s comments are the “usual Russian approach,” and “of course, it is even impossible to discuss and that is only giving evidence that all of these massive attacks on energy infrastructure were aimed to make terror to our people.”
“The main goal of this destruction is, especially on the upcoming winter, is to create problems for the civilians. … They aim to destroy the energy infrastructure of the country before the winter,” he added.
The energy minister also called for international assistance with more air protection systems to protect energy infrastructure from drone attacks. He said there is also an urgent need for equipment to replace what has been damaged.
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US expected to announce $275 million in security assistance for Ukraine
From CNN's Arlette Saenz
US President Joe Biden’s administration is expected to announce a new round of security assistance for Ukraine totaling around $275 million today, according to a US official.
The fresh round of assistance will come through a presidential drawdown from existing inventories and will not include any new types of weapons systems, the official said.
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Remains of 18th-century Russian commander Potemkin moved deeper into Russian-held territory, official says
From CNN’s Anna Chernova?
The bones of a famed 18th-century Russian commander have been removed from St. Catherine’s Cathedral in the occupied city of Kherson, the region’s pro-Russian proxy leader has announced.
The remains of Prince Grigory Potemkin and a statue of him have been taken across the Dnieper river and further into Russian-held territory, Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed governor, told Crimean TV.
“We have moved the remains of His Serene Highness Prince Potemkin from St. Catherine’s Church and the monument itself to the left [east] bank,” Saldo said, according to Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.
Monuments to naval commander Fyodor Ushakov and commanders Alexander Suvorov and Vasily Margelov were also removed from the church and taken to an undisclosed location, Saldo said. The relics will be returned when the city is safer, he added.
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Ukraine has shot down over 300 Iranian-made drones, military official says
From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London?
Uraine has shot down more than 300 of the Iranian-made Shahed-136 drones that Moscow is using to cripple critical infrastructure since Sept. 13, according to Yurii Ihnat, spokesperson of the Air Force Command of Ukrainian Armed Forces.?
In a briefing to journalists on Friday, Ihnat said Moscow was “changing tactics because it doesn’t have enough missiles left. They are running out of Iskander missiles. Other types of missiles are also scarce.”?
German president condemns Putin and predicts "rough years" ahead in rare speech
From CNN's Nadine Schmidt in Berlin
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaks at a press conference on October 25, in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Ukrainian Presidency/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has plunged Europe into an era of insecurity, Germany’s President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Friday, a day after Russian President Vladimir Putin said the world faces the ”the most dangerous decade” since the end of World War II.?
Russia’s war in Ukraine has ”also plunged us in Germany into another time, into an insecurity we thought we had overcome: a time marked by war, violence and flight, by concerns about the expansion of war into a wildfire in Europe,” Steinmeier said in a rare, nationally televised speech.
“Harder years, rough years are coming,” Steinmeier warned.?
“When we look at the Russia of today, there is no room for old dreams,” Steinmeier said, referring to former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev’s vision of a “common European home.”
Steinmeier, who is from a wing of Germany’s Social Democrats that long argued for closer economic ties to Moscow, said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had caused an ”epochal break” in Germany’s ties with Moscow.
Steinmeier, whose role as head of the German state is largely ceremonial, said in his address to the nation that Russian President Vladimir Putin was personally responsible for the turmoil in Europe.
”In his imperial obsession, the Russian president has broken international law,” he said.
Steinmeier made a surprise visit to Kyiv on Tuesday, where he promised Germany’s ongoing support to Ukraine, particularly in the field of air defense. It was Steinmeier’s first wartime visit to Ukraine after two failed attempts in April, when he was uninvited due to his links with Russia, and last week when his visit was canceled for security reasons.
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CNN visits frontlines in Kherson region, as Ukrainian forces inch into Russian-controlled territory
By CNN staff
Russian state media has?reported?the situation in the Kherson region of Ukraine is stabilizing, with less frequent artillery fire and no counterattacks from Ukrainian forces.
The region has become a focal point in the ground campaign, after weeks of steady gains by Kyiv’s forces raised the possibility that Ukraine could retake the regional capital, which has been occupied by Russia since early in the war.
Moscow has meanwhile reduced the footprint of its occupation in Kherson. Ukrainian officials say the Russians are moving injured people, administrative services and financial institutions out of the city, while sending in more troops to fortify their positions.
CNN’s Frederik Pleitgen visited the frontline in the Kherson region to get a first-hand look at how Ukrainian troops are leading the charge into Russian-controlled territory.
Ukrainian advance in Luhansk “not going as fast as we would like” -- regional governor
From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London
The advance of Ukraine’s ground forces in the eastern Luhansk region is being slowed by the weather, “thousands” of mobilized reservists and fierce Russian resistance, governor Serhiy Hayday told Ukrainian television on Friday.
“The advance of Ukrainian troops forward is not going as fast as we would like it to,” Hayday said. “Russian troops had some time to recover reserves. We see a lot of mobilized personnel and convicts there, as well as lots of equipment. The Russians had time to prepare fortifications and mine large areas.”
Luhansk is one of four Ukrainian regions Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed to have annexed last month.
Hayday said the Kremlin had deployed “thousands” of mobilized reservists to stave off the Ukrainian counteroffensive. “There are a lot of newly mobilized personnel in the Luhansk region – thousands of them actually,” he said. “There are already a couple of thousand around Bakhmut, but they die in bulk. The mobilized simply go forward to identify our positions. They will not break through, but they are still people who can pull a trigger and so bullets will be shot in our direction.”
“The average “shelf life” of mobilized personnel is about two weeks,” he added.
Hayday claimed that Ukrainian troops were still pushing forward one to three kilometers a day on some parts of the frontline, despite weather that, “does not contribute to the Ukrainian advance.”
The “fiercest battles” were around Bilohorivka and Svatove, he said, and villages retaken by Ukraine were still being shelled by the Russians.
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Emergency power outages in Ukrainian capital Kyiv continue?
From CNN’s Jo Shelley?
A residential building is seen during a blackout in Kyiv, Ukraine, on October 27.
Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Emergency power outages in Kyiv continued on Friday morning as the city struggled to repair “significant damage” caused by an attack on “critically important” energy infrastructure the previous day, the energy company DTEK said in a post on Facebook.?
DTEK warned that “longer power outages are possible.”?
“Due to the night attack on October 27, a number of critically important energy facilities went out of order,” it said.
“Unfortunately there is a high possibility of more severe and long-term power outages in the coming days,” it warned.
DTEK reiterated calls for city residents to use electricity “sparingly”, especially in the morning and evening.
Russia has been striking key energy infrastructure across Ukraine in recent weeks, causing blackouts and leading to warnings that those living in the country could face a difficult winter period.
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Russia has sent up to 1,000 troops to defend occupied Kherson, Ukraine says
From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London
A view of damage at Velyka Oleksandrivka town in the Kherson region, Ukraine, on October 24.
Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Russia has sent “up to 1,000” mobilized personnel to the west bank of the Dnipro river in its bid to defend the city of Kherson, the Ukrainian armed forces said in a Facebook post on Friday.?
The post said that, while the region’s pro-Moscow authorities moved civilians and items like hospital equipment to the east bank, “the strengthening of the enemy group with mobilized military personnel numbering up to 1,000 people on the right [west] bank in the Kherson region is noted.”?
“They are resettled in the homes of local residents who have left these areas,” it added.?
Russia is digging in ahead of an expected battle for the regional capital, which lies on the west bank of the Dnipro.?
The UK’s defense ministry said in its daily intelligence update?on Friday?said it was “likely” that “mobilized reservists” had been sent to reinforce Russian troops on the west bank.?
“Russia has likely augmented some of its units west of the Dnipro river with mobilized reservists,” it said. “However, this is from an extremely low level of manning.”?
It added that Russian forces across most of Ukraine had transitioned to a “long-term, defensive posture” over the last six weeks, “likely due to a more realistic assessment that the severely undermanned, poorly trained force in Ukraine is currently only capable of defensive operations.”
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Top Putin aide visits Russian-controlled city of Kherson
From CNN’s Olly Racz and Jo Shelley
Sergei Aksyonov visits the headquarters of the Ministry of Emergency Situations in Mayskoye, Crimea on August 16.
Viktor Korotaev/Kommersant/Sipa USA
A top aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin has visited the Russian-occupied city of Kherson in southern Ukraine, the Kremlin-backed governor of annexed Crimea, Sergei Aksyonov, said in a Telegram post late on Thursday.?
Aksyonov said he had accompanied Sergei Kiriyenko to Kherson, which is the capital of one of four provinces Putin?declared he was annexing in September.
“Together with First Deputy Head of the Presidential Administration Sergey Vladilenovich Kiriyenko I visited Kherson, and also visited the port and the crossing over the Dnipro river,” Aksyonov said.?
Kherson was the first city to fall to Russian forces after Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February and is the only regional capital under their control. The Moscow-installed local authorities have warned of an impending Ukrainian attempt to retake the city, which could be one of the most significant battles in the war.?
The post from Aksyonov also said that the Russian-installed authorities in Kherson had finished their?relocation of residents from the west bank?of the Dnipro river further into Russian-held territory. “The [river] crossing is empty! The work of organizing the departure of residents on the left bank of the Dnipro river to safe regions of Russia has been completed,” he said.
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South?Korea's President denies supplying weapons to Ukraine after Putin accusation?
?From CNN’s Gawon Bae, Josh Pennington and Joseph Ataman
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol delivers a speech at the National Assembly in Seoul on October 25.
Jeon Heon-Kyun/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Friday denied providing lethal weapons to Ukraine, hours after Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed Seoul had decided to supply arms and ammunition to Kyiv.
“We are putting efforts to maintain peaceful, good relations with every country in the world, including Russia.”
Speaking at a forum in Moscow on Thursday, Putin claimed — without providing evidence — that South?Korea?had decided to send “arms and ammunition” to Ukraine, which would “ruin our relations” with them.
Some background: In February, the presidential Blue House ruled out South Korean military deployments or lethal support for Ukraine, a position reiterated by the Defense Ministry in March.
South?Korea has provided non-lethal supplies to Ukraine including bulletproof helmets, tents, blankets, bedspreads, ready-to-eat meals (MREs), first aid kits and medicines, South Korea’s Defense Ministry spokesperson Boo Seung-chan said in a briefing in March.?
Poland announced last month the purchase of almost 1,000 tanks, more than 600 pieces of artillery and dozens of fighter jets from South Korea, in part to replace equipment donated to Ukraine to help Kyiv fight?the Russian invasion, the Polish Ministry of Defense told CNN.
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White House official: US will provide more security aid for Ukraine very soon
From CNN's Sam Fossum
John Kirby, White House National Security Council spokesperson, speaks with CNN on Thursday, October 27.
CNN
The United States will provide a new security package to Ukraine “very, very soon,” according to John Kirby, White House National Security Council spokesperson.
Putin’s war of words:?Asked about?escalating rhetoric?from Russian President Vladimir Putin, Kirby said, “He’s the one who invaded Ukraine and in a completely unprovoked manner.”
Kirby added that the US sees no indication the Russians plan to use a “dirty bomb” —?a weapon combining conventional explosions with uranium — or other nuclear weapon in Ukraine.
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Here's what's behind the UN nuclear watchdog’s "dirty bomb" probe in Ukraine
From CNN's Maria Kostenko?in Kyiv
The United Nations’ nuclear watchdog?announced this week?that it will look for any signs of “dirty bomb” production in Ukraine —?and it’s doing so at Kyiv’s request.
International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi outlined the plans in a letter Thursday. He said the decision was prompted by a written request from the Ukrainian government, which is responding to?unproven claims?from Russia that it is developing the weapons.
Inspectors will look for any possible undeclared nuclear activities and materials related to the development of dirty bombs at two locations,?according to the statement?from Grossi.
The results would be released to the agency’s board of directors and the public as soon as possible, he added.
What is a dirty bomb??The?weapons in question?combine conventional explosives like dynamite with radioactive material like uranium. They are often referred to as weapons for terrorists, not countries, as they’re designed to spread fear and panic more than eliminate any military target.
What does Russia claim??Without providing any evidence,?Moscow claims?there are scientific institutions in Ukraine housing the technology needed to create a dirty bomb – and that Kyiv plans to use it.
The international community rejects this narrative:?Russia’s allegations have been?strongly refuted?by Ukraine, the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union and NATO, which have in turn accused Moscow of trying to launch its own false-flag operation, which would provide motivation or justification for its own attacks.
CNN’s Brad Lendon contributed to this report.
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Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians left without power, utility CEO says
From Maria Kostenko?in Kyiv
Shoppers look over items at a market in Kyiv, Ukraine on October 27.
Oleg Petrasyuk/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Thursday was a difficult day for Ukrainians after more Russian attacks left hundreds of thousands of homes?without power,?the CEO of Ukraine’s Yasno Energy Company said.
The power supply was slashed by 40% in some areas, Serhiy Kovalenko said in a statement. The new power cuts applied to Kyiv and its surrounding region, Chernihiv, Cherkasy and the Zhytomyr region,?the CEO said.
At one point, more than 320,000 homes in the capital were without power. By the evening, that number had fallen to 159,000 homes, he said.
In the wider Kyiv region, at least 258,000 homes were without power and more than 500,000 homes were disconnected throughout the day.
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Putin accuses Western elites of playing "dangerous, bloody and dirty game"
From CNN's Uliana Pavlova,?Sugam Pokharel?and?Amy Cassidy
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during the annual meeting with participants of the Valdai International Discussion Club, on October 27 in Moscow.?
Stringer/Getty Images
Russian President Vladimir Putin took some familiar swipes at the US and its allies during a speech on Thursday, accusing “Western elites” of playing a “dangerous, bloody and dirty game” and seeking to blame them for much of the world’s trouble, including his own invasion of?Ukraine.
Speaking at the Valdai Club discussion forum in Moscow, he denied that Russia had considered using nuclear weapons against Ukraine, saying Moscow had never “intentionally said anything” about it, but added that as long as nuclear weapons exist, there is always the danger of their use.
Putin also accused the West of “forcing the thesis that Russia will use nuclear weapons” to influence neutral countries against Moscow. He stressed that Russia’s military doctrine only allows the use of nuclear weapons for “defense” purpose.
Some context: His comments come after?Russian officials claimed, without evidence, that Ukraine is considering the use of a “dirty bomb,” which US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has described as “another fabrication and something that is also the height of irresponsibility coming from a nuclear power.”
US "concerned" about Russian escalation in Ukraine, defense head says
From CNN's Michael?Conte and Oren Liebermann
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin speaks during a media briefing at the Pentagon on October 27.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
The US is “certainly concerned” about escalation in Ukraine, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said during a news conference at the Pentagon.
Austin also said that Russia’s use of a nuclear weapon in Ukraine would result in “a very significant response from the international community.”
“Russia has been indiscriminately using thousands of offensive missiles in Ukraine,” a senior defense official said. “Their use of missiles in Ukraine shows we should expect these weapons to become a common feature of 21st?century conflict.”
So far, Russia has been “absolutely deterred from attacking NATO,” a second defense official said?with a level of confidence rarely heard from the US, especially amid escalating rhetoric from Russia and its state-run media outlets.?
“President Biden has stated unequivocally that we will defend every inch of NATO territory, and it’s very clear to us here in the Pentagon that Russia has received that message,” the official said.?