Rabu, 07 Juni 2023

Russia-Ukraine war live: Kyiv says 42,000 at risk from dam flooding as fears grow for missing people - The Guardian

About 42,000 people are at risk from flooding on both sides of the Dnipro River after the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam, Ukrainian officials have said, with floodwaters expected to peak on Wednesday.

The prediction came after UN aid chief Martin Griffiths told the security council on Tuesday night that the dam breach “will have grave and far-reaching consequences for thousands of people in southern Ukraine on both sides of the front line through the loss of homes, food, safe water and livelihoods”.

“The sheer magnitude of the catastrophe will only become fully realised in the coming days,” he said.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, Ukraine’s governor of Donetsk, one of the occupied regions of the Donbas which the Russian Federation claims to have annexed, has posted a situational update in which he states that yesterday two people were killed in the region by Russian shelling.

He listed Kurakhove, Ocheretyne, Avdiivka and Toretsk among locations targeted, with five houses damaged in the latter, and additional one high-rise building in Chasiv Yar coming under fire.

The claims have not been independently verified.

Maria Zakharova, official spokesperson of the Russian foreign ministry, has said that the government in Kyiv could not survive for “a hundredth of a second” without the support of the west, and claimed as a consequence that Ukraine was blackmailing the world.

Tass quotes her telling listeners of the Sputnik radio station:

Without the help of material, financial, without weapons, without political support, the Kyiv regime cannot exist for a hundredth of a second at all. Of course, people [in Ukraine’s government] have this understanding.

And therefore, they have long resorted to the method of blackmailing the world community, realizing that if this assistance, these supplies, these handouts stop even for a second, perhaps people no longer participate in this criminal conspiracy, then there will be nothing more, that is, they will disappear, in one second. The only thing that feeds them and gives them strength is these colossal Nato infusions in every sense of this word. Without them – the end.

Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Tass is carrying some quotes from Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-imposed leader of Ukraine’s occupied Kherson region. It reports:

Between 22,000 and 40,000 people were in the disaster zone in the Kherson region due to the emergency at the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station (KHPP). The level of the Kakhovka reservoir in the Enerhodar region dropped by more than 3.5m, Saldo said.

He also noted that from a military point of view, the operational-tactical situation after the destruction of the KHPP by the armed forces of Ukraine developed in favour of the Russian forces.

Both Ukraine and Russia have blamed the other for the destruction of the dam, which was in Russian-held territory. Ukraine’s hydroelectric energy company have stated that it was blown up from inside.

Tass reports that the occupying Russian authorities in the portion of Kherson that they control have declared “an ‘emergency situation’ mode of operation”.

The Russian Federation claimed to annex Kherson late last year, despite only controlling the territory to the south of the Dnipro, on its left-bank. Ukraine forced Russian troops back over the river and liberated the right-bank city of Kherson in November.

Ed Ram is in Kherson, and here are some more of his pictures, showing people wading through the flood water.

A child wades through rising flood water in central Kherson around 300 metres from the Dnipro river.
A man with his bike and dog attempt to travel through flooded Kherson.

Our photo desk has also put together this gallery of some of the most striking images to emerge since the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Two towns in Russia’s western Kursk region lost electricity and a man was wounded on Wednesday after Ukraine dropped explosives on an electricity substation near the border overnight, the region’s governor said.

“One of the workers received shrapnel wounds while restoring power supply. He is in the central district hospital and doctors are giving him all necessary treatment,” Reuters reports governor Roman Starovoyt said.

The claims have not been independently verified.

That is it from me for today. My colleague Martin Belam will take you through the rest of the day’s news.

The governor of Ukraine’s Kherson region, Oleksandr Prokudin, says that 1,582 houses have been flooded on the right bank of the Dnipro River and some 1,457 people have been evacuated overnight, Reuters reports.

At least seven people are missing after waters from the destroyed Nova Kakhovka dam flooded nearby areas, Russia’s TASS news agency cited the Moscow-installed mayor of the city of Nova Kakhovka as saying on Wednesday.

“Of seven people we know for sure (are missing),” TASS cited Nova Kakhvovka mayor Vladimir Leontiev as saying. More than 900 people were evacuated on Tuesday from the Russian-controlled city of some 45,000 people, which sits on the left bank of the Dnipro River.

Ukrainian officials said that some 80 communities in the overall Kherson region are at risk of being flooded, Reuters reports.

Relief workers on the Ukraine-controlled right bank of the river have reported having to work under fire. “The biggest difficulty right now is not the water. It’s the Russians on the other side of the river who are shelling us now with artillery,” said Andrew Negrych, who was coordinating relief efforts for a US charity, Global Empowerment Mission, on Tuesday.

In Kherson on Tuesday evening, Reuters reporters heard four incoming artillery blasts near a residential neighbourhood where civilians were evacuating.

At least seven people are missing after dam blast, Tass, Russia’s state news agency cited the Moscow-installed mayor of the city of Nova Kakhovka as saying on Wednesday.

No flood-related deaths have been reported, but US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the flooding had probably caused “many deaths”.

About 42,000 people are at risk from flooding on both sides of the Dnipro River after the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam, Ukrainian officials have said, with floodwaters expected to peak on Wednesday.

The prediction came after UN aid chief Martin Griffiths told the security council on Tuesday night that the dam breach “will have grave and far-reaching consequences for thousands of people in southern Ukraine on both sides of the front line through the loss of homes, food, safe water and livelihoods”.

“The sheer magnitude of the catastrophe will only become fully realised in the coming days,” he said.

Russian forces shelled the Ukrainian region of Kherson multiple times over the past day, the region’s governor said, with one person dying and one injured as a result of the attacks.

The shelling included the city of Kherson, the Ukrainian governor of the region, Oleksandr Prokudin, said on the Telegram messaging app.

Neither the Guardian nor Reuters could not independently verify the report. There was no further detail from Prokudin.

On Tuesday, the critical Nova Kakhovka dam in the Russian-controlled part of Kherson was destroyed, flooding large swaths of Kherson and forcing the evacuation of thousands.

Here is the video of Ukraine and Russia accusing each other of terrorism at the UN on Tuesday:

Water levels in the city of Nova Kakhovka have begun to decline after the destruction of the nearby dam, the Russian-installed administration of the city said on the Telegram messaging app.

“The water level on the previously flooded streets of Nova Kakhovka began to subside,” the administration of the now Moscow-controlled city in occupied Ukraine said.

Images released from the city have shown flooding submerging entire streets under water. The devastation to the region is likely to be severe and ongoing, even if it is confirmed that flood waters have begun to recede more than 24 hours after the dam collapsed.

Satellite images from Ukraine, provided by the Maxar Technologies company, have revealed the extent of the flooding in the country’s south.

The images show houses and buildings submerged in water, with many having only their roofs showing, and water taking over parks, land and infrastructure.

Maxar said that their images covered more than 2,500 square km between Nova Kakhovka and the Dniprovska Gulf southwest of Kherson city on the Black Sea, giving some idea of the scale of the crisis.

As Reuters reports, US President Joe Biden told G7 leaders last month that Washington supported joint allied training programmes for Ukrainian pilots on F-16s.

But US National Security adviser Jake Sullivan has said there was no final decision on Washington sending aircraft.

Zelenskiy has long appealed for the F-16 jets, saying their appearance with Ukrainian pilots would be a sure signal from the world that Russia’s invasion would end in defeat.

Russia said on Tuesday that US-built F-16 fighter jets can “accommodate” nuclear weapons and warned that supplying Kyiv with them will escalate the conflict further.

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2023-06-07 06:32:00Z
2109640738

Chris Christie lashes out at Trump family's 'breathtaking grift' – live - The Independent

Former Governor of New Jersey Chris Christie

Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie launched his campaign for president on Tuesday at a town hall in Manchester, New Hampshire.

This is the second time Mr Christie has made a bid for the White House, the first being in 2016 when he lost to former president Donald Trump.

Though Mr Christie lent his support to Mr Trump in 2016 when he dropped out of the race, he has since changed his opinion of the former president and become a vocal critic of Mr Trump.

That was evident on Tuesday, as he denounced his former ally as a corrupt narcissist and vowed to draw blood in his quest for the Republican nomination. He did so several times during the town hall event, including at one point when he tore into the former president’s family for “breathtaking” levels of corruption and “grift” that he said followed them through the White House and beyond.

The former New Jersey governor plans to position himself as a moderate Republican alternative to both Mr Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, while promising an aggressive campaign unafraid to punch at his rivals.

1686114900

Christie hits Trump for adding to debt — but so did congressional Republicans

One of Chris Christie’s attacks aimed at Donald Trump Tuesday evening hinged on the issue of the debt, which jumped under the Trump administration in large part due to the Covid-19 pandemic as well as a major tax cut passed in 2017.

The problem? While Mr Trump certainly was the one who signed that bill into law, it was Republicans in Congress — the same ones who he hopes will be his allies during a 2024 run — who voted for it.

John Bowden7 June 2023 06:15
1686107712

Next big Christie event: A CNN town hall

Chris Christie will return for another town hall event next week — this time moderated by CNN, which has hosted both Donald Trump and Nikki Haley for similar events in recent days.

John Bowden7 June 2023 04:15
1686104268

Christie rips into Trump family

Speaking about Donald Trump’s tenure in the White House, Mr Christie’s most scathing remark of the night was aimed at the entire Trump family as a whole.

"The grift from this family is breathtaking. Jared Kushner and Ivanka Kushner walk out of the White House, and months later, it turns out, they get $2 billion from the Saudis?” Mr Christie asked.

“That makes us a banana republic,” he added.

John Bowden7 June 2023 03:17
1686099262

Christie wraps up first 2024 event

Chris Christie’s first 2024 presidential campaign event has ended, following a whirlwind two hours of remarks and questions with the former New Jersey governor.

Follow all of The Independent’s live coverage of the 2024 race here, and be sure to join us again later in the week as the contest heats up with more appearances from GOP candidate including Ron DeSantis.

John Bowden7 June 2023 01:54
1686097560

Christie sets up bitter 2024 battle with Trump

The battle for the Republican nomination just got a whole lot messier.

That was the defining message of former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s campaign launch on Tuesday: Get ready for blood.

Calling out his opponents by name, deconstructing their campaign slogans and clever quips — Chris Christie was in prime form on Tuesday evening at St Anselm College in New Hampshire, where he addressed a small crowd of voters in a town hall-style event and put his sights clear on his top rival, Donald Trump.

Mr Christie spoke at length before taking questions from his guests. In his remarks throughout the event, he remained plain-spoken and sharp-tongued while denouncing the four years of his rival’s presidency as an utter failure and little more than an opportunity for “breathtaking” levels of corruption and “grift” carried out by the Trump family.

Read more:

John Bowden7 June 2023 01:26
1686096040

A look back on Chris Christie’s 2016 campaign

As former governor Chris Christie prepares to launch his 2024 presidential campaign in New Hampshire on Tuesday, many are reminded of his first go at the White House in 2015.

“America has been a nation that has always controlled events and yet today events control us. Why? Because leadership matters,” Mr Christie wrote in a post on his Facebook wall in 2015 . “It matters if we want to restore America’s role in the world, find the political will to take on the entrenched special interests that continually stand in the way of fundamental change, reform entitlement spending at every level of government, and ensure that every child, no matter their zip code, has access to a quality education.”

Here is a look back at Mr Christie’s campaign for president from The Independent:

John Bowden7 June 2023 01:00
1686094297

Trump lashes out on Truth Social

Donald Trump attacked his newest primary rival as Chris Christie’s town hall campaign launch unfolded Tuesday evening.

“How many times did Chris Christie use the word SMALL? Does he have a psychological problem with SIZE? Actually, his speech was SMALL, and not very good. It rambled all over the place, and nobody had a clue of what he was talking about,” he wrote on Truth Social.

“Hard to watch, boring, but that’s what you get from a failed Governor (New Jersey) who left office with a 7% approval rating and then got run out of New Hampshire. This time, it won’t be any different!” Mr Trump added.

John Bowden7 June 2023 00:31
1686092624

Christie attacks Donald Trump, and those who won't

Calling him a man “obsessed with the mirror” and unwilling to admit his own mistakes, Mr Christie entered into the conclusion of his remarks on Tuesday with a pointed attack aimed at Donald Trump.

Mr Christie also lashed out at Republicans like Ron DeSantis and his other rivals for the 2024 nomination, who he said were afraid to name their enemy as if he was “Voldemort” from the Harry Potter franchise.

“Beware of the leader in this country who has never made a mistake. Who has never done anything wrong. Who when something goes wrong it’s someone else’s fault,” said Mr Christie.

John Bowden7 June 2023 00:03
1686092428

Ex-governor references ‘BridgeGate’ scandal in remarks

Speaking to voters in New Hampshire, Chris Christie made it clear he was not shying away from questions about the ‘BridgeGate’ scandal that consumed the final months of his tenure in office.

Explaining that he trusted people whom he should not have, the governor explained: “It resulted in me being at one point in my career admitting that I was publicly embarrassed and humiliated by the things that had happened on my watch.”

John Bowden7 June 2023 00:00
1686091423

Christie: Obama, Biden and Trump made America ‘smaller’

Chris Christie lashed out at the past three presidents of the United States in his campaign launch Monday evening, blaming the men for making the United States “smaller” and dividing Americans into groups.

Barack Obama, he said, “divided” America. Donald Trump divided the country “even further”. And Joe Biden ran on bringing the country together, before according to Mr Christie pitting his party against Republicans and painting the GOP with one brush.

John Bowden6 June 2023 23:43

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2023-06-07 05:15:00Z
2091962675

Selasa, 06 Juni 2023

Russia-Ukraine war live updates: thousands evacuated as UN says scale of dam disaster will only be clear in coming days – latest news - The Guardian

UN aid chief Martin Griffiths told the UN security council that “the sheer magnitude of the catastrophe will only become fully realised in the coming days.”

“But it’s already clear that it will have grave and far-reaching consequences for thousands of people in southern Ukraine on both sides of the front line through the loss of homes, food, safe water and livelihoods,” he added.

The ISW has also looked at the available information on whether there is a threat to the Zaporizhzhia power plant, which seems to be less acute than initially feared, it reports.

The plant will have sufficient water for cooling for “some months”, International Atomic Energy Agency director Rafael Grossi said.

The ISW quotes Grassi and other officials:

  • IAEA Director Rafael Grossi reported that the drop in the water level at the Kakhovka Reservoir poses “no immediate risk to the safety of the plant” and that IAEA personnel at the ZNPP are closely monitoring the situation. Grossi stated that the ZNPP is pumping water into its cooling channels and related systems, and that the large cooling pond next to the ZNPP will be ”sufficient to provide water for cooling for some months.”

  • Ukrainian nuclear energy operator Energoatom’s President Petro Kotin stated that the fall in the water level at the Kakhovka Reservoir does not directly impact the water level in the ZNPP cooling pond and noted that the ZNPP pool basins are still at the same water level.

  • Ukrainian Chief Inspector for Nuclear and Radiation Safety Oleh Korikov stated that the decrease in water level at the Kakhovka Reservoir will not affect the condition of the ZNPP provided that ZNPP personnel implement established safety measures.

The Institute for the Study of War has published its report on the dam’s collapse. The US thinktank says, it “has not yet observed clear evidence of what transpired at the KHPP on June 6 and is therefore unable to offer an independent assessment of responsibility at the time of this publication.”

But, it added, “Statements by US and European officials are generally consistent with ISW’s October 2022 forecast that the Russians have a greater and clearer interest in flooding the lower Dnipro despite the damage to their own prepared defensive positions and forces than the Ukrainians.”

In October 2022 the USW said that “Russia may use the flooding to widen the Dnipro River and complicate Ukrainian counteroffensive attempts across the already-challenging water feature.”

In its update, it says that “Russian sources have expressed intense and explicit concern over the possibility that Ukraine has been preparing to cross the river and counterattack into east bank Kherson Oblast. Available footage from June 6, corroborated by claims made by Russian [military bloggers], suggests that the flooding washed away Ukrainian positions near the Dnipro shoreline and forced Ukrainian formations to evacuate while under Russian artillery fire.”

Reporters for the Associated Press are on the ground as evacuations are take place. They have filed this report:

In the early morning, before the floodwaters arrived, many residents tried to stick it out. But as the water level climbed in the streets, rising nearly to the tops of bus stops or the second floor of buildings, national guard teams and emergency crews fanned out to retrieve people who got stranded.

Some found themselves floating under the rafters of their homes as the waters rose. Space was limited on the trucks, and an effort to tow two rafts behind one went awry when the ropes snapped. One man chucked his German shepherd from the roof of the stalled truck onto another. Some residents clung to each other to keep from falling into the rising tide.

Officials said about 22,000 people live in areas at risk of flooding in Russian-controlled areas on the eastern side of the river, while 16,000 live in the most critical zone in Ukrainian-held territory on the western side — areas like those evacuated on Tuesday.

The United Nations said at least 16,000 people have already lost their homes, and efforts were underway to provide clean water, money, and legal and emotional support to those affected. Evacuations on the Ukrainian-controlled side of the river were ferrying people to cities including Mykolaiv and Odesa to the west.

Amnesty International’s regional director for Eastern Europe says that the dam’s destruction is a “huge humanitarian disaster”.

“While towns and villages in downstream Dnieper River are going under water, the human and environmental cost of the destruction of the Kakhovka dam is a huge humanitarian disaster — and the international community must unite to bring those responsible to justice,” said Marie Struthers.

“The rules of international humanitarian law specifically protect dams, due to the dangers their destruction poses to civilians,” she said.

Vasily Nebenzya, the Russian envoy to the UN, claimed Ukraine had committed an unthinkable crime. His main supportive evidence was an article in the Washington Post in which Andriy Kovalchuk, Ukraine’s southern commander, claimed Ukraine had tested strikes on the dam.

Nebenzya said the west was responsible for a coordinated disinformation campaign full of flawed logic that “reeks of schizophrenia and not of a latent variety”. He said the attack was part of an effort to distract from Ukraine’s clearly bogged down military offensive that was failing to meet its objectives.

“We are deeply bewildered that the UN secretariat repeatedly fails to condemn the attacks perpetrated by the Kyiv regime citing insufficient information. The secretary’s leadership does not hesitate to replicate politicised conclusions that suggest all such crimes are as a result of Russia’s actions in Ukraine,” he said.

Neither the French, US or British representatives at the UN directly said there was evidence of Russian responsibility, but called for an investigation and insisted their support for Ukraine was unwavering.

Outside the UN security council chamber on Tuesday, the deputy US ambassador to the UN, Robert Wood, said: “We’re not certain at all, we hope to have more information in the coming days.

“But, I mean, come on … why would Ukraine do this to its own territory and people, flood its land, force tens of thousands of people to leave their homes – it doesn’t make sense.”

UN delegates attend a Security Council meeting for the Maintenance of Peace and Security of Ukraine at the United Nations headquarters on 6 June 2023 in New York City.

Russia’s UN envoy was accused of floundering in a “mud of lies” after he claimed at an emergency session of the security council that Ukraine destroyed Kakhovka dam in a “war crime”.

Sergiy Kyslytsya, the Ukraine envoy to the UN, said it was typical of Russia to blame the victim for its own crimes, pointing out Russia has been in control of the dam for more than a year and it was physically impossible to blow it up by shelling. He said the dam was mined by the Russian occupiers and they blew it up. He accused Russia of “floundering again in the mud of lies”.

“By resorting to scorched earth tactics, or in this case to flooded earth tactics, the Russian occupiers have effectively recognised that the captured territory does not belong to them, and they are not able to hold these lands,” Kyslytsya said.

A satellite photo Tuesday morning by Planet Labs PBC analysed by The Associated Press shows more than 600 meters (over 1,900 feet) missing from the wall of the Nova Kakhovka dam.

The top image shows the undamaged Kakhovka HPP dam and an image taken on June 6, 2023 showing water flowing through the damaged Kakhovka HPP dam.

A video shared by Euromaidan Press shows a house collapsing into floodwaters:

UN aid chief Martin Griffiths told the UN security council that “the sheer magnitude of the catastrophe will only become fully realised in the coming days.”

“But it’s already clear that it will have grave and far-reaching consequences for thousands of people in southern Ukraine on both sides of the front line through the loss of homes, food, safe water and livelihoods,” he added.

This is Helen Sullivan bringing you the latest from the war in Ukraine and the aftermath of the attack on Nova Kakhovka dam.

I’ll be with you for the next while. If you see news you think we may have missed, have questions, or live near Nova Kakhovka dam get in touch with me on Twitter @helenrsullivan.

Meanwhile China and Russia have conducted a joint air patrol on Tuesday over the Sea of Japan and East China Sea for a sixth time since 2019, prompting neighbouring South Korea and Japan to scramble fighter jets, Reuters reports.

China’s defence ministry said the patrol was part of the two militaries’ annual cooperation plan. South Korea scrambled fighter jets, according to its military, after four Russian and four Chinese military aircraft entered its air defence zone in the south and east of the Korean peninsula.

Japan’s military said it had scrambled fighter jets after verifying that two Russian bombers had joined two Chinese bombers over the Sea of Japan and flown together as far as the East China Sea, where they were joined by two Chinese fighter planes.

Here are images showing damage to the dam:

A satellite image shows a close-up view of flooding in Nova Kakhovka dam and hydroelectric power facility, in Nova Kakhovka, Ukraine, 6 June 2023.

Satellite images taken on Tuesday afternoon by Maxar Technologies showed extensive flooding in southern Ukraine with the region’s Nova Kahkovka dam and hydroelectric station largely destroyed.

This image was taken before homes were flooded:

A satellite image shows a view before homes were flooded along Dnipro River southeast of Kherson, Ukraine, 6 June 6, 2023.

In this image shows large sections of the area under water:

A satellite image shows flooded homes along Dnipro River southeast of Kherson, Ukraine, June 6, 2023.

Maxar said the images of more than 2,500 square km (965 square miles) between Nova Kakhovka and the Dniprovska Gulf southwest of Kherson city on the Black Sea, showed numerous towns and villages flooded.

“The Nova Kakhovka dam and hydroelectric plant has been largely destroyed and few structures remain,” Maxar said in a statement.

The satellite images show houses and buildings submerged in water, with many having only their roofs showing, and water taking over parks, land and infrastructure.

Welcome back to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine and the aftermath of the breaching of the Nova Kakhovka dam.

I’m Helen Sullivan and I’ll be bringing you the latest.

UN aid chief Martin Griffiths has told the United Nations security council that “the sheer magnitude of the catastrophe will only become fully realised in the coming days.”

“But it’s already clear that it will have grave and far-reaching consequences for thousands of people in southern Ukraine on both sides of the front line through the loss of homes, food, safe water and livelihoods,” he added.

Here is a summary of recent developments to bring you up to date:

  • Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has condemned the attack on the Nova Kakhovka dam in the Russia-occupied south of his country as “an environmental bomb of mass destruction”. Zelenskiy made the claim in his nightly video address to the nation on Tuesday, adding that only liberation of the whole of Ukraine from the Russian invasion could guarantee against new “terrorist” acts. “Such deliberate destruction by the Russian occupiers and other structures of the hydroelectric power station is an environmental bomb of mass destruction,” he said.

  • UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said that if the bursting of the Kakhovka dam in southern Ukraine on Tuesday was proven to be intentional, it would represent a “new low” in Russian aggression, BBC reporter Chris Mason tweeted.Sunak said the UK’s military and intelligence agencies were looking into the blast and it was too soon to pre-empt the cause and make a definitive judgment, while he was travelling to Washington for his upcoming meeting with Joe Biden, BBC’s Mason said.

  • US military chief Milley said Ukraine is “well prepared” for a counteroffensive. The senior US military leader, chair of the joint chiefs General Mark Milley, says that while few conclusions can be drawn from an increase of fighting in Ukraine, the country is ‘well prepared’ to carry on the battle against the Russian invasion. But he also cautions the war will be “lengthy”.

  • Zelenskiy’s chief of staff says he “does not understand” how there are any doubts that Russian forces blew up the dam. In a statement, Andriy Yermak said: “At 2.50am, Russian troops blew up the Kakhovka hydroelectric station and its dam. I do not understand how there can be any doubt about this. Both constructions are located in the temporary Russian-occupied territories. Neither shelling nor any other external influence was capable of destroying the structures. The explosion came from within.”

  • The Kremlin has accused Ukraine of deliberately sabotaging the dam. Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, told reporters: “We can state unequivocally that we are talking about deliberate sabotage by the Ukrainian side.” He said [Russian president] Vladimir Putin had been briefed on the situation.

  • The US “cannot say conclusively” who was responsible. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters at the White House: “We’re doing the best we can to assess”, noting “destruction of civilian infrastructure is not allowed by the laws of war”. Earlier Tuesday, NBC News reported that the US government had intelligence indicating Russia was behind the incident, according to two US officials and one western official.

  • The Ukrainian government called for people living downstream to evacuate in the face of catastrophic flooding. Energy company Ukrahydroenergo said the hydroelectric power plant at the dam had been blown up from the inside and was irreparable.

  • The governor of the Kherson region, Oleksandr Prokudin, said about 16,000 people were in the “critical zone” on the Ukrainian-controlled right bank of the river. The areas most under threat of flooding are the islands along the course of the Dnipro downstream of Nova Kakhovka and much of the Russian-held left bank in southern Kherson. Andrey Alekseyenko, one of the Russian-installed officials in occupied Kherson, has posted to Telegram to say that up to 22,000 people are in the flood plains in Russian-controlled territory.

  • Ukraine’s foreign ministry called for an urgent meeting of UN security council to discuss what it called a Russian “terrorist act against Ukrainian critical infrastructure”.

  • There seems to be no immediate safety threat to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant from the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam 200km downstream, according to Ukrainian and UN experts. Water from the reservoir affected by the destruction of the dam is used to supply the plant’s cooling systems.

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2023-06-07 02:06:49Z
2109640738

Nova Kakhovka dam: everything you need to know about Ukraine’s strategically important reservoir - The Guardian

In the early hours on Tuesday, footage began to emerge of water spilling from the strategically important Nova Kakhovka dam in southern Ukraine. The Ukraine army’s southern military command said the dam had been blown up by Russian forces. The local Russian-installed mayor has called it a “terrorist act”.

Nova Kakhovka dam on the Dnipro River lies about 20 miles (30km) east of the city of Kherson. Its destruction will have a number of significant repercussions for the local area – and for Ukraine’s wider war effort.

Why is Nova Kakhovka dam significant?

The dam traverses Ukraine’s enormous Dnipro River, holding back a huge reservoir of water. The dam itself is 30 metres tall and hundreds of metres wide. It was built in 1956 as part of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant.

The reservoir it contains holds an estimated 18 cubic kilometres of water, about the same volume as the Great Salt Lake in Utah. Bursting the dam could send a wall of water flooding settlements below it, including Kherson, which Ukrainian forces recaptured in late 2022.

Soon after Ukraine accused Russia of blowing up the dam, the head of the Kherson region urged residents to evacuate the area warning that “water will reach a critical level in 5 hours”.

Water from the reservoir supplies the Crimean peninsula to the south, which was annexed by Russia in 2014, as well as the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, Europe’s largest, to the north.

It also helps power the Kakhovka hydroelectric plant. Its destruction will add to Ukraine’s ongoing energy problems, after Russia spent weeks earlier this year targeting vital infrastructure.

It will also be likely to wreck the canal system that irrigates much of southern Ukraine, including Crimea.

A satellite image of the dam taken in February.

Has it been threatened before?

Since the start of Russia’s war against Ukraine, the Nova Kakhovka dam has been earmarked as a potential target for both its strategic importance – as well as the damage that its destruction would unleash. It was captured by Russia at the start of Moscow’s February 2022 invasion, and has been held by it ever since.

In October, as Ukraine was in the midst of reclaiming large parts of occupied Kherson, Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged the west to warn Russia not to blow up the dam, warning that it would flood a large area of southern Ukraine. At the time, he claimed that Russian forces had planted explosives inside the dam.

Zelenskiy said “destroying the dam would mean a large-scale disaster” and compared such an act to the use of weapons of mass destruction.

Ukraine military intelligence said “the scale of the ecological disaster [would] go far beyond the borders of Ukraine and affect the entire Black Sea region”.

At the same time, Russia accused Kyiv of rocketing the dam and planning to destroy it.

After Ukraine recaptured Kherson in November, images emerged of some significant damage to the dam. Russia had accused Ukraine of shelling the dam in its campaign to recapture Kherson.

An image from November showing damage to the dam.

What has been happening this year?

In May, residents in a nearby village reported ongoing flooding which they blamed on Russia’s occupation of Nova Kakhovka. Speaking to the Reuters news agency, locals said the water level had begun to rise in April, sometimes by up to 30cm a day, and had remained elevated since.

Ukrainian officials said the rise of the Dnipro’s water level, “as a result of which settlements in the Zaporizhzhia region were flooded, is linked to the Russian occupation of the Kakhovka dam”.

But they added that they were unable to say what exactly Russian forces were doing at the dam because they did not have access themselves.

A Russian energy official said in May that the dam risked being overwhelmed by record-high water levels.

Reuters contributed to this report

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2023-06-06 22:52:00Z
2109640738

Death toll in Odisha train crash rises as unclaimed bodies 'to be embalmed' - The Independent

India train crash: Families of victims speak out after fatal derailment

The death toll in the Odisha train crash has risen to 278 as three more people succumbed to their injuries, according to Railway Ministry data.

Eastern Central Railways official Rinkesh Ray said: “About 1,100 people were injured in the accident, out of which about 900 people were discharged after treatment. Around 200 people are being treated in various hospitals in the state”.

Meanwhile, a hospital is to start embalming the unidentified victims, with more than 100 bodies still yet to be claimed by families.

Anatomy and forensic experts were called to AIIMS Bhubaneswar to engage in the process of preserving the bodies at the hospital’s overstretched mortuary, which does not have refrigeration facilities.

It is now four days since three trains collided in the eastern state of Odisha in of India’s worst train crash this century, killing at least 278 people, many of them migrant labourers travelling in the trains’ lower class carriages.

The accident has sparked questions over the safety of India’s vast railways network, which is used by more than 22 million people every day.

Officials are investigating whether the collision occurred due to “deliberate interference” with an electronic safety system, according to reports.

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Watch live: Recovery efforts progress after deadly train crash in India

Watch The Independent’s live coverage of the Odisha train crash as recovery efforts are underway.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 08:06
1686040224

Haunting drone footage lays bare deadly devastation of India train crash

Aerial footage captured above the scene of the deadly India train crash shows the extent of the incident that has killed almost 300 people.

So far 278 people have died and 1,100 more were left injured after two passenger trains crashed into each other in India’s eastern state of Odisha around 7pm 2 June.

Footage from the scene shows the damaged carriages derailed and laying on their sides both near the tracks and meters away.

Aerial visuals over scene of Odisha train accident show extent of devastating damage
Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 09:30
1686038424

Man found alive almost 48 hours after Odisha train accident

A man was found alive and rescued almost two days after the deadly train accident in Odisha, after he was thrown by the impact of the crash into thick bushes next to an upturned carriage.

Dulal Mazumdar, 35, from Guwahati, was discovered with severe injuries by those working on the tracks to restore train services on Sunday.

The workers said they were alerted after they heard a feeble voice at around 5.30pm.

“We were surprised how a man could be alive after 48 hours of a train accident such as this. We called for help and, aided by some social workers, took him to the community centre at Soro. He was administered first aid there, and rushed to the Balasore district headquarters hospital,” a policeman who did not wish to be identified was quoted as saying by HT.

It is not known if the man survived his injuries.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 09:00
1686036624

Video shows CBI officials at crash site conducting investigation

A team of CBI officials has arrived in Odisha to conduct an investigation into the triple train collision as suspicion are being raised over deliberate sabotage of the system.

The CBI, India’s equivalent of the FBI, will look into whether criminal charges should be brought over the crash that killed at least 278 passengers, though there is mounting concern in Odisha that the actual death toll may prove to be considerably higher.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 08:30
1686034824

Political parties demand resignation of railway minister for impartial inquiry

As many as 12 opposition political parties are making a joint call for the resignation of railways minister Ashwini Vaishnaw in order to make way for an impartial probe into the country’s worst train accident this century.

The political parties, including Congress, CPI, RJD, AAP and others, held a joint meeting and passed a resolution to reject a CBI criminal probe and demand a Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team be set up instead.

The opposition leaders accused the CBI, India’s equivalent of the FBI, of “working at the behest of the [ruling] BJP” party.

Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh said: “Even before the Commissioner of Railway Safety has submitted his report on Balasore train disaster, a CBI inquiry is announced.”

He called it an attempt at “headlines management” after having failed to meet deadlines.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 08:00
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Death toll revised to 278 as more people succumb to injuries

The death toll in the Odisha train crash has been revised to 278, adding three more deaths among people who succumbed to their injuries in hospital.

Rinkesh Ray, an Eastern Central Railways official, said on Monday that apart from 278 deaths, 1,100 people were injured in the 1 June crash.

The death toll was first revised to much lower from the initial 288, after the state government officials said some bodies were counted twice.

The state government’s figure however still stood at 275 on Tuesday morning.

It comes as witnesses and political leaders questioned the official death toll, raising doubts over whether it was being kept artificially low given the sheer number of those critically injured.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee, who is also a former railways minister, said 61 people from her state alone have died and 182 others are still missing.

Mr Ray said out of 278 bodies, 177 have been identified and 101 unidentified have been kept in six different hospitals.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 06:48
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Pictures show devastation in the aftermath of Odisha train accident

Victims' family members look at photographs at the emergency ward to identify dead bodies, in the Fakir Mohan Medical College and Hospital.

Hospital staff carry a victim’s coffin who died in the carriage wreckage from AIIMS Bhubneshwar.

Volunteers display victims' photographs to help family members identify dead bodies at the help desk in hospital.

Anil Marandi sobs while he searches for his three family members among the identified bodies.

A rescue worker walks past victims' bodies at a business park used as temporary mortuary to identify the dead recovered from the carriage wreckage.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 06:21
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101 bodies yet to be identified and 200 injured receiving treatment, officials say

A top railway official has said 101 dead bodies are yet to be identified and out of 1,100 injured people, 200 are currently in hospitals.

Divisional Railway Manager of the Eastern Central Railways Rinkesh Roy told ANI that 900 people were discharged from hospitals.

“Out of 278 people who died in the accident, 101 bodies are yet to be identified,” he said.

Vijay Amrit Kulange, Commissioner, of Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation told ANI, that they had 193 dead bodies, out of which 80 have been identified.

He said 55 bodies have been handed over to the relatives so far.

The BMC helpline 1929 received more than 200 calls and they are still in the process of identification of dead bodies and handing them over to relatives.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 06:08
1686026920

Anger grows as 100 bodies from Odisha train crash remain unclaimed: ‘No one is taking responsibility’

It has been more than three days since India witnessed one of the deadliest train crashes in the country’s history, but anguished and increasingly frustrated families are still running between hospitals and makeshift mortuaries in Odisha to try and find their loved ones.

Authorities began a formal investigation on Monday and said the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), India’s equivalent of the FBI, will look into whether criminal charges should be brought over the three-train crash that killed at least 275 passengers, though there is mounting concern in Odisha that the actual death toll may prove to be considerably higher.

It’s a reflection of growing distrust in the official response to Friday night’s disaster, with upwards of 100 bodies still unidentified and unclaimed at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) hospital in Odisha’s capital city Bhubaneswar.

Kalipada Maity from West Bengal has been searching for his brother, who worked as a daily-wage labourer, since Friday. “We have gone to every hospital and mortuary across the state of Odisha. He is nowhere to be found,” Mr Maitey tells The Independent.

Read Alisha Rahaman Sarkar’s ground report.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 05:48
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US State Department says no US citizen killed in crash

In a briefing on Wednesday, a US State Department spokesperson said they are monitoring the Odisha train crash closely and no US citizen was injured or killed in the accident.

“We are not at this time aware of any US citizen injured or killed in the train crash in Odisha, India,” said Vedant Patel.

“We’re monitoring the situation closely and are in touch with local authorities. We strongly encourage US citizens in India to continue to monitor local news, follow the emergency instructions provided by local authorities, and of course enroll in our Smart Traveler Program to receive any additional updates.”

It comes after Joe Biden joined other world leaders to express condolences over the tragic train crash.

“(First Lady Dr) Jill (Biden) and I are heartbroken by the tragic news of the deadly train crash in India. Our prayers go out to those who have lost loved ones and the many who suffered injuries in this terrible incident,” he said in a statement.

“The United States and India share deep bonds rooted in the ties of family and culture that unite our two nations — and people all across America mourn alongside the people of India. As the recovery effort continues, we will hold the people of India in our thoughts”.

Shweta Sharma6 June 2023 05:46

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2023-06-06 07:06:10Z
2107687528

Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian dam destroyed in blow to counter-offensive - The Telegraph

A Ukrainian dam has been destroyed in a major blow to the counter-offensive.

The vast Soviet-era dam in the Russian controlled part of southern Ukraine was blown on Tuesday, unleashing a flood of water across the war zone, according to both Ukrainian and Russian forces.

Flooding could prevent further Ukrainian advances in the south and threaten the safety of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant. 

Both sides blamed the other for destroying the dam.

Videos on social media showed a series of intense explosions around the Kakhovka dam. 

Other clips showed water surging through the remains of the dam with bystanders expressing their shock, sometimes in strong language.

Follow all the latest below

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2023-06-06 08:58:21Z
2109640738

Senin, 05 Juni 2023

Ukraine war: Kyiv forces 'increasing offensive operations and making gains' against Russian forces - Euronews

Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Malyar said the military has scored gains, but it's not clear whether these operations are part of a long-awaited major offensive which has been mooted for months.

Ukrainian forces were making a major effort to end months of a battlefield stalemate and punch through Russian defensive lines in southeast Ukraine for a second day, with Russian officials saying that Moscow's forces have foiled at least one assault.

Kyiv authorities said their forces were indeed increasing offensive operations and making gains, but suggested some of the Russian announcements were misinformation as speculation grows about a widely anticipated counteroffensive after more than 15 months of war.

Vladimir Rogov, an official in the Russia-backed administration of Ukraine's partly occupied Zaporizhzhia province, said fighting resumed on its border with the eastern Donetsk province on Monday after Russian defenses beat back a Ukrainian advance the previous day.

“The enemy threw an even bigger force into the attack than yesterday (Sunday),” and the new attempt to break through the front line was “more large-scale and organized,” Rogov said, adding: “A battle is underway.”

Rogov interpreted the Ukrainian military movements as part of an effort to reach the Sea of Azov coast and sever the land corridor to the Crimean Peninsula, which Moscow annexed in 2014. Analysts have long viewed that strategy as likely because it would cut the Russian forces in two and severely strain supplies to Crimea, which has served as a key Russian military hub in the war that started Feb. 24, 2022.

Rogov's comments came after Moscow also said that its forces thwarted large Ukrainian attacks in Donetsk province, near its border with the Zaporizhzhia province.

Reacting to Russia's declarations that it repelled Ukrainian offensives, a US official said on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters that “We have no reason to believe any Russian action has had any spoiling effect on pending or ongoing Ukraine operations."

Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Malyar said the Ukrainian military has scored gains.

“Despite fierce resistance and attempts of the enemy to hold the occupied lines and positions, our units moved forward in several directions during the fighting,” she said.

Malyar drew no distinctions between phases of the war, insisting that Ukraine’s defense against Russia’s invasion “contains everything, including counter-offensive actions.” She acknowledged that Kyiv’s forces “in some areas ... are shifting to offensive operations.”

Retired British General Richard Barrons, co-chair of the UK-based strategic consulting firm Universal Defence & Security Solutions, said Ukraine was “clearly in the preliminary phase” of its counteroffensive.

“The focus will be on the tanks and artillery, and infantry — that’s the most visible tip of the spear,” he told The Associated Press, noting that the counteroffensive will also include politics, diplomacy, information and cyber warfare.

Ukraine often waits until the completion of its military operations to confirm its actions.

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2023-06-05 20:09:00Z
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