Russia has started to shell Ukraine’s critical infrastructure more intensively as response to the successful Kharkiv counteroffensive. Strikes targeting Ukraine’s power grid have caused partial or full blackout in the regions of Kharkiv, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, and Sumy, the country’s President Volodymyr Zelensky says. Many people in those regions now lack water supply, too. Mykhailo Podolyak, adviser to Zelensky, has stated that “direct and deliberate strikes against the critical civilian infrastructure, including the Kharkiv heat and power plant, is with no doubt an act of terrorism which demonstrates Russia’s willingness to leave civilians with no electricity and heating.” The blackout caused the Kharkiv rapid transit system to stop operation and set trolleybuses in Poltava on fire after a voltage swing, Ukraine’s media report. Kharkiv’s mayor Ihor Terekhov also reported that the missile strikes had continued in the following days; the city suffered one more blackout on 12 September when another critical infrastructure facility was targeted by Russia.
“Both Ukraine and the rest of the civilised world can see these acts of terrorism even through this impenetrable darkness,” Zelensky said. “Those were deliberate and cynical missile strikes against our civilian infrastructure, and not at all military facilities.”
Seven Russian missiles destroyed a hydraulic power station and a dam in the city of Kryvyi Rih on 14 September, as per Kyrylo Tymoshenko, Deputy Head of Zelensky’s Office, which caused the water level in the Inhulets River to rise by 1 to 2 metres, flooding residential areas.
A catastrophic menace
International practice defines critical infrastructure as facilities that are essential for the functioning of a society and economy, namely, power, water supply and drainage facilities, as well as transportation ones. In wintertime, heating facilities are also included. Destroying heating and water supply facilities may cripple the city’s daily living activities for a long time. Even one day with no electricity, water supply, and drainage is enough to cause a humanitarian catastrophe in huge settlements where people mainly reside in multi-storey buildings.
“Russia started shelling civilian infrastructure as early as 24 February,” Anton Pustovalov, a journalist and historian who started collecting evidence of Russia’s war crimes in Ukraine when the war started has told Novaya Gazeta. Europe. “Telephone links and communications were their top priority. The most notable act in this regard was the hit of a TV Tower in Kyiv’s Babyn Yar in early March. They started shelling rail junctions, railway stations and even trains with refugees in the same period.