Russian strike hits Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk, cutting utilities, mayor says


Dec 7 (Reuters) - Russian forces launched an overnight combined air strike on infrastructure in the central Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk, causing power and water outages, its mayor Vitalii Maletskyi said on Sunday.

Located on the Dnipro River, Kremenchuk is a major industrial hub and home to one of Ukraine's biggest oil refineries. The city has been repeatedly hit by Russian missiles, including a 2022 strike on a crowded shopping mall that killed at least 21 people.

Maletskyi said in a social media post that details of consequences of the strike would be released later on Sunday after damage assessment is completed. City services were working to restore electricity, water and heating in districts where supplies were disrupted, he added.

Russia has intensified long-range strikes on Ukraine's power, heating and water infrastructure ahead of winter and seeking to sap public morale and disrupt industry after previous cold seasons in the nearly four-year war saw nationwide blackouts and emergency rationing.

A photo posted by the mayor showed a large blaze engulfing what looked like industrial buildings at night.

"We will restore everything," he wrote.

Reuters could not independently verify Maletskyi's report. Ukraine's Air Force warned several times overnight on its Telegram messaging that the city was under threat from Russia's drone and missile attacks.

(Reporting by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Ukraine, Latvia sign drone deal as Russia says Europe not ready to mediate peace talks
Factbox-NASA's Artemis III crew: a test pilot, an Italian, a record-holder and a first-timer
China, Kuwait hold cultural event focused on dialogue among civilizations
1 killed, several wounded as protests over power outages intensify across S. Yemen: source
US House passes $70 billion bill to fund ICE, Border Patrol
Congo says number of confirmed Ebola cases rises to nearly 600
Saudi Arabia, T�rkiye sign MoU on railway cooperation
Russia's cross-border electricity trade to remain flat in 2026
At Cuba's once bustling tourist sites, foreign visitors are increasingly scarce
US urges Europe to impose Ebola travel bans ahead of World Cup

Others Also Read