Russia strikes are crime against humanity, Zelenskiy tells UN, as power cut in Ukraine and Moldova

Ukraine’s president labels Russia’s strikes on energy sites as crimes against humanity, as G7 discussions to cap Russian oil prices reportedly hit a set-back

Fresh Russian strikes battered Ukraine’s already failing electricity grid, causing blackouts across the country and in neighbouring Moldova, in attacks Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told the UN were “an obvious crime against humanity”.

Addressing an urgent meeting of the UN security council late on Wednesday, Zelenskiy said Ukraine would put forward a resolution condemning “any forms of energy terror”. Referring to Russia’s likely veto, he said, “it’s nonsense that the veto right is secured for the party that wages this war.”

“We cannot be hostage to one international terrorist,” Zelenskiy said.

He also invited the UN to send experts to examine and evaluate Ukraine’s critical infrastructure.

“When we have the temperature below zero, and scores of millions of people without energy supplies, without heating, without water, this is an obvious crime against humanity,” Zelenskiy told the security council via video link.

It comes as talks between the G7 and other pro-Ukraine allies to set a cap on the price of Russian oil reportedly hit a set-back, after a meeting between EU officials ended without agreement.

The price cap on sea-borne exports of Russian oil will form part of sanctions intended to punish Moscow by limiting its revenues from oil exports. EU diplomats were reportedly unable to reach an agreement on what price the cap should be set at.

On Wednesday, Ukraine’s military said Russian forces had fired about 70 cruise missiles at targets across the country and also deployed attack drones.

The strikes killed 10 people and disconnected three nuclear power stations from the grid, officials said.

The country’s Energy Ministry said supplies were cut to “the vast majority of electricity consumers”. All of Kyiv lost water, the capital’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said. The city’s administration said water and heating would return to residential buildings on Thursday morning.

Residential blocks in Kyiv without power after Russian strikes.
Residential blocks in Kyiv were left without power after Russian strikes. Photograph: Evgeniy Maloletka/AP

Late Wednesday, the deputy head of Ukraine’s presidential office said that Kyiv and over a dozen regions, including Lviv and Odesa in the south, had been reconnected to the power grid.

Klitschko said 21 out of 31 missiles targeting Kyiv were shot down before they reached their targets. One of the 10 that evaded the defences hit an apartment block in Vyshgorod, a northern suburb of the city, killing three people and wounding 15.

There was a kindergarten in the lower ground floor of the building, but it was evacuated after air raid sirens went off. The blast left a three-metre crater in front of the building, destroyed apartments around it, blew the tops of nearby trees and ruined a children’s playground.

“It flew right over us. We heard a whistling sound and then it came down on the building,” said Ruslan Vorona, a local resident. He and his eight-year-old son, Oleksii, were sheltering and charging their phones in a tent set up by the emergency services.

Another local man, Oleksandr, 28, who would not give his last name, said: “There were a few explosions. Two were quieter and one was louder, and one of the missiles went straight over my head.”

Earlier in the day, a newborn baby was killed when a Russian rocket struck a hospital maternity ward in southern Ukraine. Ukraine’s state emergency service said a woman with her two-day-old baby and a doctor were in the facility in the town of Vilniansk, close to the city of Zaporizhzhia, when it was hit. The mother and the doctor were pulled alive from the rubble by rescue workers but the baby died, it said on the Telegram messaging app.

UN political chief Rosemary DiCarlo demanded at the security council meeting that Russia immediately stop the attacks, which violate international humanitarian law, stressing “there must be accountability for any violations of the laws of war.”

US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Vladimir Putin was “weaponising winter to inflict intense suffering on the Ukraine people”.

Russia’s ambassador to the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, told the security council that Moscow was carrying out “strikes against infrastructure in response to the unbridled flow of weapons to Ukraine and the reckless appeals of Kyiv to defeat Russia”.

Firefighters work at the site of an apartment block destroyed by strikes in Vyshhorod, near Kyiv
At least 10 people were killed as a result of Russian strikes across Ukraine. Photograph: Oleg Petrasyuk/EPA

Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said the latest series of Russian strikes were a response to a decision by the European parliament to recognise Russia as a “state sponsor of terrorism” over its nine-month invasion of Ukraine, and its call for the 27-nation EU to follow.

“Being unable to win in a fair fight with the Ukrainian army, Russia wages a cowardly war of terror against civilians,” Kuleba said, urging Kyiv’s western backers to supply more air defence systems.

Wednesday’s decision by European legislators to recognise Russia as a “state sponsor of terrorism” is a symbolic political step with no legal consequences.

Kyiv has for months called on the international community to declare Russia a “terrorist state,” and the EU parliament’s decision will probably anger Moscow.

The resolution approved by EU lawmakers said the “deliberate attacks and atrocities carried out by the Russian Federation against the civilian population of Ukraine … and other serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law amount to acts of terror.”

Ukraine praised the decision, with Zelenskiy calling for Russia to be “held accountable in order to end its longstanding policy of terrorism in Ukraine and across the globe.”

Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

Contributors

Lorenzo Tondo and Julian Borger in Kyiv and agencies

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Russia launches fresh strikes on Ukraine as Zelenskiy delivers new year message of hope
President says country ready to fight for return to normal life as Moscow launches latest wave of attacks

Dan Sabbagh

01, Jan, 2023 @12:58 PM

Article image
Zelenskiy says Ukraine willing to discuss neutrality at Russia talks
Talks set to start in Turkey as Ukraine president seeks peace ‘without delay’ and Biden denies seeking regime change in Russia

Samantha Lock, and Daniel Boffey in Lviv

28, Mar, 2022 @7:27 AM

Article image
Zelenskiy promises to work for new sanctions against Russia – as it happened
Volodymyr Zelenskiy says new round of negotiations ahead but that deal would have to be subject to referendum; Joe Biden rejects suggestion he was calling for regime change in Moscow

Samantha Lock (now); Lois Beckett, Alexandra Topping, Tom Ambrose and Helen Livingstone (earlier)

28, Mar, 2022 @4:00 AM

Article image
Russia-Ukraine war: Fate of Europe and global security being decided in Ukraine, Zelenskiy says– live
Russian foreign minister says western weapons are a ‘legitimate target’; about 15,000 Russian troops have been killed since start of invasion, UK defence secretary says

Helen Livingstone (now); Dani Anguiano, Gloria Oladipo, Harry Taylor, Léonie Chao-Fong, Martin Belam (earlier)

26, Apr, 2022 @5:20 AM

Article image
Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 274 of the invasion
Volodymyr Zelenskiy calls for UN security council to take action after latest strikes; EU leaders fail to agree on price cap for Russian oil

Helen Sullivan

24, Nov, 2022 @12:37 AM

Article image
Ukraine-Russia peace talks will end if Moscow ‘eliminates’ Mariupol fighters, says Zelenskiy
Russia has told Ukrainian soldiers in southern city to surrender as Ukraine president laments ‘inhuman’ situation there

Hannah Ellis-Petersen

17, Apr, 2022 @6:03 AM

Article image
Russia-Ukraine war: what we know on day 13 of the Russian invasion
Attacks on hospitals and ambulances increasing rapidly, says WHO, as medical supplies dwindle

Martin Farrer, Miranda Bryant and Jennifer Rankin

08, Mar, 2022 @6:43 PM

Article image
Up to 3,000 Ukraine troops killed since Russia invaded, says Zelenskiy, as battle rages in Mariupol
Ukraine president claims up to 20,000 Russian soldiers have died; reprisals from Moscow expected in wake of sinking of flagship cruiser the Moskva

Luke Harding in Kyiv, Julian Borger in Washington, and agencies

16, Apr, 2022 @5:37 AM

Article image
Russia-Ukraine war: ‘no indication’ of direct military threat to Moldova or Romania, says US – as it happened
Comments from US come after missiles reported in Moldovan and Romanian airspace

Léonie Chao-Fong (now); Martin Belam and Samantha Lock (earlier)

10, Feb, 2023 @7:00 PM

Article image
Zelenskiy pushes for EU membership and raises fears of Russian designs on Moldova
Ukrainian president said his intelligence services had intercepted Russian plan to ‘establish control over Moldova’ in historic address

Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

09, Feb, 2023 @11:25 AM