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    HomeCompany NewsPutin questions crucial infrastructure protection amid intensified Ukrainian attacks

    Putin questions crucial infrastructure protection amid intensified Ukrainian attacks

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    MOSCOW, March 13 (Reuters) - President Vladimir ‌Putin discussed measures to protect Russia's critical infrastructure with his ​Security Council, the Kremlin said on Friday, after intensified Ukrainian attacks that hit a major military plant ⁠among other targets.

    Putin asked Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, Transport Minister Vitaly Savelyev and Construction Minister Irek Faizullin to report on the proposed measures in his opening remarks, ​with the rest of the meeting not made public.

    Ukraine said on March 10 that it had used ‌British Storm Shadow missiles to hit a factory that produced semiconductor devices and integrated micro chips for missiles in the city of Bryansk, just over 100 km (60 miles) from Ukraine's ⁠border.

    After the attack, which killed six people, some Russian war bloggers ⁠expressed bewilderment that such a crucial site for meeting Russia's battlefield needs had not been evacuated during four years of war and was operating within reach of Ukrainian missiles.

    On February 25, Ukrainian drones hit a chemical plant owned by fertiliser producer Akron in the ‌town of Dorogobuzh, knocking off about 5% of Russia's fertiliser output just before the ⁠supply crunch caused by U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran.

    Russia's defence ‌ministry said on Thursday that Ukraine had attempted to ​attack a pumping station operated by gas giant Gazprom that exports natural gas via the TurkStream subsea pipeline to European customers, but that the attack was foiled.

    On March ‌2, Sheskharis, a major oil terminal on Russia's Black Sea ​coast, suspended loadings following a ⁠Ukrainian drone attack that injured five, damaged 20 buildings and set a ‌fuel terminal on fire.

    Amid the stepped-up attacks, ⁠Russia has slowed down or turned off mobile internet in Moscow and some other major cities as part of what the Kremlin described as security measures.

    Although such outages have ​become common across Russia during ‌the war in Ukraine, Moscow has not previously experienced them on such a scale since ⁠the war started, with millions of people ​losing access to popular services such as maps or taxi hailing applications.

    (Reporting by ​Gleb Bryanski; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

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