HomeEuropeKyiv residents grapple with cold after Russian strike rips open apartments

Kyiv residents grapple with cold after Russian strike rips open apartments

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By Vladyslav Smilianets

KYIV, Jan 9 (Reuters) - ​Kyiv resident Nataliya Revutska could have it worse: her apartment is still liveable after a Russian drone smashed into her high-rise late on Thursday, shattering windows across the building and exposing ⁠residents to bitter January winds.

"There's no water, there's no power - there's nothing. But it's warm in those two rooms," said the 58-year-old, pointing across her damaged apartment to the other side of ‍the building.

Revutska's high-rise was one of the latest sites damaged in a sprawling Russian winter campaign to plunge Ukrainians ​into cold and darkness as their government faces U.S. pressure to end the nearly four-year-old war launched by Moscow.

Officials said on Friday they were racing to restore power to 500,000 consumers and heating to ​6,000 buildings in Kyiv as temperatures hovered around -10 degrees Celsius (14 Fahrenheit), after an attack that involved 242 drones and 36 missiles.

Four people were killed in the strikes, which also included a hypersonic Oreshnik missile fired by Russia at the western Lviv region near the EU border.

Revutska's building was left with a sweeping, charred scar across several stories where the drone had struck. ‌Heavy snow fell as residents and workers collected debris to the din of generators.

RUSSIAN ATTACKS STRAINING ‌ENERGY SYSTEM

Twelfth-floor resident Oleg Marasin, 54, described yelling for help to a group of medics below, who had been hit in ​a second strike.

"One was dead, the others were badly wounded," he said as street noise flooded his apartment, where shattered glass was strewn across a floor littered with children's toys.

Ukrainian officials have ‌warned that a cold snap could further strain the country's energy system, which has come under regular ⁠attack since autumn.

Deputy energy minister Mykola Kolisnyk told reporters on Friday that only ‌part of the outages were a result of the ​overnight attack - with the weather accounting for the greater portion.

On Thursday, Russian strikes on Ukraine's industrial southeast had sparked near-total blackouts across two regions.

Still, residents like Marasin and Revutska appeared largely calm, telling ⁠Reuters their spirits have not ⁠yet been shattered despite Russia showing little interest in a U.S.-backed peace push.

"We've already survived - so we'll ​continue living," said Revutska, dressed in a thick gray fleece and tan knit hat.

"We'll figure it out somehow."

(Additional reporting by Yuliia Dysa; Writing ‌by Dan Peleschuk, Editing by William Maclean)

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