October 22, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

October 22, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

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Why Ukraine fears Russian troops could reenter through a neighboring country
02:24 - Source: CNN

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We’ve wrapped up our live coverage for today. Find more news on the war in Ukraine here, or scroll through the updates below.

Ukrainian military: Looting has increased in Kherson as Russia orders evacuations and pulls back troops

The Ukrainian military has received increased reports of looting and robbery in the Russian-controlled city of Kherson, officials claimed in a statement Saturday.

“The number of cases of looting and illegal actions in Kherson has increased,” the Ukrainian General Staff of the Armed Forces said in a statement. “Occupants seize cars from the local population and try to leave the city using the ferry crossing near Antonivskyi bridge.”

Earlier Saturday, the Russian-backed administration told civilians to evacuate to the eastern bank of the Dnipro River. Ukraine’s counteroffensive is approaching, though the Kyiv government dismisses Russian claims of danger to citizens as unfounded “hysteria.”

Russian troops repositioning: Ukraine’s military also claims Russian forces are in retreat from the Kherson region, leaving two settlements about 100 kilometers (roughly 60 miles) northeast of the city, Charivne and Chkalove. Officers and medical personnel have evacuated from Beryslav, east of Kherson city, as well, the Ukrainian military said.

CNN has not independently verified the military’s claims on crime in Kherson or the Russian military’s movements.

Russia says Ukrainian shelling killed two civilians in a settlement near the border

Two civilians died in Russia’s Belgorod region — near Ukraine’s eastern border — after Ukrainian forces shelled the area, a local official said.

The mayor of Belgorod, Vyacheslav Gladkov, also claimed the attack knocked out power for thousands of residents in the area.

“In Shebekino, the shelling resulted in the loss of power for nearly 15,000 people. It will take five to six hours to restore power,” he wrote on Telegram.

Shebekino is a Russian settlement outside Belgorod city, located just a few kilometers north of the border with Ukraine.

CNN has not independently verified Gladkov’s report.

Russia is battering Ukraine's power grid ahead of winter. Experts in Kyiv say the strategy is clear

People visit a supermarket without electricity after a Russian missile attack in Kyiv, Ukraine, on October 22. 

More than military bases or transport hubs in recent weeks, Russia has bombarded Ukraine’s electricity distribution and heating networks.

With winter weeks away, Russian missile and drone strikes are hitting thermal power stations, electricity substations, transformers and pipelines. The result: rolling power cuts, disabled water pumping stations and widespread internet outages.

A strategy emerges: As Russian forces endured losses in September and into this month, pundits appeared on state media urging that Ukraine be plunged into a dark, freezing winter in revenge. That now appears to be the goal.

The casualties are relatively few but the damage inordinate. Power infrastructure is an obvious, static target that is hard to defend without an extraordinary array of area defenses, which Ukraine has been begging for from its Western allies.

Electricians repair a power line damaged from shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on October 21. 

Maksym Timchenko, the CEO of energy company DTEK, noted in a recent interview that Russia has been very selective in their targeting. He told Ekonomichna Pravda that the strikes were aimed not at generating capacities but the cogs of distribution: switchgears and transformers, or output equipment at thermal power plants. 

Ukrainian authorities are clearly struggling to keep up with an ever-longer list of needed repairs this month, and some infrastructure is beyond repair.

Photos show fiery aftermath of Russian strike on power plant in northwestern Ukraine

Thick plumes of black smoke billowed from a power plant in the northwestern city of Rivne Saturday, after Ukrainian officials say Russian missiles hit the facility.

Similar scenes played out across the country as the state-owned utility, Ukrenergo, scrambled to restore service. The agency compared Saturday’s barrage to the consequences of attacks on Oct. 10 through 12, saying the strikes were some of the most destructive this month.

If the Kremlin strategy of targeting civilian infrastructure continues, Ukrainians could be in for a long, dark winter, the country’s infrastructure minister told CNN Friday.

Iran once again denies supplying drones to Russia as Ukraine pursues criminal charges

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian denied US and Western allegations that Iran is supplying Russia with drones, echoing denials from other officials in Tehran and in Moscow.

“We condemn the allegations of giving drones to Russia in the Ukraine war. We are against war anywhere in the world,” Abdollahian said Saturday, according to Iran’s semi-official Tasnim News Agency. 

The foreign minister’s remarks came as the Security Service of Ukraine announced criminal proceedings to identify anyone involved in supplying Iranian drones and short-range ballistic missiles to Russia.

Despite Russia’s attempts to disguise the (Iranian) Shaheds as Gerans (Russia-branded drones), we will prove their Iranian origin,” the acting head of the security service, Vasyl Maliuk, said. “We are working to tear masks off all war criminals and punish them.”

Some background: A growing number of countries and international organizations have condemned Russian-Iranian coordination on drone strikes.

Earlier this week, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said the US has “abundant evidence” that Russia is using Iranian drones, specifically to target Ukrainian civilians and critical civilian infrastructure. The White House added claims that Iran’s military gave Russians hands-on training with the weapons.

The European Union and the United Kingdom have rolled out sanctions on the manufacturers of Iranian drones.

Damage from Saturday's bombardment is some of the worst this month, Ukrainian utility says

The damage from Saturday’s wave of attacks on Ukrainian power facilities is similar — or could be worse — than Russian attacks earlier in the month, the state-owned energy agency said.

On its Telegram channel, the utility Ukrenergo compared the barrage’s impact to the consequences of attacks on Oct. 10 through 12, which reduced the country’s power-generating capacity by about 30%. 

“Power supply restrictions have been imposed in Kyiv, Kyiv (region), Chernihiv, Cherkasy, Zhytomyr, Sumy, Kharkiv, Poltava, Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kirovohrad regions,” the utility wrote Saturday.

“The restrictions are necessary to reduce the load on the networks and avoid repeated accidents after the power grids were damaged by terrorist missile attacks.”

Repairs are underway across the country. In one southern city, Mykolaiv, power has now been restored, its mayor said on his Telegram channel.

“Gradually, light appears in different districts of the city,” Oleksandr Senkevych said. “I thank the power engineers for their work.”

Earlier Saturday, a representative for the Ukrainian president’s office said more than 1.5 million energy subscribers were without power after the attacks.

Kherson resident describes a ghost town of exhausted people

A view of damaged buildings in Kherson, Ukraine, on October 7. 

A resident of Russian-occupied Kherson city told CNN the situation there is tense, with people “emotionally exhausted” and the streets empty by mid-afternoon.

CNN reached the woman through a third party and spoke with her shortly before the Russian-appointed administration in the city ordered civilians to leave — the latest evacuation notice over the oncoming Ukrainian counteroffensive.

Previously the authorities recommended people leave; Saturday’s announcement appeared to go beyond that.

She said Kherson has become a ghost-town. Tens of thousands of its residents have left since the Russian occupation began in March.

“In the evening, you can see a large number of high-rise buildings in which a maximum of two or three windows are lit,” the woman told CNN. “During the day, you can meet people mostly near the market. But at 3 or 4 p.m. the streets are empty and there is no one at all.” 

The woman said she was not considering leaving.

The woman also insisted that most people left in the city understood the Ukrainian military “will never harm the population and there will be no shelling of civilians.”

Ukraine’s government has accused Russia of generating “hysteria” to compel people to leave.

You can read the full report here.

Ukraine's military says it knocked 18 cruise missiles out of the sky during Russian attacks on infrastructure

The Ukrainian military said it destroyed over a dozen Russian cruise missiles during a string of attacks on energy infrastructure across the country Saturday.

The country’s air force said “18 enemy cruise missiles were destroyed by aviation, anti-aircraft missile units and mobile fire groups.” 

“In addition, the Russians attacked from ships in the Black Sea with Kalibr cruise missiles. A total of 16 starts,” the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine wrote online.

CNN cannot independently confirm the Ukrainian military’s claims. 

Several rockets flying toward Kyiv Saturday were shot down by air defense forces, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said in a separate statement. 

Widespread power outages: A series of attacks across Ukraine Saturday left residents in parts of Odesa, Cherkasy, Kropyvnitsky, Rivne, Khmelnytskyi and Lutsk without electricity, according to officials in each region.

Ukraine has faced a wide assault on critical infrastructure and power sources since Oct. 10. 

Russia is evacuating civilians from a recently annexed territory. Here's where it is happening

Evacuees from Kherson arrive at the railway station in Dzhankoi, Crimea, on Friday, October 21.

Russian-installed authorities in the city of Kherson urged residents to leave the city Saturday, the latest in a string of calls for civilian evacuations there this week.

Kherson was annexed by Russia just last month, amid wide international condemnation. Kyiv officials have accused the Kremlin of generating “hysteria” to compel people to leave as the Ukrainian counteroffensive approaches.

Saturday’s evacuation called for residents to cross to the eastern bank of the Dnipro River, which divides the region, as you can see on the map below. Ukrainian gains in recent weeks have come on the other side — in villages and farmlands along the western bank.

Over 1.5 million customers without power after latest Russian barrage, Ukrainian government says

Tetyana Safonova looks at her mobile phone during a power outage on October 20, in Borodyanka, Ukraine.

Over 1.5 million energy subscribers in Ukraine have been left without power following another wave of Russian attacks, the deputy head of the Ukrainian President’s Office said Saturday.

Repairs started immediately to fix the outages, according to Kyrylo Tymoshenko, who shared the update on his Telegram channel.

Air sirens were activated across the country, except in Russian-annexed Crimea, according to the Ministry of Digital Transformation.

Remember: Ukraine has been facing a wide assault on critical infrastructure and power sources since Oct. 10. 

Government officials have warned of a potentially cold, dark winter.

Local leaders share the situation on the ground: The fresh series of attacks damaged infrastructure across central and western Ukraine, officials in various regions said Saturday.

Residents in the western city of Rivne were told to “stay in shelters” while electricians worked to restore power across the city, the head of the region’s military administration, Vitaliy Koval, said on Telegram. 

South of Rivne in Khmelnytskyi, the city council reported the entire city was without power after a series of explosions were heard. 

“Please stock up on water, if possible, because it will also disappear in an hour,” the council wrote on Telegram. 

Parts of Lutsk — in Ukraine’s far west — were left without power due to a hit on an energy facility there, Mayor Ihor Polishchuk said. He added rescuers were working to find anyone injured and that one civilian was burned in the blast, but no one appeared to have been killed.

An attack on an energy facility in the Kropyvnytskyi region of central Ukraine also left residents there and in neighboring Cherkasy without power, according to officials from both region’s military administrations. 

CNN’s Stephanie Halasz contributed to this report.

Russia-backed authority urges civilians to leave the city of Kherson immediately

Evacuees from Kherson arrive at the railway station in Dzhankoi, Crimea, on Friday, October 21.

The Russian-installed authority in the southern Ukrainian region of Kherson has told civilians to “immediately leave the city” and relocate to the eastern bank of the Dnipro River.

Kherson — a gateway to Crimea located on the mouth of the Dnipro River to the Black Sea — was annexed by Russia last month, together with three other Ukrainian regions amid wide international condemnation.

The Russian-backed authority told civilians in the city Saturday to cross to the eastern bank of the river.

“Due to the tense situation at the front, the increased danger of massive shelling of the city and the threat of terrorist attacks, all civilians must immediately leave the city,” a message to residents posted on Telegram reads. “Take care of the safety of your family and friends! Do not forget documents, money, valuables and clothes.”

Some context: Earlier this week, Kremlin-backed officials ramped up the relocation of up to 60,000 people from the city as Russia’s forces struggled to withstand the Ukrainian counteroffensive.

The Kyiv government has accused Russia of generating “hysteria” to compel people to leave. By Thursday, Ukrainian officials believed that fewer than half of Kherson’s civilian population was left in the city – around 130,000 people.

Ukrainian forces have been advancing through several parts of the broader Kherson region in recent weeks, capturing villages and farmland along the western bank of the Dnipro River. Today’s order urged residents to the other side.

Ukrainian people are ready to suffer through winter blackouts, infrastructure minister says

Ukraine's Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov speaks with CNN on Friday October 21.

The people of Ukraine are “ready to suffer” through a potentially dark and cold winter as long as Russian troops are still occupying Ukraine’s territory, the country’s infrastructure minister told CNN on Friday.

“Everybody feels that our army on the battlefield is winning,” Oleksandr Kubrakov told CNN’s Julia Chatterley. But they also understand that the attacks on the infrastructure are aimed at making people’s lives more complicated, he said. 

Some background: Days of devastating attacks on energy infrastructure have caused the nation to lose at least 40% of its power-generating capacity.

Ukrainian officials warned earlier this week that both emergency and scheduled blackouts would follow. Those power outages impacted the capital Kyiv and other central regions Thursday before expanding to eastern regions.

A top priority for Ukraine now is to maintain connectivity between different regions for military and humanitarian transport, while also keeping the energy infrastructure running, Kubrakov told CNN.

Ukraine will not negotiate with Russia as long as Russian soldiers are still occupying Ukrainian land, he added.

US congressional delegation visits Kyiv in wake of drone attacks on the city

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky greets Rep. Jim Himes on Friday October 21.

Three members of the US House Intelligence Committee met with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv on Friday.

It is the first visit by a congressional delegation to the city in more than a month, and the first since Russia began a campaign of air strikes targeting civilian infrastructure in the Ukrainian capital and other major cities.

Standing close to the site of a recent drone attack on a power plant in Kyiv, Rep. Jim Himes, the head of the delegation, told CNN’s Nic Robertson the visit was about showing solidarity with Ukraine, which he said was “fighting for the democracy that so much of the world cares about.”

GOP Rep. Mike Turner said “there is strong bipartisan support for Ukraine, and it will continue,” when asked by CNN whether US aid to Ukraine could change if Republicans gain control of the House in November’s midterm elections.

Remember: That issue became a campaign trail talking point this week after House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy said if the GOP wins the chamber, it may not be as forthcoming with aid to the embattled nation.

US President Joe Biden seized on those comments and similar remarks from some Republicans, framing the position as undermining US leadership in an increasingly volatile world.

Creating an “air shield”: Ukraine’s military considers bolstering its air defense capabilities a key concern. Zelensky appealed to the visiting delegation for help with creating what he described as an “air shield” over the country, according to a statement released by his office.

Turner told CNN the US supply of weapons and intelligence to Ukraine would change as the nature of the threat changes.

“We’re looking at both air defense and also ways in which we can defeat these individual drones. But we’re going to have to accomplish that together,” he said. “Our goals are aligned.”

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