Missile blasts were heard in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv on Monday October 31, and around the country, after Moscow blamed Kyiv for an attack on its Black Sea fleet and pulled out of a deal to allow Ukrainian grain shipments out of the Black Sea.
Russia and Ukraine are the world’s biggest grain exporters, and a Russian blockade of Ukrainian grain shipments caused a global food crisis earlier this year before the United Nations and Turkey intervened setting up an agreement which allows Ukraine to send grains to different parts of the world while Russian and Turkish inspectors monitor the ships to see if they transport military hardware.
Following Russia’s announcement on Sunday, that it will halt its part of the UN brokered deal alleging attacks on its Black sea fleet in a Crimean port with 16 drones on Saturday, missiles rained on Ukrainian cities Monday morning.
“Another batch of Russian missiles hits Ukraine’s critical infrastructure. Instead of fighting on the battlefield, Russia fights civilians,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.
“Don’t justify these attacks by calling them a ‘response’. Russia does this because it still has the missiles and the will to kill Ukrainians.”
Ukranine’s Foreign ministry spokesman Oleg Nikolenko said missiles had hit energy infrastructure in Kyiv and other cities, causing electricity and water outages.
“Russia is not interested in peace talks, nor in global food security. Putin’s only goal is death and destruction.”
Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelenskiy accused Russia of “blacmailing the world with hunger” by pulling out of the food export deal negotiated by the United Nations and Turkey.
Among vessels held up was one carrying tens of thousands of tonnes of wheat, chartered by the U.N. World Food Programme for an emergency response in the Horn of Africa, Zelenskiy said in an overnight address even as Ukraine’s infrastructure ministry said a total of 218 vessels were “effectively blocked”.
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About 80% of #Kyiv residents were left without water supply, said Klitschko
There is no light and water in some areas due to #attacks. Locals are already lining up for water in case of emergency shutdowns.#russiaisateroriststate #RussiaisATerroistState #RussiaInvadedUkraine pic.twitter.com/yRT7Gohmmt— Albina Fella ? ???????? (@albafella1) October 31, 2022
Russia’s morning attacks on Ukrainian cities and critical infrastructure bring Kharkiv subway and electrical city transport to a halt, cut electricity and water supply in parts of Kyiv. Air defence system intercepted a missile in Kyiv region – video by reg police chief Nebytov pic.twitter.com/IMg2GxwIhT
— Myroslava Petsa (@myroslavapetsa) October 31, 2022