Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on
day 251 of the invasion
Putin says strikes, pulling out of grain deal are
response to Crimea fleet attack
Guardian
staff and agencies
Tue 1 Nov
2022 00.10 GMT
A barrage of Russian missiles has struck
hydroelectric plants and other critical energy and water infrastructure across
Ukraine. Russia said it hit military and energy infrastructure targets, but
Ukraine said its military facilities were not targeted.
Large parts of Kyiv were left without power or
water. The Ukrainian capital’s mayor said 40% of residents did not have water,
with 270,000 apartments without power as of Monday evening.
Twelve grain export ships left Ukraine despite
Russia’s decision to pull out of the Black Sea grain deal, Ukraine’s minister
of infrastructure said. The UN also confirmed the first of 40 planned ship
inspections was completed in Istanbul waters.
Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, said the
strikes and the decision to pull out of the Black Sea grain deal were responses
to a drone attack on Moscow’s fleet in Crimea that he blamed on Ukraine. Putin
told a news conference on Monday that Ukrainian drones had used the same marine
corridors that grain ships transited under the UN-brokered deal.
Moscow called ship movements through the Black
Sea security corridor “unacceptable”. In a statement, the Russian defence
ministry said it wanted “commitments” from Ukraine not to use the Black Sea
grain corridor for military purposes, adding “there can be no question of
guaranteeing the security of any object” in the area until then.
The UN disputed Moscow’s claim that a civilian
cargo ship carrying Ukrainian grain may have been involved in a drone strike against
Russia. The UN aid chief Martin Griffiths said no such ships were in the Black
Sea’s designated “safe zone” corridor at the time Russia said the attack had
taken place.
France is working towards allowing Ukrainian food
exports to go through land routes rather than the Black Sea.
Russia dismissed reports that its agents hacked
Liz Truss’s phone and gained access to sensitive information.
Norway put its military on a raised level of
alert to enhance its response to the war in Ukraine, though the prime minister,
Jonas Gahr Støre, said no direct threat of invasion was detected from Russia.
Afghan special forces soldiers are being
recruited by the Russian military to fight in Ukraine, three former Afghan
generals have told the Associated Press. They said the Russians wanted to
attract thousands of the former elite Afghan commandos into a “foreign legion”
with offers of $1,500 a month and promises of safe havens for themselves and
their families.
Also on Monday, the Russian defence ministry said
Moscow had completed the partial military mobilisation announced by Putin in
September and no further call-up notices would be issued.
A 40% cut in deliveries of Russian natural gas is
hitting Moldova’s ability to provide sufficient electricity for its 2.5 million
people, the deputy prime minister of the small ex-Soviet state has said.
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