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After the Ukrainian attack, tens of thousands in Belgorod are without electricity

The regional governor reported that?about 50,000 people in the Russian city Belgorod were without electricity on Friday morning after Ukrainian missiles had struck the city overnight.

Governor?Vyacheslav?Gladkov stated that about half of the affected people should be connected by Friday's end following the latest attack in a long series of attacks which have led to repeated blackouts.

Belgorod is located about 40 km from the Ukrainian border. In the four years that Russia invaded its neighbor, it has been the target of many Ukrainian missile and drone strikes.

Gladkov posted on Telegram that "serious damage" had occurred to the energy infrastructure. As a result of this, the supply of water, electricity and heating has been disrupted.

Officials from Ukraine did not immediately comment. Residents of Kyiv, and other Ukrainian cities, have often lost heat and electricity during the coldest winter weeks because of Russian attacks against Ukraine's power grid.

UKRAINIAN STRIKES CROSS THE BORDER

Belgorod, along with the neighbouring Kursk Region, which was seized in an attack by Ukraine?in August of 2024, and held for many months, has been the target of Ukrainian cross border strikes since the beginning of the war.

The war is a daily reality in Russia. But, according to opinion polls, many people are ignoring the news of the battlefield and trying to go about their normal lives.

Local media and officials claim that since the beginning of the war in Belgorod, there have been 485 deaths, 35 of which occurred this year.

There have been more frequent bangs in the night, and the glass on the window frames rattles a lot. "We've been shelled heavily for the entire month of February," said an elderly woman in Belgorod. She added that she was told not to expect hot water until the summer.

The Belgorod resident who asked to remain anonymous, a 40-year-old Belgorod woman, also said that she went to the theatre in Belgorod this month to see a play which was interrupted three times due to missile alerts. She said that the audience was told to "keep their coats" on due to the lack of heating.

She said, "We sometimes can't sleep because we hide when shells strike neighbouring houses." People will generally seek cover anywhere they can. "Everyone is looking for a place to hide away from windows." (Reporting and writing by Mark Trevelyan, London, edited by Timothy Heritage.

(source: Reuters)