Ukraine urges refugees to stay abroad as winter power cuts loom

Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said the grid ‘won’t survive’ the return of refugees from abroad, and that the situation would ‘only get worse’

Station workers move the power generator, that will be installed on central railway station and will supply energy in case of electricity shortage in Kyiv, Ukraine after scheduled power cuts were introduced. Photograph: Shutterstock
Station workers move the power generator, that will be installed on central railway station and will supply energy in case of electricity shortage in Kyiv, Ukraine after scheduled power cuts were introduced. Photograph: Shutterstock

Refugees who fled in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine should stay abroad this winter due to blackouts created by Moscow’s bombardment of critical energy infrastructure, a Ukrainian minister has said.

In an interview broadcast on Ukrainian national television on Tuesday, deputy prime minister Iryna Vereshchuk told Ukrainians currently sheltering abroad that they should wait until spring before returning to Ukraine.

“I wanted to ask [them] not to return. We need to survive the winter,” she said.

Since October 10th, Russia has launched waves of missile and drone strikes targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Kyiv says they have damaged up to 40 per cent of the power system.

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A local official in Kyiv, the capital, warned last week that residents needed to be prepared for possible disconnections lasting days or even weeks.

The strikes on Ukraine’s infrastructure come against a backdrop of soaring energy, food and other prices in Europe, where most of the millions of refugees who fled Ukraine following Russia’s February 24th invasion sought shelter.

This poses a problem for refugees, many of whom have struggled to find well-paid, permanent jobs in their new countries of residence.

Vereshchuk said the grid “won't survive” the return of refugees from abroad, and that the situation would “only get worse”.

“To return now is to risk yourself and your children, your vulnerable relatives,” she said. — Reuters

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