Interior Minister: 10 dead, 42 missing due to Kakhovka dam disaster.
As a result of the flooding caused by Russia's destruction of the Kakhovka dam, ten people died, and 42 are considered missing, including seven children, Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko reported[1] on June 12. Eight people died in Kherson Oblast and two in Mykolaiv Oblast. The number of casualties on the Russian-occupied east bank of the Dnipro River is yet to be confirmed, Klymenko said on national television.
The water level continues to fall in Kherson Oblast, dropping to 3.12 meters as of 12:30 p.m. local time, the regional administration wrote[2], adding that 3801 homes on the west bank are still flooded. According to the Interior Ministry, 2743 residents of Kherson Oblast have been evacuated, including 205 children and 76 people with reduced mobility.
This Week in Ukraine Ep.
11 - Russia's destruction of Ukrainian dam, and catastrophic flood it caused Episode #11 of our weekly video podcast "This Week in Ukraine" is dedicated to Russia's destruction of Ukraine's Kakhovka dam, and the catastrophic flood it caused.
Host Anastasiia Lapatina is joined by the Kyiv Independent reporter Igor Kossov. Listen to the audio version of the podcast on Apple,...
[3]In Mykolaiv Oblast, 31 settlements have been flooded, from which 982 people, including 167 children, have been rescued, the ministry wrote[4] on Telegram. Meanwhile, the Ecology Ministry reported[5] that 72% or 14,395 cubic km of water had been spilled from the Kakhovka Reservoir, an important water source for Dnipropetrovsk Oblast and southern Ukraine.
As of the June 11 evening, the reservoir's water level in the Nikopol area reached about nine meters and continues to drop. As a result, almost 165,000 households in 32 settlements of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast have no water supply, according to the Interior Ministry's latest update. Ukrainian authorities are delivering the water to the affected settlements and searching for other supply options.
Russian forces destroyed[6] the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant's dam on June 6, sparking a humanitarian and environmental disaster across southern Ukraine.
Saving lives from Russia's flood: Inside inundated, shelled Kherson Since Russia's full-scale war began, first came eight months of terror under occupation, then came seven months of intense shelling across the river, then came the river itself to Kherson. Over 24 hours after Russian forces destroyed the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant and its massive...
[7] Dinara KhalilovaNews editor
Dinara Khalilova is a news editor at the Kyiv Independent.
She has previously worked as a fixer and local producer for Sky News. Dinara holds a BA in journalism from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv and a Master's degree in media and communication from Bournemouth University in the UK.
References
- ^ reported (youtu.be)
- ^ wrote (t.me)
- ^ This Week in Ukraine Ep.
11 - Russia's destruction of Ukrainian dam, and catastrophic flood it causedEpisode #11 of our weekly video podcast "This Week in Ukraine" is dedicated to Russia's destruction of Ukraine's Kakhovka dam, and the catastrophic flood it caused. Host Anastasiia Lapatina is joined by the Kyiv Independent reporter Igor Kossov.
Listen to the audio version of the podcast on Apple,...
(kyivindependent.com) - ^ wrote (t.me)
- ^ reported (t.me)
- ^ destroyed (kyivindependent.com)
- ^ Saving lives from Russia's flood: Inside inundated, shelled KhersonSince Russia's full-scale war began, first came eight months of terror under occupation, then came seven months of intense shelling across the river, then came the river itself to Kherson.
Over 24 hours after Russian forces destroyed the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant and its massive...
(kyivindependent.com)