'This winter will be about survival': Millions of lives at risk in war-torn Ukraine, WHO says

The World Health Organization has warned that millions in Ukraine face a dangerous winter as Russia continues to target civilian energy infrastructure.

A man gestures from inside a ruined building.

Up to three million Ukrainians could leave their homes in search of warmth and safety as Russia targets Ukraine's civilian energy infrastructure. Source: Getty / (Photo by Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Key Points
  • Up to three million Ukrainians could leave their homes in search of warmth and safety.
  • Moscow has launched missile strikes that have left homes across the country without electricity.
  • The damage is having "knock-out effects" on Ukraine's health system, WHO regional director for Europe said.
Millions of Ukrainian lives are at risk this winter as the country's power grid struggles under a barrage of Russian attacks, the World Health Organization warned on Monday.

Moscow has been targeting energy infrastructure, launching missile strikes that have left homes across the country without electricity as temperatures plunge.
The damage is having "knock-out effects" on Ukraine's health system, WHO regional director for Europe Hans Kluge told reporters.

"This winter will be about survival," he warned, saying it would be "life-threatening for millions of people in Ukraine".

Who is most at risk?

Up to three million Ukrainians could leave their homes in search of warmth and safety, he said.

"They will face unique health challenges, including respiratory infections such as COVID-19, pneumonia, influenza, and the serious risk of diphtheria and measles in (an) under-vaccinated population," he added.

Meanwhile, Ukraine said it had discovered four Russian torture sites in the southern city of Kherson, which Moscow's forces pulled out of earlier this month, leaving behind a trail of misery and destruction.
Snowfall in Ukraine's Borodianka
A child plays snowball as daily life continues in Borodianka, following the withdrawal of Russian forces in Kyiv district, Ukraine on 20 November 2022. Source: Getty / (Photo by Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
It was the only regional capital Moscow's forces had won after nearly nine months of fighting in Ukraine.

Kyiv accused withdrawing forces of rendering key infrastructure useless, including water and electricity stations.

Claims of 'horrific' torture

On Monday, Kyiv said Moscow had run a network of torture black sites in the city, building on claims that Russian authorities had perpetrated abuses on a "horrific" scale there.

"Together with police officers and experts, (prosecutors) conducted inspections of four premises where, during the capture of the city, the occupiers illegally detained people and brutally tortured them," the Ukrainian prosecutor general's office said in a statement.
A man walks through a detention centre.
A Ukrainian police officer stands inside a detention centre allegedly used by the Russian forces for interrogations, detentions, and torture, according to the Ukrainian authorities on 16 November 2022. Source: Getty / (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Russian forces had also set up "pseudo-law enforcement agencies" at detention centres in Kherson as well as in a police station, it said.

The remains of rubber truncheons, a wooden bat and "a device with which the occupiers tortured civilians with electricity" were found, it added.
Russian authorities also left behind paperwork documenting the administration of the detention sites, the prosecutor's office said.

The allegations are just the latest from Kyiv against Russian troops, who have been accused of running similar abuse operations elsewhere.

Last week Ukrainian ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets said Russian forces were responsible for "horrific" torture in Kherson, saying dozens were abused in detention and more were killed.

AFP spoke last week to a Kherson resident who said he spent weeks in detention where he was beaten and electrocuted by Russian and pro-Russian forces.

But the Kremlin has also come forward with allegations of abuses perpetrated by Ukrainian troops, vowing to track down and punish those it said were responsible for the "brutal" murder of nearly a dozen Russian servicemen who were allegedly surrendering.

"Without a doubt, Russia will itself search for those who committed this crime. They must be found and punished," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

'Methodical murder'

Mr Peskov was referring to video footage that began circulating on social media last week and which Moscow claims is compelling evidence that Kyiv's troops murdered nearly a dozen Russian soldiers in east Ukraine.

The Russian defence ministry said last week that the videos showed the "deliberate and methodical" killing of over 10 servicemen.

Ukraine has denied that its forces killed prisoners of war, saying the soldiers were shot following a false surrender.

The UN said last week it had been made aware of the videos and was looking into them.
A report it released earlier last week said there were credible allegations of abuses committed by both sides.

Russia's Human Rights Council said the alleged executions took place in Makiivka, a village in the eastern Lugansk region, which the Ukrainian army said it had recaptured last week.

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4 min read
Published 22 November 2022 7:04am
Source: AFP, SBS


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