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Free for a month, Kherson still toils to clear Russian traps

KHERSON, Ukraine (AP) — A hand grenade jerry-rigged into the detergent tray of a Kherson home’s washing machine. A street sign maliciously directing passers-by toward a deadly minefield. A police station that allegedly housed a torture chamber but remains so booby-trapped that demining crews can’t even start to hunt for evidence.

Sunday marks exactly one month since Russia’s troops withdrew from Kherson and its vicinity after an eight-month occupation, sparking jubilation across Ukraine. But life in the southern city is still very far from normal.

The departing Russians left behind all sorts of ugly surprises, and their artillery continues to batter the city from new, dug-in positions across the Dnieper River. The regional administration said Saturday that shelling over the past month has killed 41 people, including a child, in Kherson, and 96 were hospitalized.

Residents’ access to electricity still comes and goes, although water is largely connected, and indoor heating has only very recently been restored — and only to about 70-80% of the city — after the Russians last month blew up a giant central heating station that served much of the city.

For authorities and citizens, sifting through the countless headaches and hazards left behind by the Russians, and bracing for new ones, is a daily chore.

On Friday alone, according to the local affiliate of public broadcaster Suspilne, Russian forces shelled the region 68 times with mortars, artillery, tank and rocket fire. Meanwhile, in the last month, a total of 5,500 people have taken evacuation trains out, and work crews have cleared 190 kilometers (115 miles) of road, Suspilne reported.

When aid trucks arrived a month ago, war-weary and desperate residents flocked to the central Svoboda (Freedom) Square for food and supplies. But after a Russian strike on the square as a line of people queued to enter a bank in late November, such large gatherings have become less common and aid is doled out from smaller, more discreet distribution points.

Regional officials say some 80% of Kherson’s pre-war population of about 320,000 fled after the Russians moved in, days after their invasion began on Feb. 24. With some 60,000-70,000 residents remaining, the city now has a feel of a ghost town. Those who remain mostly keep indoors because they’re cautious about making forays into the streets.

“Life is getting back to normal, but there is a lot of shelling,” said Valentyna Kytaiska, 56, who lives in the nearby village of Chornobaivka. She lamented the nightly “Bam! Bam!” and the unsettling uncertainty of where the Russian ordnance may land.

Normal is a relative term for a country at war. There’s no telling whether what Russia insists on calling a “special military operation” will end in days, weeks, months or even years.

In the meantime, painstaking efforts go on to establish a better sense of normalcy, like clearing the mess and mines left behind by the Russians, in tough wintertime weather.

“The difficulties are very simple, it’s the weather conditions,” said one military demining squad member, who goes by the nom de guerre of Tekhnik. He said some of their equipment simply doesn’t work in frost conditions “because the soil is frozen like concrete.”

The deployment of additional teams could help ease the heavy workload, he said. “To give you an idea, during the month of our work, we found and removed several tons of mines,” said Tekhnik, adding that they focused only on about 10 square kilometers (about 4 square miles).

In Kherson’s Beryslavskyi district, a main road was blocked off with a sign reading “Mines Ahead” and rerouting passersby to a smaller road. In fact, it was that side road which was mined, and cost the lives of some military deminers. A few weeks later, four police officers were also killed there, including the police chief from the northern city of Chernihiv, who had come down to help Kherson regain its footing.

The general state of disrepair of weather-beaten roads helped the outgoing Russians disguise their deadly traps: Potholes, some covered with soil, provided a convenient place to lay mines. Sometimes, the Russians cut into the asphalt to make holes themselves.

Demining squads go slowly house-to-house to ensure it’s safe for owners or previous residents to return. Experts say a single home can take up to three days to be cleared.

One crew turned up a hand grenade in one house, stuffed into a a washing machine — the pin placed in such a way that opening the detergent tray would set off an explosion.

The city’s main police station, where detainees were reportedly tortured, is packed with explosives. When demining squads tried to work their way in, part of the building exploded — so they’ve shelved the project for now.

Longer term questions remain: Kherson sits in an agricultural region that produces crops as diverse as wheat, tomatoes, and watermelon — a regional symbol. The fields are so heavily mined that about 30% of arable land in the region is unlikely to be planted in the spring, Technik the deminer said. A cursory look reveals the tops of anti-tank mines poking up in the fields.

Even so, after a night of shelling from Friday evening into Saturday, Kherson resident Oleksandr Chebotariov said life had been even worse under the Russians for himself, his wife and 3-year-old daughter.

“It’s easier to breathe now,” the 35-year-old radiologist said — only to add: “If the banging doesn’t stop before the New Year, I’m going on vacation.”

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Keaten reported from Kyiv, Ukraine. Evgeniy Maloletka in Kherson, Ukraine, contributed to this report.

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Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine: https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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Ukraine launches missile attack on Russian-occupied Melitopol

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CNN

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Several explosions have been reported in the Russian-occupied town of Melitopol in southern Ukraine and in annexed Crimea, which includes at a Russian military services barracks.

The explosions in Melitopol arrived amid reports from officials on each sides that Ukraine experienced introduced a missile assault on the city on Saturday.

Melitopol’s Moscow-set up directors stated 4 missiles strike the metropolis, killing two and injuring 10, although Melitopol’s mayor reported several explosions, including at a church occupied by Russian forces.

Separately, studies also emerged of many explosions hitting Russian-annexed Crimea, which includes at a military services barracks in Sovietske.

On the other hand, Ukrainian officers have not commented on the explosions in Crimea and CNN is unable to verify the trigger of the blasts or the extent of the problems.

Melitopol, in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia Oblast, has been beneath Russian occupation because early March.

Yevgeny Balitsky, Russia’s acting governor of Zaporizhzhia, stated the missile assault on Melitopol experienced “completely destroyed” a recreation center where by “people, civilians, and [military] foundation staff were obtaining evening meal on Saturday night.”

The strikes ended up acknowledged by Ivan Fedorov, Ukraine’s previous administrator of Melitopol city, who stated they experienced focused Russian armed forces bases.

Federov final thirty day period explained Russia experienced turned Melitopol into “one big military services base.”

“The Russian military services is settling in local properties they seized, faculties and kindergartens. Army machines is stationed in household parts,” Federov reported in November.

The Melitopol mayor Ivan Fedorov reported there had been quite a few explosions, such as at the Melitopol Christian Church, “which the occupiers seized various months ago and turned into their hideout.”

Fedorov, who is not in Melitopol, mentioned there ended up useless and wounded among the Russian forces there.

The attack on Melitopol arrived amid social media footage and reviews of a number of blasts in the Crimean town of Simferopol at all-around 9 p.m. area time on Saturday.

There were also reports of explosions in Sevastopol, the headquarters of the Russian Black Sea fleet at a Russian military services barracks in Sovietske and in Hvardiiske, Dzhankoi and Nyzhniohirskyi

The blasts appear right after Moscow ramped up its missile assaults on Ukraine final 7 days, pursuing Russian claims that Kyiv was at the rear of current drone hits on armed forces airfields deep inside its territory.

There are conflicting accounts surrounding the explosions in Crimea.

The unofficial Crimean media portal “Krymskyi veter” claimed an explosion at a Russian armed service barracks in Sovietske experienced set the barracks on fire and there were lifeless and wounded.

On the other hand, a pro-Russian Crimean channel claimed that the hearth at the barracks experienced been triggered by “careless managing of hearth.”

“Two individuals died. Now all the servicemen, about two hundred people, are accommodated in yet another premises,” it said.

Sergey Aksenov, the Russian-appointed head of Crimea, claimed on Telegram: “The air protection system worked above Simferopol. All solutions are performing as normal.

Mikhail Razvozhaev, governor of Sevastopol, claimed the explosions were being thanks to firing routines.

The news comes amid stories that 1.5 million men and women in the Odesa region of Ukraine have been remaining with no energy subsequent strikes by Iranian-made drones.

“In whole, Russian terrorists utilized 15 Shahed drones in opposition to Odesa,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky mentioned during his everyday deal with on Saturday.

He reported “Ukrainian sky defenders” had shot down 10 of the 15 drones, but the harm was nonetheless “critical” and he recommended it will get a handful of days to restore energy provide in the region.

“Only vital infrastructure is linked and to the extent in which it is feasible to source electric power,” he mentioned.

Ukraine has been experiencing a huge assault on its vital infrastructure and ability sources because early October. This has still left tens of millions across the state experiencing ability cuts amid freezing winter season temperatures.

“In standard, equally unexpected emergency and stabilization electrical power outages go on in numerous locations,” Zelensky stated. “The electricity technique is now, to set it mildly, very significantly from a standard state.”

Odesa was already amongst the worst influenced regions following Russia’s earlier assaults on essential infrastructure.

“This is the true attitude of Russia to Odesa, in direction of Odesa residents – deliberate bullying, deliberate endeavor to carry disaster to the metropolis,” Zelensky extra.

Ukraine on Saturday acquired “a new help bundle from Norway in the quantity of $100 million” that will be utilised “precisely for the restoration of our vitality program after these Russian strikes,” Zelensky additional.

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U.S. energy envoy Hochstein calls investor hostility to shale drilling “un-American“ -FT

2022-12-11T06:34:28Z

U.S. Senior Advisor for Energy Security Amos Hochstein speaks after meeting with Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun (not pictured) at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon October 27, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo

U.S. energy envoy Amos Hochstein described the refusal of the country’s shale investors to ramp up drilling as “un-American” in an interview with the Financial Times on Sunday.

“I think that the idea that financiers would tell companies in the United States not to increase production and to buy back shares and increase dividends when the profits are at all-time highs is outrageous,” the White House’s chief energy adviser told the FT, adding, “It is not only un-American, it is so unfair to the American public”.

Hochstein also criticised Exxon Mobil Corp’s (XOM.N) recently announced share buyback scheme.

“You want to pay dividends, pay dividends. You want to pay shareholders, pay shareholders. You want to get bonuses, do that, too. You could do all of that and still invest more. We are asking you to increase production and seize the moment”, the FT quoted him as saying.

Exxon announced the share buybacks this week and raised the annual base salaries of its top boss and other executives for next year.

It is distributing more cash to shareholders than it is investing in new production – $30 billion between share buybacks and dividends this year. However, the company has kept its annual capital investment range of $20 billion-$25 billion out to 2027 unchanged. read more

The oil industry’s high profits this year have attracted the attention of U.S. President Joe Biden, who has accused the sector of war profiteering and said Exxon was making “more money than God”.

Biden has repeatedly called on U.S. oil and gas companies to use their record profits to increase production and reduce fuel prices for Americans.

Hochstein’s comments come amid the recent G7 price cap on Russian seaborne oil as the West tries to limit Moscow’s ability to finance its war in Ukraine, but Russia has said it will not abide by the measure even if it has to cut production.

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The Observer view on the indefensible decision to open a deep coalmine in a climate crisis | Observer editorial

The government says the needs of UK steelmaking override the environmental impact. The industry thinks differently

The decision to approve a new £165m coalmine in Cumbria reveals an unpleasant truth about the government. It demonstrates, with brutal clarity, that No 10 has no credible green agenda and does not understand or care about the climatic peril our world is facing.

Ministers are clearly focused only on short-term, tactical gain – in this case, to give a brief boost to local employment – at the expense of forming a strategy for reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2050 and maintaining world leadership in the battle to limit the impact of greenhouse gas emissions on our climate.

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NASA“s Orion capsule heads for splashdown after Artemis I flight around moon

2022-12-11T06:08:30Z

(Reuters) – NASA’s uncrewed Orion capsule hurtled through space on Sunday on the final return leg of its voyage around the moon and back, winding up the inaugural mission of the Artemis lunar program 50 years to the day after Apollo’s final moon landing.

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FILE PHOTO: NASA’s next-generation moon rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion crew capsule, lifts off from launch complex 39-B on the unmanned Artemis 1 mission to the moon, seen from Sebastian, Florida, U.S. November 16, 2022. REUTERS/Joe Rimkus Jr.

The gumdrop-shaped Orion capsule, carrying a simulated crew of three mannequins wired with sensors, was due to parachute into the Pacific at 9:39 a.m. PST (1739 GMT) near Guadalupe Island, off Mexico’s Baja California peninsula.

Orion was nearing the end of its 25-day mission less than a week after passing about 79 miles (127 km) above the moon in a lunar fly-by and about two weeks after reaching its farthest point in space, nearly 270,000 miles (434,500 km) from Earth.

After jettisoning the service module housing its main rocket system, the capsule was expected to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere at 24,500 miles per hour (39,400 kph) – more than 30 times the speed of sound – for a fiery, 20-minute plunge to the ocean.

Orion blasted off on Nov. 16 from the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida, atop NASA’s towering next-generation Space Launch System (SLS), now the world’s most powerful rocket and the biggest NASA has built since the Saturn V of the Apollo era.

The debut SLS-Orion voyage kicked off Apollo’s successor program, Artemis, aimed at returning astronauts to the lunar surface this decade and establishing a sustainable base there as a stepping stone to future human exploration of Mars.

By coincidence, the return to Earth of Artemis I unfolded on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 17 moon landing of Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt on Dec. 11, 1972. They were the last of 12 NASA astronauts to walk on the moon during a total of six Apollo missions starting in 1969.

Re-entry marks the single most critical phase of Orion’s journey, testing whether its newly designed heat shield will withstand atmospheric friction expected to raise temperatures outside the capsule to nearly 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit (2,760 degrees Celsius).

“It is our priority-one objective,” NASA’s Artemis I mission manager Mike Sarafin said at a briefing last week. “There is no arc-jet or aerothermal facility here on Earth capable of replicating hypersonic re-entry with a heat shield of this size.”

It will also test the advanced guidance and thruster systems used to steer the capsule from the moon to its proper re-entry point and through descent, maintaining the spacecraft at just the right angle to avoid burning up.

“It’s essentially like throwing a football 300 yards and hitting a penny,” Eric Coffman, Orion propulsion senior manager at Lockheed Martin Corp, which built Orion under contract with NASA, told Reuters.

An internal navigation and control system commands 12 on-board thrusters, fixed in recessed positions along the base of the capsule, to fire bursts of propellant as needed to keep the capsule oriented correctly and on course, he said.

The heat, speed and forces exerted on Orion on its return from the moon will exceed those endured by spacecraft making more routine descents from the International Space Station (ISS) or other flights from low-Earth orbit.

In yet another new twist, Orion is programmed to employ a novel “skip entry” descent in which the capsule briefly dips into the top of the atmosphere, flies back out and re-enters – a braking maneuver that also provides more control in steering the vehicle closer to its intended splashdown target.

NASA officials have stressed the experimental nature of the Artemis I mission, marking the first launch of the Boeing Co-built SLS and the first combined with Orion, which previously flew a brief two-orbit test launched on a smaller Delta IV rocket in 2014.

Though the capsule encountered some unexpected communication blackouts and an electrical issue during its voyage around the moon, NASA has given high marks to the performance of both SLS and Orion so far, boasting that they exceeded the U.S. space agency’s expectations.

If Artemis I is deemed a success, a crewed Artemis II flight around the moon and back could come as early as 2024, followed within a few more years by the program’s first lunar landing of astronauts, one of them a woman, with Artemis III.

Compared with Apollo, born of the Cold War-era U.S.-Soviet space race, Artemis is more science driven and broad-based, enlisting commercial partners such as Elon Musk’s SpaceX and the space agencies of Europe, Canada, and Japan.

It also marks a major turning point for NASA, redirecting its human spaceflight program beyond low-Earth orbit after decades focused on space shuttles and the ISS.

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The Observer view on why public sector workers have no choice but to strike | Observer editorial

The government has failed to raise real-term wages for years and is now refusing to negotiate

Workers in the UK are experiencing the longest pay squeeze in more than 200 years. They are earning on average £900 less a year in real terms than they were before the 2008 financial crisis, and the Resolution Foundation has forecast average wages are not set to return to 2008 levels until 2027.

But public sector workers have suffered the worst. TUC analysis shows that nurses, on average, are today paid £5,000 a year less in real terms than in 2010. For paramedics and midwives, that figure is £6,000 a year. Police officers and prison service officers have seen their real pay drop by 13% and 10.4% respectively since 2009. The pay of secondary school staff and primary school staff has fallen by 9.7% and 11.8%. And as inflation has spiked and energy prices have spiralled, it is public sector workers who are facing the deepest real pay cuts, with average nominal pay offers below the private sector average. This is the context in which many of them – from nurses to teachers to Border Force guards – will be going on strike in the coming weeks. Many of these workers are people who continued going out to work during the pandemic, putting their health and that of their families at risk to maintain the provision of essential services. Yet successive Conservative chancellors have effectively achieved cuts to public services over the last decade by forcing public sector workers to bear real-term pay cuts. The NHS is being cross-subsidised by docking nurses’ pay. Teachers are being paid less to keep spending on schools as low as possible.

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Hawaii volcano alert level lowered to watch – USGS

2022-12-11T05:33:01Z

FILE PHOTO:The Mauna Loa volcano erupts, as seen from Mauna Kea near Hilo, Hawaii, U.S. December 6, 2022. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson/File Photo

Lava and volcanic gas emissions at Hawaii’s Mauna Loa, the world’s largest active volcano, declined on Saturday, the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said.

As a result, the Observatory downgraded the alert level for the volcano to a watch from the previous level of warning, with lava confined to a small area.

Under a watch alert level, an eruption is underway but poses limited hazards.

Mauna Loa began erupting in late November for the first time since 1984, ending its longest quiet period in recorded history.

The lava flow front in the Humu’ula Saddle region stagnated 1.9 miles (3.06 km) from the Daniel K. Inouye Highway, also known as Saddle Road, and is no longer a threat, the Observatory said.

The behavior of the volcano suggests the eruption may end soon. However, an inflationary trend of Mauna Loa’s summit is accompanying the decreased activity, the Observatory said.

“There is a small possibility that the eruption could continue at very low eruptive rates,” it said.

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Armed Forces of Ukraine name Iranian kamikaze drones’ weak spot

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The working of Iranian-built kamikaze drones straight depends on weather conditions situations and can be disrupted in cold weather.

Natalia Humeniuk, Head of the Joint Coordination Push Heart of the Southern Protection Forces, stated this in the course of the nationwide telethon.

According to her, there is a pause in the use of Iranian-designed drones as the Russians tried to change them to the climate situations.

“These drones had been examined in to some degree unique climatic disorders of Iran. Our weather is different and, among the other factors, they had been most concerned about aerodynamics, the possibility of icing in scenario of temperature adjustments, which could influence flight potential,” Humeniuk mentioned.

Examine also: Ukrainian forces shoot down 10 enemy drones in south

She added that now the air temperature in the south of Ukraine is optimistic, so the occupiers determined to start a batch of drones concentrating on Odesa area again.

Read through also: Zelensky on aftermath of Russian attack on Odesa area: more than 1.5 million people today keep on being with out electric power

As described, Russian troops attacked Odesa location with kamikaze drones on the evening of December 10. The enemy hit power amenities, leaving more than 1.5 million people today devoid of electric power.

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Russians strike Sumy region community during funeral procession

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On December 10, Russian troops ongoing shelling Sumy location, northern Ukraine. In distinct, they opened mortar fireplace on Znob-Novhorodske local community, wherever a funeral procession was held at that moment. The occupiers also struck Seredyna-Buda neighborhood with tube artillery.

“There were being 10 explosions in Znob-Novhorodske group. The Russians shelled a lawn and a street around the dwelling of the deceased. Men and women hid in shelters. In the border village of Seredyna-Buda community, five shots from tube artillery have been recorded.

In addition, on December 9, the Russians strike the village of Velyka Pysarivka, Sumy area, with S-300 missiles,” Dmytro Zhyvytskyy, Head of the Sumy Regional Military services Administration, posted on Telegram.

As a end result of the shelling, a two-tale residential making, 20 non-public residences, as effectively as administrative buildings were weakened.

The invaders routinely shell Sumy location, while they retreated from it in the spring. The Russian Federation even now keeps some of its units in the border parts of Bryansk and Kursk locations. Nevertheless, Ukrainian officials have not but noticed the creation of assault formations in Russia that could attack Sumy region all over again.

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Russia drones smash power network in Odesa, leaving 1.5 million without power

2022-12-11T04:49:19Z

All non-critical infrastructure in the Ukrainian port of Odesa was without power after Russia used Iranian-made drones to hit two energy facilities, leaving 1.5 million people without power, officials said on Saturday.

“The situation in the Odesa region is very difficult,” President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in his nightly video address.

“Unfortunately, the hits were critical, so it takes more than just time to restore electricity… It doesn’t take hours, but a few days, unfortunately.”

Since October, Moscow has been targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure with large waves of missile and drone strikes.

Norway was sending $100 million to help restore Ukraine’s energy system, Zelenskiy said.

Serhiy Bratchuk, spokesperson for Odesa’s regional administration, said electricity for the city’s population will be restored “in the coming days,” while complete restoration of the networks may take two to three months.

Bratchuk said an earlier Facebook post by the region’s administration, advising some people to consider evacuating, was being investigated by Ukraine’s security services as “an element of the hybrid war” by Russia.

That post has since been deleted.

“Not a single representative of the authorities in the region made any calls for the evacuation of the inhabitants of Odesa and the region,” Bratchuk said.

Odesa had more than 1 million residents before the Feb. 24 invasion that Russia calls a “special military operation” to “denazify” its smaller neighbour.

Kyiv says Russia has launched hundreds of Iranian-made Shahed-136 drones at targets in Ukraine, describing the attacks as war crimes due to their devastating effect on civilian life. Moscow says its attacks are militarily legitimate and that it does not target civilians.

Ukraine’s prosecutor general’s office said two power facilities in Odesa region were hit by Shahed-136 drones.

Ukraine’s armed forces said on Facebook that 15 drones had been launched against targets in the southern regions of Odesa and Mykolaiv, and 10 had been shot down.

Tehran denies supplying the drones to Moscow. Kyiv and its Western allies say that is a lie.

Britain’s defence ministry said on Saturday that it believed Iran’s military support for Russia was likely to increase in the coming months, including possible deliveries of ballistic missiles.

Related Galleries:

A vendor waits for customers in a small store that is lit with candles during a power outage after critical civil infrastructure was hit by Russian missile attacks, as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continues, in Odesa, Ukraine December 5, 2022. REUTERS/Serhii Smolientsev

A firefighter works at a site of a critical power infrastructure object, which was hit during Russia’s missile attacks in Odesa region, Ukraine, in this handout picture released December 6, 2022. Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine/Handout via REUTERS
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