Ukrainian Drone Assaults Ignite Fires at Energy Facilities in Oryol and Impact FSB Building in Chechnya | World | london-news-net.preview-domain.com

Ukrainian Drone Assaults Ignite Fires at Energy Facilities in Oryol and Impact FSB Building in Chechnya

Ukrainian Drone Assaults Ignite Fires at Energy Facilities in Oryol and Impact FSB Building in Chechnya

A recent drone attack by Ukraine overnight targeted the western Oryol region, causing fires at multiple fuel and energy facilities, according to local officials. Unverified reports also indicated that a building belonging to the Federal Security Service (FSB) in Chechnya sustained damage during these assaults.

Governor of the Oryol region, Andrei Klychkov, confirmed the strikes occurred in the Livensky district but did not specify the names of the facilities attacked.

He reported on Telegram, “No injuries have been reported. Emergency services are on-site and are conducting the necessary response and cleanup operations.”

The exiled news outlet Meduza pointed out that the Livensky district houses the Livny Combined Heat and Power Plant, which is the primary provider of electricity and heating for Livny, the region’s second-largest city.

According to Telegram news channels, the Orelnefteprodukt fuel depot, previously reported to have been targeted in January, is also situated within the Livensky district.

Additionally, residents in Chechnya reported that a Ukrainian drone strike severely damaged an FSB building in the area, although officials have yet to comment on this event.

Russia’s Defense Ministry announced that its air defense systems intercepted one Ukrainian drone in the Oryol region and four in Chechnya during the same night. In total, it stated that 45 Ukrainian drones had been shot down across eight different regions, alongside engagements in annexed Crimea and the Black Sea.

Civil aviation authorities have temporarily restricted operations at seven airports throughout Russia, including those in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya.

Since the summer, Ukraine has intensified its strikes on Russian energy infrastructure to diminish Moscow’s oil revenue, which is vital for its military funding.

November set a new monthly record for these types of attacks, with reports of at least 14 Ukrainian drone strikes targeting Russian oil refineries.

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Military Court Sentences 8 to Life in Prison Over Crimean Bridge Bombing Текст: A Russian military court on Thursday sentenced eight men to life in prison over the 2022 bombing of the Crimean Bridge, a key symbol of Russia’s claim to the peninsula it annexed in 2014. The Oct. 8, 2022, blast killed five people and badly damaged a section of the bridge. Russian authorities said explosives had been hidden inside rolls of plastic film that were shipped from Odesa through Bulgaria, Armenia and Georgia using falsified paperwork. Moscow accused Ukrainian security services of orchestrating the attack, alleging that a Ukrainian agent coordinated the movement of the explosives. Kyivtook responsibilityfor the bombing nearly a year later, while insisting that those arrested in Russia had been unaware that they were transporting explosives. Russia’s Southern District Military Court in Rostov-on-DonsaidThursday that the defendants were found guilty of carrying out a deadly “terrorist act” and of illegally acquiring weapons as part of an organized criminal group. Two were also convicted of smuggling explosives. All eight defendants had denied the charges against them. The trial began earlier this year and was held behind closed doors. After the sentencing on Thursday, Oleg Antipov, a transportation company CEO and one of the defendants,insistedthe entire group was innocent and said they had cooperated fully with law enforcement officials during the investigation into the bridge bombing. “Not a single person testified against us. Every witness says we’re innocent. All the evidence says we’re innocent. All 116 volumes [of the case] say we’re innocent. Show people the truth,” Antipov said in a video published by the independent news outlet Mediazona. The Memorial human rights groupdesignatedall eight men as political prisoners, arguing that their cooperation with investigators indicates they had no links to Ukrainian intelligence services. “All of them insist they were simply doing their regular work and had no knowledge that explosives were hidden in the cargo,” Memorial said in a statement. The Crimean Bridge, completed in 2018, stretches 19 kilometers (12 miles) across the Kerch Strait and has served as a crucial logistics route for Russian forces amid the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Ukraine has repeatedly targeted the bridge since February 2022.

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