The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Ukraine - Russia war: latest news live | Stoltenberg says Moscow is trying to use winter as a weapon

2022-11-27T11:22:40.404Z


Most of kyiv residents have electricity and water again | In 14 regions of the country there are still energy restrictions that affect at least 100,000 consumers in each of them


EL PAÍS offers the last hour of the conflict in Ukraine free of charge as a public service.

If you want to support our journalism, subscribe.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has assured that Russian President Vladimir Putin is trying to use winter as a weapon of war with the attacks in recent weeks against energy infrastructure.

“Rising food and energy bills portend difficult times for many households in Europe.

But we must remember that the people of Ukraine pay with their blood every day," Stoltenberg said in an interview with the German newspaper

Die Welt.

The majority of the inhabitants of the capital already have access to electricity supply and other basic services, as reported this Sunday by the military administration of the Ukrainian capital.

"In the capital, electricity, water, heating and communications have been almost completely restored," the institution announced through its Telegram account.

The supply has been progressively restored in recent days, but the Ukrainian president, Volodimir Zelenski, reiterated tonight his appeal to citizens to save energy.

In 14 regions of the country there are still restrictions that affect at least 100,000 consumers in each of them.

  • Last videos of the invasion

  • Key dates of the conflict: when and how it started

  • Photogallery |

    The distribution of humanitarian aid in Kherson during the war

02:08

The images of the 276 day of war in Ukraine

new posts

Surviving below zero in Ukraine

Nikol Goldman does not want to be photographed because she has not showered for two days: "My hair is dirty, it would not look good."

In kyiv the temperature is already below zero degrees and in her apartment she has had neither water nor electricity in three days, since the Russian attack that on November 23 hit the electricity grid of Ukraine (44 million inhabitants) again. .

50% of the country's electrical system has been destroyed and on Friday there were six million people without electricity, according to its president, Volodímir Zelenski.

Without electricity, the water pumping stations cannot operate;

Neither can the systems that burn gas or heat water for city stoves work without electricity.

This 18-year-old woman is concerned about her image because she doesn't want to lose her dignity,

despite the fact that she is aware that she and the rest of the Ukrainians face a more serious problem, surviving this winter.

By 

Luis de Vega 

and 

Cristian Segura. 

In the image of Luis de Vega, a group of people collect humanitarian aid in the town of Kupiansk (Kharkov), on November 18.

You can read the complete information here

10:23

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Most of kyiv residents have electricity and water again

The majority of the inhabitants of the capital already have access to electricity supply and other basic services, as reported this Sunday by the military administration of the Ukrainian capital.

"In the capital, electricity, water, heating and communications have been almost completely restored," the institution announced through its Telegram account.

Most of the residents have recovered electricity and no longer suffer temporary power outages.

"Everything works normally", they have assured the military administration, which has said that the work to repair the network is in its "final phase".

The news comes on a day when snowfall is expected in kyiv and when, according to forecasts, temperatures will drop to -2ºC during the day and -5ºC at night.

The wave of Russian attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure on November 23 caused widespread blackouts across the country, as the power grid suffered extensive damage and most power plants had to be taken offline.

The supply has been gradually restored in recent days, but the Ukrainian president, Volodimir Zelenski, reiterated tonight his call on citizens to save energy.

In 14 regions of the country there are still restrictions that affect at least 100,000 consumers in each of them.

The supply has also been restored in the city of Kherson, in the south of the country, which was left without basic services after the Russian withdrawal on November 9.

The head of the regional military administration, Yaroslav Yanushevich, announced yesterday that the main sewage plant and other facilities already have electricity.

"Next, electricity will gradually be provided to the city's residential areas. This will happen in the next few days," he said.

(Eph)

09:44

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Stoltenberg says Russia is trying to use winter as a weapon

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin is trying to use winter as a weapon with the recent wave of Russian attacks that even caused a "massive blackout" in neighboring Moldova.

"Rising food and energy bills portend difficult times for many households in Europe. But we must remember that the people of Ukraine pay with their blood every day," he specified in an interview with the German newspaper

Die Welt

, and has added that Moscow "will not" succeed.

Stoltenberg once again recalled "how dangerous" it is for the population to "depend on Russia for gas."

"Now we have to assess our dependence on authoritarian regimes, especially China," he said.

These statements come before the NATO foreign ministers meet on November 29 and 30 in Bucharest, the capital of Romania, to discuss the war in Ukraine, the Alliance's support for kyiv, as well as the role of China in the framework of the socio-political challenges facing the future.

NATO foreign ministers are scheduled to meet with their Ukrainian counterpart, Dimitro Kuleba, to discuss and call for further military and non-lethal aid within the Atlantic Alliance's comprehensive assistance package, which includes fuel, medical supplies,

specialized winter equipment and drone blockers, among others.

(EP)

08:17

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

EU fears Russian attacks on Ukraine's power grid will force another wave of refugees

Cold and darkness, as a weapon.

Russia's latest attacks on Ukraine's energy and civil infrastructure have left millions of people without heat, gas or electricity, and with severe problems with access to water when the frosts have already started, and only three weeks before the official start of winter .

When nine months of war are over, the Kremlin maneuvers like this to subdue the population and force it to give in.

With living conditions becoming increasingly difficult despite public resistance, the EU fears that the blackmail of the cold will force another wave of refugees.

Brussels insists that the reception systems are prepared, but the countries of the East, those closest to the Ukrainian borders and with the most refugees,

They warn that with a possible rebound in arrivals they will need help and have urged the Union to act.

By 

Maria R. Sahuquillo. 

In the image of Roman Pilipey, a girl, leaning on a chair where a policeman's gun rests, waited for a train on Friday to leave Kherson for kyiv.

You can read the complete information here

07:30

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

The International Summit on Food Safety raises 144 million euros, according to Zelenski 

The Ukrainian president, Volodímir Zelenski, has communicated through his official Telegram channel that up to 144 million euros have been raised during the first International Summit on Food Safety, which was held this Saturday in kyiv.

There, the Ukrainian Grain from Ukraine humanitarian initiative has been implemented, which aims to provide cereals free of charge to at least five million people in countries such as Sudan, Yemen, Kenya and Nigeria until the end of spring 2023, as announced. previously the Ukrainian government.

The money raised at this summit will be used to buy food for countries in Africa and Asia that suffer from extreme hunger, Zelenski announced during a conversation with representatives of the media after the end of the summit.

26 Nov 2022 - 20:56 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Ukraine says Russian strikes have killed 32 civilians in Kherson since Kremlin troop withdrawal 

The head of Ukraine's national police, Igor Klimenko, has reported that Russian bombardments of the Kherson province (south) have killed at least 32 civilians since Kremlin forces withdrew from the area two weeks ago.

Russian troops completed their withdrawal from the city of Kherson on November 11, after an occupation of almost nine months.

They are now positioned on the eastern bank of the Dnieper River, from where they have been regularly shelling the city.

"Daily Russian attacks are destroying the city and killing peaceful local residents," the national police chief said.

"Many residents remain in their homes, and we have to provide them with the maximum possible security," he continued.

Last week, a senior Ukrainian official said evacuation of people wanting to leave the province would start "soon".

Klimenko also explained that investigators have recorded a total of 578 war crimes committed by Russian troops and their accomplices in the province.

Moscow routinely rejects accusations that its forces have abused civilians.

(Reuters)

26 Nov 2022 - 19:31 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

What has happened in the last hours

On the 276th day of the war started by Russia against Ukraine, these are the key data at 8:00 p.m. this Saturday, November 26:

  • Ukraine denounces Russian attacks on the city of Dnipro.

    The Dnipro authorities have warned that the Russian Armed Forces have carried out this Saturday a new attack on the city, located in the Dnipropetrovsk region, in eastern Ukraine.

    According to the town's mayor, Boris Filatov, preliminary data suggests that the energy and communications infrastructure has not been affected, as has been the case in most of the latest Russian offensives.

  • Third prisoner exchange with Russia in a week.

    The Ukrainian government has reported the release of nine soldiers and three civilians who were in Russian captivity, in what is the third exchange of prisoners with Moscow in a week.

    The head of the Presidential Office, Andriy Yermak, has communicated through his official Telegram channel that 12 Ukrainian prisoners have been released.

    "Among them, four soldiers from the Navy, two national guards, two border guards, a member of the Territorial Defense Forces and three civilians: husband and wife and a man who was reported missing," Yermak detailed.

  • The Belarusian Foreign Minister dies suddenly.

    The Belarusian Foreign Minister, Vladimir Makei, has died suddenly at the age of 64, the state agency Belta announced on Saturday.

    Minsk has not reported the causes of the death of the senior official, who in the summer celebrated a decade at the head of Belarusian diplomacy, and his death has caused consternation both to the Aleksandr Lukashenko regime and to Moscow.

    "We are shocked by the news of his death," Russian Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Maria Zajárova wrote on social media as soon as the news broke.

  • The European Union will pay for the export of 40,000 tons of Ukrainian cereal.

    The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has announced that the EU will pay for the transport in two ships of 40,000 tons of Ukrainian cereal as part of a kyiv initiative aimed at exporting grain to vulnerable countries.

    "We will pay for the transport, whatever the cost", has assured the German policy in a telematic intervention during the Ukraine Grain summit.

    This summit aims to provide cereals free of charge to at least five million people in countries such as Sudan, Yemen, Kenya and Nigeria until the end of spring 2023, as previously announced by the Ukrainian government.

In the image, a group of citizens pay tribute to the victims of the Holodomor, a famine caused by Stalin in Soviet Ukraine from 1932 to 1933 that killed millions of Ukrainians.

/

Oleg Petrasyuk 

26 Nov 2022 - 19:01 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Ukraine calls for the cap on Russian oil to be set at between $30 and $40 per barrel, below what the G-7 plans to set 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky believes that the price of Russian oil transported by sea should be limited to between 30 and 40 dollars per barrel, below the ceiling proposed by the Group of Seven nations, which are considering setting the price of crude at between 65 and 70 dollars.

Governments in the European Union, seeking to curb Moscow's ability to finance the Ukraine war without

shocking

oil supplies, are divided on this G-7 proposal, which is scheduled to take effect on June 5. december.

"I think the limit being considered is artificial," said Zelensky, who has consistently pushed allies to impose tougher sanctions of all kinds against Russia.

"We would like the sanctions to be very effective in this fight, so that Russia feels them."

In early November, the G-7 members agreed to cap the price of Russian oil, but only for oil arriving by sea.

(Reuters)

26 Nov 2022 - 18:26 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

The European Union will pay for the export of 40,000 tons of Ukrainian cereal

The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has announced that the EU will pay for the transport in two ships of 40,000 tons of Ukrainian cereal as part of a kyiv initiative aimed at exporting grain to vulnerable countries.

"We will pay for transportation, whatever the cost," German politics assured in a telematic intervention during the 

Ukraine Grain Summit

, held in kyiv this Saturday and which brought together the Prime Ministers of Belgium, Poland and Lithuania and the President of Hungary in person.

The presidents of Germany and France have weighed in with speeches shown on video.

This summit aims to provide cereals free of charge to at least five million people in countries such as Sudan, Yemen, Kenya and Nigeria until the end of spring 2023, as previously announced by the Ukrainian government.

The new European aid will be added to that mobilized through the so-called Solidarity Corridors promoted by the EU, which since May have allowed the export of 17 million tons of cereals and food products by land.

"The Solidarity Corridors have become a lifeline for the Ukrainian economy, providing more than 19,000 million euros of much-needed income to farmers and companies," said Von der Leyen, recalling that 1,000 million euros have recently been mobilized additions to strengthen these export routes.

In addition, the agreement promoted by Turkey and the United Nations, dubbed the Black Sea Grain Initiative, allows food to be taken out of the country by boat, bringing the products exported to the rest of the world from Ukraine to 28 million tons.

"Russia is once again using food as a weapon. As part of its brutal aggression, it has vandalized your agricultural production, attacked your silos and blocked your ports. Russia is therefore depriving the most vulnerable countries of vital access to food. from Africa, the Middle East and Asia", Von der Leyen told by video.

The EU and its members strive to discredit Moscow's discourse, which attributes the problems in world food trade and exports from Ukraine to the effect of European sanctions,

one of the main cereal suppliers in the world.

(Eph)

26 Nov 2022 - 17:03 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Belarusian foreign minister dies suddenly

The Belarusian Foreign Minister, Vladimir Makei, has died suddenly at the age of 64, the state agency Belta announced on Saturday.

Minsk has not reported the causes of the death of the senior official, who in the summer celebrated a decade at the head of Belarusian diplomacy, and his death has caused consternation both to the Aleksandr Lukashenko regime and to Moscow.

"We are shocked by the news of his death," Russian Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Maria Zajárova wrote on social media as soon as the news broke.

By Javier G. Cuesta

Read the complete information here.

26 Nov 2022 - 16:39 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Ukraine announces third prisoner swap with Russia in a week

The Ukrainian government has reported the release of nine soldiers and three civilians who were in Russian captivity, in what is the third exchange of prisoners with Moscow in a week.

The head of the Presidential Office, Andriy Yermak, has communicated through his official Telegram channel that 12 Ukrainian prisoners have been released.

"Among them, four soldiers from the Navy, two national guards, two border guards, a member of the Territorial Defense Forces and three civilians: husband and wife and a man who was reported missing," Yermak detailed.

According to the same source, the military had been captured during the siege of the coastal city of Mariupol (southern Ukraine);

at the Chernobyl nuclear plant, which Russian forces occupied at the start of the war;

and on the Island of Snakes, in the Black Sea.

The head of the Presidential Office has added that, with this release, the number of Ukrainian prisoners of war exchanged with Russia in one week rises to 98.

"We are working to free all our people. We will not stop," Yermak concluded.

For its part, the Russian Defense Ministry has announced that nine Russian soldiers have been released by the Ukrainian side.

(Eph)

26 Nov 2022 - 15:23 UTC

WhatsApp

Facebook

Twitter

copy link

Hungarian President Katalin Novák visits Zelensky in kyiv

Katalin Novák, presidenta de Hungría, se ha entrevistado este sábado en Kiev con su homólogo Volodímir Zelenski, aunque sin precisar los temas del encuentro. "Aquí estoy en Kiev, invitada por el presidente ucranio. Ayudamos donde hay problemas", ha informado Novák en sus redes publicando una foto en la que no solo aparecen ellos dos, sino también los primeros ministros de Polonia, Mateusz Morawiecki, y de Bélgica, Alexander De Croo.

A pesar de que la prensa húngara había informado sobre el viaje, la oficina de la presidenta no confirmó hasta hoy la visita, supuestamente por cuestiones de seguridad. Novák es la política húngara de más alto rango que ha visitado Ucrania desde el inicio de la invasión rusa en febrero pasado. En Ucrania vive una minoría húngara de 150.000 personas, por lo que la prensa local opina que este pudo haber sido uno de los temas del encuentro de hoy. (Efe)

26 Nov 2022 - 13:30 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

Ucrania denuncia ataques rusos sobre la ciudad de Dnipró

Las autoridades de Dnipró han alertado de que las Fuerzas Armadas rusas han llevado a cabo este sábado un nuevo ataque sobre la ciudad, ubicada en la región de Dnipropetrovsk, en el este de Ucrania. De acuerdo con el alcalde de la localidad, Boris Filatov, los datos preliminares apuntan a que la infraestructura energética y de comunicaciones no se ha visto afectada, como sí ha ocurrido en la mayoría de las últimas ofensivas rusas.

"Estamos a la espera de detalles del bombardeo e información sobre las víctimas por parte de la administración militar", ha añadido Filatov en su canal de Telegram, según recoge la agencia de noticias UNIAN. Por su parte, el gobernador de Dnipropetrovsk, Valentin Reznichenko, ha confirmado los ataques sobre Dnipró, y ha adelantado que siete viviendas se han visto afectadas por una explosión que, además, ha originado un incendio. (EP)

26 Nov 2022 - 13:04 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

Polonia y Lituania redoblan su apoyo al ingreso de Ucrania en la OTAN y la UE

Los primeros ministros de Polonia, Lituania y Ucrania han firmado este sábado una declaración conjunta por la que Varsovia y Vilnius se comprometen, entre otros puntos, a "intensificar" el debate sobre el ingreso en la OTAN y en la Unión Europea (UE). Según informaron medios polacos y ucranios, Mateusz Morawiecki e Ingryda Simonyte, los primeros ministros de Polonia y Lituania, alentarán las discusiones en el seno de la OTAN para invitar a Ucrania a entrar en negociaciones de acceso de cara a la próxima cumbre de la alianza en Vilnius.

Además, en la declaración expresan su apoyo a abrir las negociaciones de adhesión a la UE tan pronto como la Comisión Europea (CE) evalúe de forma positiva la implementación de las recomendaciones asociadas con el estatus de país candidato. La reunión ha tenido lugar en Kiev, adonde Morawiecki y Simonyte han viajado el día en que se conmemora el nonagésimo aniversario del inicio del Holodomor, la hambruna que en tiempos soviéticos costó la vida a varios millones de ucranianos.

Otras cuestiones abordadas por los tres jefes de Gobierno han sido el reforzamiento del apoyo militar, financiero y humanitario a Ucrania, así como la investigación de los crímenes de guerra rusos en Ucrania y su persecución penal. Además, señaló el primer ministro ucranio, Denis Shmihal, los tres han tratado los "desafíos" relacionados con la destrucción de la infraestructura energética ucrania y sus consecuencias para el invierno. "Hablamos de la cuestión del suministro de generadores a Ucrania y todos los equipos necesarios para sobrevivir al invierno", ha declarado. (Efe)

26 Nov 2022 - 12:28 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

Scholz anuncia una contribución alemana al plan de transporte de cereal ucranio

El canciller alemán, Olaf Scholz, ha anunciado que su país aportará 10 millones de euros al plan para transportar cereal ucranio a países pobres en coordinación con el Programa Mundial de Alimentos (PMA) de la ONU. Scholz ha comunicado la noticia durante una breve alocución en la ceremonia de apertura de la iniciativa Grain from Ukraine, que el Gobierno ucranio ha lanzado este sábado con ocasión del nonagésimo aniversario del Holodomor, la hambruna que devastó Ucrania en los años 1932-1933.

"Hoy, afirmamos unidos que el hambre no debe ser usada nunca más como arma", ha dicho el canciller, que ha recordado que la hambruna "provocada deliberadamente por Stalin mató a más de 3,3 millones de hombres, mujeres y niños ucranianos". Scholz ha asegurado que con el bloqueo de los puertos del mar Negro y con los ataques contra las infraestructuras ucranias, Rusia está agudizando la crisis alimentaria global, en particular en países como Madagascar o Afganistán.

Más allá de las contribuciones de la Unión Europea (UE) al transporte de grano ucranio por vía terrestre y fluvial, el club de naciones industrializadas del G7 ha aportado 4.500 millones de dólares para reforzar la seguridad alimentaria global, recordó. "Me complace anunciar que Alemania proporcionará diez millones de euros adicionales para realizar más envíos de grano desde Ucrania, en coordinación con el Programa Mundial de Alimentos", ha añadido Scholz. (Efe)

26 Nov 2022 - 11:49 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

Qué ha pasado en las últimas horas

En el 276 día de la guerra iniciada por Rusia contra Ucrania, estos son los datos clave a las 12.30 de este sábado 26 de noviembre:

El Reino Unido considera que Moscú está agotando sus reservas de misiles de largo alcance. El Ministerio de Defensa británico considera probable que Rusia esté agotando sus reservas de misiles de largo alcance, ya que hay indicios de que Moscú está usando munición antigua a la que ha retirado las ojivas donde se encuentra la carga nuclear. En su informe diario, la institución explica que los restos de un misil de crucero lanzado por Rusia contra Ucrania parecen coincidir con los de un artefacto nuclear diseñado en la década de 1980. “Sea cual sea la intención de Rusia, esta improvisación deja claro el agotamiento en la reserva de misiles de largo alcance de Rusia”, destaca el Ministerio.

El primer ministro belga visita Ucrania y promete más ayuda. Alexander De Croo, primer ministro de Bélgica, y la ministra de Exteriores belga, Hadja Lahbib, han realizado este sábado una visita a Ucrania en la que han anunciado que entregarán al país en guerra otros 37,4 millones de euros en ayuda militar, civil y humanitaria. La visita, que se había mantenido en secreto hasta hoy por razones de seguridad, es la primera de miembros del Gobierno belga a Kiev desde el inicio de la invasión rusa el pasado 24 de febrero y durante la misma estos se han reunido con el presidente del país, Volodímir Zelenski, según informan medios belgas.

La electricidad ha sido restablecida en la ciudad de Jersón. Kirilo Timoshenko, alto asesor presidencial ucranio, ha informado este sábado de que la electricidad se ha restablecido en la ciudad de Jersón, que fue recuperada por las tropas de Kiev hace un par de semanas. "Primero hemos suministrado energía a la infraestructura crítica de la ciudad y luego inmediatamente a los consumidores domésticos", ha escrito Timoshenko en Telegram.

Zelenski afea al alcalde de Kiev su gestión de los centros de emergencia contra los apagones. El presidente ucranio, Volodímir Zelenski, ha afeado al alcalde de Kiev, Vitali Klitschko, su gestión de los centros de emergencia contra apagones, diseñados por el Gobierno central para proveer de electricidad, agua, calefacción y conexión a internet a los ciudadanos que sufran cortes de energía prolongados a causa de los bombardeos rusos. Durante su habitual discurso nocturno, el mandatario ucranio ha afirmado que estos puntos de asistencia están desplegados “por todo el país”, pero que “lamentablemente, las autoridades locales no han hecho un buen trabajo en todas las ciudades” y que “hay muchas quejas en Kiev”.

En la imagen de Libkos, soldados ucranios disparan artillería contra posiciones rusas cerca de Bakhmut, en la provincia de Donetsk.

26 Nov 2022 - 11:31 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

La electricidad ha sido restablecida en la ciudad de Jersón

Kirilo Timoshenko, alto asesor presidencial ucranio, ha informado este sábado de que la electricidad se ha restablecido en la ciudad de Jersón, que fue recuperada por las tropas de Kiev hace un par de semanas. "Primero hemos suministrado energía a la infraestructura crítica de la ciudad y luego inmediatamente a los consumidores domésticos", ha escrito Timoshenko en Telegram.

Las tropas ucranias encontraron una ciudad sin electricidad, calefacción central y agua corriente cuando la recuperaron el 11 de noviembre. La localidad había estado en manos de Moscú prácticamente desde el comienzo de la invasión, siendo la única capital regional que rusia había logrado tomar y su pérdida ha representado un revés significativo para las tropas rusas que se replegaron a la margen izquierda del rio Dniéper. (Reuters)

26 Nov 2022 - 11:13 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

El primer ministro belga visita Ucrania y promete más ayuda 

Alexander De Croo, primer ministro de Bélgica, y la ministra de Exteriores belga, Hadja Lahbib, han realizado este sábado una visita a Ucrania en la que han anunciado que entregarán al país en guerra otros 37,4 millones de euros en ayuda militar, civil y humanitaria. La visita, que se había mantenido en secreto hasta hoy por razones de seguridad, es la primera de miembros del Gobierno belga a Kiev desde el inicio de la invasión rusa el pasado 24 de febrero y durante la misma estos se han reunido con el presidente del país, Volodímir Zelenski, según informan medios belgas.

"Tras los duros bombardeos de los últimos días, estamos con el pueblo de Ucrania. Más que nunca. Con los fríos meses de invierno por delante, Bélgica liberará nueva ayuda humanitaria y militar", ha escrito de Croo en Twitter. Además de apoyo militar, el nuevo paquete de 37,4 millones de euros incluirá material como generadores eléctricos, kits de primeros auxilios y sacos de dormir, así como ayuda humanitaria que se canalizará con la intermediación de Unicef y se destinará a acceso al agua, higiene y saneamiento. También habrá fondos para la reconstrucción, donde Bélgica trabajará con la Organización Internacional de las Migraciones para rehabilitar 14 hospitales e infraestructuras de agua y calefacción, según recogen los medios que han viajado a Kiev con la delegación gubernamental.

Además, el consejo de ministros belga aprobó este viernes el envío de 10 drones submarinos y dos laboratorios móviles a Ucrania, cuyas fuerzas armadas recibirán también formación por parte del Ejército belga tanto de tipo militar como para la asistencia médica sobre el terreno, según explicó ayer la ministra de Defense, Ludivine Dedonder, en una entrevista con el diario belga Le Soir. En total, Bélgica ha desembolsado 221,7 millones de euros ayuda a Ucrania desde el inicio de la guerra, de los cuales, 145 se han destinado a apoyo militar y 76,7 a ayuda civil. (Efe)

En la imagen de Sergei Dolzhenko, Alexander De Croo, primer ministro de Bélgica, visita al presidente ucranio, Volodímir Zelenski, en Kiev este sábado.

26 Nov 2022 - 10:22 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

El Reino Unido considera que Rusia podría estar utilizando misiles nucleares descargados

El Ministerio de Defensa británico considera probable que Rusia utilice sus misiles nucleares retirando las ojivas donde se encuentra la carga nuclear. En su informe diario, la institución explica que los restos de un misil de crucero lanzado por Rusia contra Ucrania parecen coincidir con los de un artefacto nuclear diseñado en la década de 1980. El Reino Unido considera que las ojivas seguramente estén siendo sustituidas por lastre. “Sea cual sea la intención de Rusia, esta improvisación deja claro el agotamiento en la reserva de misiles de largo alcance de Rusia”, destaca el Ministerio.

26 Nov 2022 - 09:05 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

Columna | Doblegar la infamia del Kremlin

Asistimos en estos días a la infame escalada bélica impulsada por el Kremlin en Ucrania, con una estrategia de ataques sistemáticos dirigidos a dejar a la población civil sin calefacción, electricidad y agua corriente, en lo que tiene todos los visos de ser un crimen de guerra. Ante las constantes derrotas en el campo de batalla, Moscú recurre a la más baja de las opciones: intentar quebrar la voluntad de la ciudadanía lejos del frente. En paralelo, se detectan en el mundo múltiples impulsos —en forma de llamamientos, protestas y movimientos en la penumbra— para detener la guerra. Por Andrea Rizzi. 

En la imagen de Bulent Kilic, una pareja se besa en un bar de Kiev durante un apagón, el pasado jueves.

Puede leer la columna completa aquí

26 Nov 2022 - 07:55 UTC

Whatsapp

Facebook

Twitter

Copiar enlace

12345

Ver directo completo

Follow all the international information on

Facebook

and

Twitter

, or in

our weekly newsletter

.

Source: elparis

All news articles on 2022-11-27

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.