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Ukraine rushes drinking water to flooded areas

Ukraine rushes drinking water to flooded areas
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Authorities on Wednesday rushed supplies of drinking water to flooded areas from a collapsed dam in southern Ukraine as officials weighed where they might resettle residents who relied on the breached reservoir on the Dnieper River that forms part of the front line in the 15-month war.

More than 2,700 people have fled flooded areas on both the Russian and Ukrainian-controlled sides of the river, according to official tallies, but it was not clear whether the true scale of the disaster had yet emerged in an area that was home to more than 60,000 people.

The Kakhovka hydroelectric dam and reservoir, essential for supplying drinking water and irrigation to a huge area of southern Ukraine, lies in a part of the Kherson region occupied by Moscow’s forces for the past year.

It is also critical for water supplies to the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.

Ukraine holds the western bank of the Dnieper, while Russia controls the eastern side, which is lower and more vulnerable to flooding.

Scenes of flooded communities, rescues and even people reportedly waiting for help on their roofs in some Russian-occupied areas called to mind a natural disaster, rather than one caused by war.

In some Russian-occupied areas along the river, people reportedly waited on roofs for help scenes that called to mind a natural disaster, rather than one caused by war.

A day after the dam’s collapse, it remained unclear what caused it, with both sides blaming each other for the destruction. Some experts said the collapse may have been due to wartime damage and neglect, although others argued that Russia might have had tactical military reasons to destroy the dam.

Many residents have fled the region due to the fighting, but others have stayed despite shelling and drone attacks, making it hard to determine how many people remain at risk in an area where hundreds of thousands lived before Russia’s February 2022 invasion.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he met with officials on the “urgent provision of drinking water and long-term solutions for settlements that were dependent on the reservoir”, as well as assessing damage to property and the environment in the region.

Flooding could wash away this season’s crops, while the depleted Kakhovka reservoir would deny adequate irrigation in the years ahead.

Zelenskyy accused Moscow-installed officials in occupied areas of failing to respond adequately to the emergency.

Russian-controlled authorities said they evacuated fewer than 1,300 people in an area where as many as 40,000 people were said to be affected. That compared with about 1,700 evacuated on the Ukrainian side where the population was reportedly around 42,000.

Residents of the Moscow-controlled village of Oleshky were reported to be stranded, according to the independent Russian news outlet Vyorstka. It quoted one woman as saying that her mother, who couldn’t make it to the roof, was in the water clutching a ladder. A volunteer said those awaiting evacuation included children and disabled people, it added.

Zelenskyy said Ukraine will appeal to international organizations for help.a

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