Skip to content

Zaporizhzhia Plunged into Darkness

At 10 p.m. local time on Wednesday evening, Zaporizhzhia went dark. Completely. Regional Governor Ivan Fedorov confirmed it: it was the first total blackout in the entire region in years. The streets were plunged into darkness. The traffic lights were out. Buildings were reduced to ghostly silhouettes. Russian drones had struck the energy infrastructure with surgical precision, targeting exactly what was needed to bring everything down.

Emergency crews were deployed immediately. In the biting cold, under the constant threat of a new wave of attacks, technicians worked through the night. Electricity began to return gradually after 3 a.m. on Thursday. But the heat took longer to come back. And during those few hours of freezing darkness, how many people suffered? How many children cried from the cold? How many elderly people thought they wouldn’t make it through the night?

Dnipro: A National Emergency

While Zaporizhzhia was able to restore power within a few hours, Dnipro was not so lucky. As I write this on Thursday afternoon, nearly one million people in the Dnipropetrovsk region are still without water and heat. Dnipro’s mayor, Boris Filatov, doesn’t mince words: this is “the most severe blackout” of any Ukrainian city. A “national-level emergency,” according to Oleksii Kuleba, Minister of Community and Territorial Development.

The city’s hospitals are partially running on generators. Partially. Imagine that. Operating rooms running at reduced capacity. Emergency departments forced to ration electricity. Patients waiting in the cold for their turn to come. The subway has stopped running. Public transportation is paralyzed. School breaks have been extended—not for the children’s enjoyment, but because it’s too cold in the schools to teach anything.

And you know what really gets to me about all this? It’s the timing. One day. Just one day after Zelensky met with his allies in Paris to discuss peace. One day after France and the United Kingdom promised to send troops to Ukraine if an agreement were reached. One day after everyone had been patting themselves on the back for the “significant progress” in the negotiations. Moscow sent its message. Clear. Brutal. Icy. “You want peace? Here’s our answer.” And meanwhile, a million people are shivering in the dark.

Sources

Primary sources

Euromaidan Press – “Russo-Ukrainian War, Day 1,415: Russian Attacks Leave Ukrainians Without Power, Heat, or Water” – January 9, 2026

Euronews – “Russian attacks leave 1 million people in Ukraine without electricity and water” – January 8, 2026

BBC News – “One million without heat and water after Russian strikes, Ukraine says” – January 8, 2026

Reuters – “Russian strikes plunge Ukraine’s industrial southeast into blackouts” – January 8, 2026

Secondary sources

Al Jazeera – “‘Deliberate torment’: Ukrainians left without heating after Russian strikes” – January 8, 2026

France 24 – “Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk leave one million without water and heat” – January 8, 2026

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty – “Russian Strikes Leave Around 1 Million Ukrainians Without Power in Dnipro and Zaporizhzhia” – January 8, 2026

The New York Times – “Russian Strikes Knock Out Power in Dnipro Region of Ukraine” – January 8, 2026

Deutsche Welle – “Ukraine: 1 million without water, heat after Russian strike” – January 8, 2026

This content was created with the help of AI.

facebook icon twitter icon linkedin icon
Copied!

Commentaires

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
More Content