Putin meets with mothers of fallen Russian soldiers
02:39
What we covered here
Some residents are evacuating the recently liberated city of Kherson as Ukrainian officials warn of a harsh winter and Russian shelling.
More than 6 million customers are still without power in Ukraine, though that is half the number initially cut off by Russian strikes Wednesday, President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
In a speech to the mothers of service members, President Vladimir Putin blamed unnamed outside forces for pushing Moscow to launch its “special military operation” in Ukraine.
The UN’s nuclear watchdog has started providing onsite support to four more nuclear power plants in Ukraine after they were disconnected from the grid. The IAEA chief said the situation was “deeply worrying.”
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg says he’s confident Hungary and Turkey will ratify the accession of Finland and Sweden to the military alliance.
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More than 6 million customers still without power in Ukraine, Zelensky says
From CNN's Lindsay Isaac
A residential building is seen in Kyiv, Ukraine, on November 24. More than 6 million customers still without power, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a Friday address.
(Andre Luis Alves/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
More than 6 million customers are still without power in Ukraine, though that is half the number initially cut off by Russian air strikes Wednesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a Friday address.
The capital, as well as the regions of Kyiv, Odesa, Lviv, Vinnytsia and Dnipro face the greatest problems with power supply as of Friday, according to Zelensky.
About 600,000 consumers in Kyiv alone are still cut off, he added. Many residents of the capital have been without electricity for more than 20 or even 30 hours.
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Kyiv hospital almost forced to evacuate some patients after loss of water supply
From CNN’s Yulia Kesaieva in Kyiv and Jo Shelley in London
One of Ukraine’s largest state hospitals was on the verge of evacuating some patients Wednesday after it lost water supply due to a Russian missile barrage, a local official told CNN.
The Kyiv Regional Clinical Hospital was about to move patients undergoing dialysis treatment, which requires an uninterrupted water supply, the deputy head of the region’s military administration said in a phone interview.
“Without water, it is difficult to run the hospital. First of all, sterilization rooms suffer and (dialysis) is impossible to conduct,” he said. “On Wednesday, the Kyiv Regional Clinical Hospital was on the edge of evacuating patients who require (dialysis) to other facilities, but in the afternoon the water supply was restored and everyone received the procedures vital for them.”
Some background: Ukraine was hit by a barrage of Russian missiles Wednesday afternoon, which damaged critical infrastructure and resulted in a temporary loss of power to the national grid.
Hospitals have generators that kick in when the power is cut, but these have limited capacity, Vlasiuk said. Medical chiefs try to conserve power by using them only for essential activities.
How Ukraine’s hospitals survive outages: Power from generators allows surgeons to continue operations during a blackout, but non-urgent surgery does not take place, according to Vlasiuk.
Hospital staff may wear headlamps so that the generator can last longer, he continued.
But he insisted that wards would be “fully lit” – despite photos that have shown doctors in the capital and other regions wearing the lights.
Orest Chemerys, the head of Lviv’s regional health department, said that critical equipment like incubators and the intensive care wards were switched to generator power within seconds of a blackout. Almost all the region’s health care facilities temporarily survived on generators after Wednesday’s airstrikes.
Ukraine’s minister of health, Viktor Liashko, told national TV on Friday that each hospital with an ICU and operating room had a generator and the government was bringing in additional generators to further increase capacity.
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Putin says Russia used to live by someone else's rules, but is now on the path toward reinvention
From CNN's Radina Gigova and Katharina Krebs
President Vladimir Putin said Friday that Russia used to live by someone else’s rules – without saying who that was – and that “those who tried to control us” pushed Moscow to invade Ukraine.
Moscow describes the February invasion of Ukraine as a “special military operation.”
Without specifying who was trying to control Russia, Putin said the country made a mistake by following a different path in the nineties and the 2000s, a reference to the period following the breakup of the Soviet Union.
“And in the end, those who tried to control us, by and large, thanks to their efforts, we ended up in this situation, including in the zone of a special military operation. After all, they pushed the situation to this,” he said.
In other remarks to the mothers of those serving in Ukraine, Putin said:
Russia is not fighting Ukrainians, but those who use them “as cannon fodder,” an apparent reference to Western nations who are supporting the Kyiv government following the invasion in February.
“We have to fight not with them (Ukrainians), but with those who supply everything to them and finance them,” Putin said.
Some context: The war in Ukraine combined with Western sanctions are taking a toll on Russians. While the shelves in most stores remain well-stocked, Western products are becoming increasingly scarce and very expensive, further driving prices that are already hammering many Russian households.
Some economists believe the population will grow increasingly critical of the “special military operation” amid mounting defeats, like in the southern city of Kherson, where a determined Ukrainian offensive forced a Russian withdrawal.
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Ukraine on the agenda when France's Macron visits White House next week
CNN’s Saskya Vandoorne in Paris
French President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech as he hosts a reception for the mayors of France at the Elysee Palace in Paris on November 23.
(Eliot Blondet/Pool/Sipa/AP)
French President Emmanuel Macron will discuss a range of political issues with US President Joe Biden next week including the war in Ukraine, trade issues and climate change, according to a French government official.
Beginning Wednesday the White House will host Macron and his wife, Brigitte Macron, for the first full-scale state visit of Biden’s administration.
The visit will be a multi-day affair with formal ceremonies, meetings and a black-tie dinner on Thursday.
Macron is the first French president to be offered two state visits, a gesture that “underscores the alliance between the two countries,” according to the official.
“It will be a different visit to the one with Trump as the dynamic won’t be the same,” the official said.
Macron, now in his second term, has emerged as the leading voice to advocate for the European Union. He is expected to raise concerns over Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, a US climate and tax law seen as a major threat to European companies.
“We cannot risk a shock on European industry,” the official said.
Macron is also expected to tackle energy issues, and he will emphasize that the sanctions on Russia aren’t having the same consequences on Europe and the US.
“The U.S is self-sufficient, but the EU does not produce gas or petrol, so we are very impacted by energy prices, and once again it’s another problem for European industry,” he said.
The relationship between the leaders hasn’t always been smooth sailing.
A failed deal for France to produce nuclear-powered submarines for Australia caused a major international rift, with the French ambassador to Washington, Philippe Etienne, being recalled for what was believed to be the first time in the nearly 250-year-old history of the alliance
Speaking to CNN’s Melissa Bell on Thursday, the ambassador said trust had since been “restored.”
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Residents start evacuating Kherson as officials warn of harsh winter and Russian shelling
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva In Kyiv
A woman walks past a recently damaged building due to a Russian strike in Kherson, southern Ukraine, on November 25.
(Bernat Armangue/AP)
Voluntary evacuations for residents from the recently liberated port city of Kherson are underway, with the first train carrying away 100 people, the Ukrainian government said.
The train is bound for the western city of Khmelnytskyi, according to the country’s Ministry of Reintegration of Ukraine. Among residents who “took advantage of the free evacuation” are 26 children, seven bedridden hospital patients and six people with limited mobility, it said in a statement.
Authorities in Kherson are urging residents to leave the city, which is still mainly without power, before temperatures plunge further. Kherson has also come under renewed shelling since Russian troops were forced to leave the west bank of the Dnipro River.
Evacuees will receive financial support, accommodations and humanitarian aid once they reach Khmelnytskyi, according to city officials.
Authorities say there are also buses running from the Kherson region to the cities of Odesa, Mykolaiv and Kryvyi Rih, where people will be “accommodated in specially equipped shelters and then evacuated to safer regions of Ukraine by car.”
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The West is struggling to set an oil price cap that hurts Russia
The West’s biggest economies agreed earlier this year to cap the price of Russia’s most valuable export and vowed to hash out the details by early December. The move is aimed at reducing inflows to President Vladimir Putin’s war chest without adding to stress on the global economy by further reducing the supply of energy.
But as the deadline approaches, countries are still haggling over where the cap should be set.
A delicate balance: Media reports this week from a gathering of European diplomats indicated that Russian oil could be capped at between $65 and $70 per barrel. Yet this range is controversial since it’s close to the current market price of Russian crude.
That would mean limited disruption to supply, but also limited pain for Russia.
Setting the price lower would be more punishing to Moscow, but could exacerbate the global energy crisis — particularly if Russia retaliates. If it were to slash production by more than expected, it would drive up fuel prices just as countries like the United States, Germany and Japan are eager to get inflation under control.
Putin said Thursday that Western plans to introduce oil price caps would have “grave consequences” for energy markets.
Disruption is inevitable: The price level isn’t the only issue at hand. Setting a static range for the price cap — as opposed to establishing a floating discount for Russian crude pegged to where Brent is trading — could pose logistical problems since it would need to be frequently adjusted.
There’s also skepticism among oil traders that the measure can be enforced, according to Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS. He expects parties to transactions will hunt for loopholes.
Some analysts think the price cap will ultimately be less important than Europe’s oil embargo. The bloc has been buying about 2.4 million barrels per day of Russian crude, and Moscow will soon be forced to hunt for new customers.
To limit spare barrels, it’s likely to reduce output. That could push oil prices higher no matter what.
This map shows the latest state of control in Ukraine
The map below reflects the current front lines in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
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EU countries donate generators to help Ukraine get through winter
From CNN’s Eve Brennan, Irina Morgan and Ivana Kottasova
A number of European Union countries said they will donate power generators to Ukraine to help the country have heating for the winter.
“Reminder: strikes against civilian infrastructures are war crimes,” she added.
Prague Mayor Zdeněk Hřib announced that the Czech Republic will also donate power generators to Ukraine.
Hřib said the package would include 626 heaters, with 400 for Kyiv and 226 for Mykolaiv, along with other equipment.
“Plus 22 million CZK (approximately $939,000 USD) worth of medical supplies for the Public Health Centre of the Ministry of Health of Ukraine,” he added.
Latvia’s ambassador to Ukraine, Oleksandr Mishchenko, announced on Facebook that the capital city of Riga had partnered with a charity to donate 84 power generators and 100 heat guns for Kyiv.
Some background: The new pledges come after the EU launched its “Generators of Hope” initiative Wednesday, whereby a network of more than 200 large European cities aim to provide energy to essential facilities in Ukraine.
A Russian missile strike dealt another significant blow to Kyiv’s electricity infrastructure earlier this week, though an energy official voiced optimism Friday that normal power levels would be restored soon.
CNN’s Radina Gigova contributed to this report.
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Germany and France sign joint declaration on energy solidarity
From CNN's Nadine Schmidt in Berlin
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne attend a news conference as they sign a joint declaration in Berlin, Germany, on November 25.
(Michele Tantussi/Reuters)
Germany and France have signed a joint declaration to strengthen energy solidarity, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne announced Friday at a press conference in Berlin.
“Friends stand by each other in times of need,” Scholz told reporters during Borne’s inaugural visit to the German capital. “Germany and France exemplify common European solidarity,” he added.
“It is an important text that will have concrete effects and protect citizens in both countries,” Borne said. “Our two countries need each other to get through the energy crisis next winter.”
Relations between the two countries have been strained in recent months due to differing positions on key issues, such as energy, defense and industrial policies. Borne’s trip to Berlin on Friday is seen as an attempt to rekindle relations.
Scholz said Germany and France support Ukraine against Russia’s invasion and called on Russia to stop bombing Ukraine’s critical infrastructure.
Some context: Europe appears to be moving toward breaking its energy dependence on Moscow, with Russian exports of coal, oil and natural gas falling sharply since the invasion of Ukraine. But European imports of a key type of Russian natural gas have risen and remain critical to meeting energy needs, as CNN has previously reported.
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Government adviser pledges Kyiv will have nearly "normal electricity coverage" by Saturday
From CNN’s Jo Shelley
Power outages have led to blackouts in Kyiv, Ukraine, on November 24.
(Zinchenko/Global Images Ukraine/Getty Images)
Power supply to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv will near normal levels by Saturday, according to an adviser to the country’s energy ministry.
Oleksandr Kharchenko, director of the Energy Industry Research Center, said at a briefing that the “key factor” in restoring power in Kyiv and across Ukraine was the operation of the country’s three functional nuclear plants. He said he expected them to be working at normal capacity by Friday night.
“Now the key factor is nuclear power plants. … There is currently a lack of power generation,” Kharchenko said. “Judging by the situation, our nuclear power plants will reach their normal planned capacity by tonight. This will mean that we will return to the planned outage schedules and people will receive electricity for at least 16 to 18 hours a day.”
Kharchenko did not say when he expected the power supply to the rest of the country to improve.
Ukraine is heavily dependent on nuclear energy, according to the World Nuclear Association. Before Russia’s full-scale invasion in February, the 15 reactors at its four plants generated about half of the nation’s electricity.
Kharchenko went into detail about the impact of Wednesday’s large-scale Russian missile assault on the energy grid, which he said “returned to its integrity and ability to operate as a single system within 10 to 11 hours” of the blackout.
In addition to reconnecting the power plants, increasing their generation capacity and managing the balance of the grid, engineers needed to repair equipment and “step by step” reconnect consumers who had been disconnected, he said.
The attacks damaged or destroyed more than half of the “key equipment” of the high voltage electricity transmission network, he added.
“The world will not produce the quantity enough to cover Ukrainian needs even within a year. We are now in discussion with all producers of such equipment,” he said.
Kharchenko appealed for generators to mitigate the impact of further strikes.
The head of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, has called on cities to donate generators and transformers to help Ukrainians get through the winter.
The US ambassador in Kyiv said on Friday that USAID had delivered 80 generators to Ukraine “to help keep the power on.”
Ambassador Bridget Brink tweeted “this support is just one part of the U.S. response to Russia’s cruel, sustained attack on critical infrastructure as we continue to #StandWithUkraine.”
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Putin says all Russian soldiers are "equal" despite concerns minorities were targeted for conscription
From CNN's Katharina Krebs
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that all soldiers fighting for Russia in Ukraine are “equal,” as activists and Ukrainian officials raise concerns that minorities were disproportionately targeted for conscription in the war.
“I know that the guys there do not divide themselves into any separate, that means castes, nationalities. Everyone is equal, everyone helps each other and understands that their lives depend on this mutual assistance and support,” Putin said Friday, during a meeting with the mothers of servicemen deployed to Ukraine.
Putin added that it is “innate for Russian soldiers to perform their duty with dignity, and even more so for soldiers from the Caucasus, from Dagestan, where people are of a special temperament.”
In September, Putin’s mobilization orders sparked protests in some ethnic minority regions of Russia. Several videos posted to social media, which CNN geolocated to the predominantly Muslim region of Dagestan, showed women in the capital Makhachkala pleading with police outside a theater.
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Pope writes letter to "bold and strong" Ukrainian people
From CNN's Sarah Dean and Delia Gallagher
Pope Francis leads his weekly general audience at St.Peter's square in the Vatican on November 23.
(Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images)
Pope Francis has written a letter to the Ukrainian people that was published on Friday by the Vatican.
“Not a day goes by that I am not close to you and hold you in my heart and prayers,” the Pope said in the letter, which was originally written in Italian.
Francis did not mention Russia, but asked: “How is it possible that men can treat other men this way?”
The Pope mentioned the suffering of young Ukrainian children killed and displaced people who have had to flee the war.
“In each one of them is the defeat of the whole of humanity,” he said.
The letter expressed sympathy for young people “who have had to take up weapons to courageously defend their country,” mothers who have lost husbands, the elderly and volunteers.
The 1932-1933 Holodomor, or Terror Famine, was artificially engineered by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, who removed food stocks from Ukrainian peasants, leading to the deaths of millions of people.
“The world has recognized a bold and strong people, a people who suffer and pray, weep and fight, resist and hope, a noble and martyred people,” the Pope added.
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Ex-German leader Merkel says she wanted Ukraine talks with Russia but lacked authority
From CNN's Nadine Schmidt
Angela Merkel, former Federal German Chancellor in her office on June 15, in Berlin, Germany.
(Thomas Trutschel/Photothek/Getty Images)
Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she wanted to set up a European format for talks involving French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian President Vladimir Putin in a bid to find a solution to tensions between Russia and Ukraine before she left office last year, but said she lacked authority.
The former chancellor had indicated for a long time she would leave office after the September 2021 national elections in Germany. Merkel officially left office in December 2021.
In August that year, she traveled to Moscow on her last official visit. Describing the meeting between herself and the Russian president, Merkel told Der Spiegel: “The feeling was entirely clear. ‘As far as power politics is concerned, you’re finished.’ For Putin, only power counts.”
Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, right, gestures to Angela Merkel, Germany's chancellor, left, while Emmanuel Macron, France's president, looks on as they depart a news conference following a 4-way summit on Ukraine at Elysee Palace in Paris, France, on December 9, 2019.
(Christophe Morin/Bloomberg/Getty Images)
Merkel initiated the Normandy Format, which was set up in 2014 between Germany, France, Russia and Ukraine following the Russian annexation of Crimea and its incursion into eastern Ukraine in February 2014.
“After Russia’s annexation of Crimea, we tried everything to prevent further incursions by Russia into Ukraine and coordinated our sanctions in detail,” Merkel said.
Since Merkel left office, she and her old government have come under fire for allowing the country to become too dependent on Russian oil and gas.
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Russian Justice Ministry adds Meta to "extremist list"
From CNN’s Anna Chernova
The Russian Ministry of Justice has added Meta — the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp — to its registry of “extremist” organizations, according to the ministry’s website.
The list now includes over 100 companies and organizations, including “American multinational holding company Meta Platforms Inc. selling the following products: social networks Facebook and Instagram,” according to the website.
The Russian communications regulator Roskomnadzor blocked access to Facebook and Instagram in March after the Tverskoy District Court of Moscow found Meta guilty of “extremist activity.” The court’s decision did not include Meta’s WhatsApp messenger.
In response, Meta president of global affairs Nick Clegg said at the time the company was doing “everything we can to restore our services” but that “millions of ordinary Russians” will soon “find themselves cut off from reliable information.”
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Patients evacuated from Kherson’s hospitals due to Russian shelling, regional governor says
From CNN’s Jo Shelley
The governor of Kherson said patients being treated in hospitals in the regional capital are being evacuated “due to constant Russian shelling.”
Children being treated at the Kherson Regional Clinical Hospital have been sent west to Mykolaiv and patients at the Kherson Regional Psychiatric Hospital have been sent to Odesa, regional governor Yaroslav Yanushevych said on Telegram.
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"Nothing can replace the loss of a son," Putin tells Russian soldiers' mothers
From CNN’s Anna Chernova
Russian President Vladimir Putin met with the mothers of Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine Friday, marking national Mother’s Day.
Speaking to the women in Novo-Ogaryovo, at his official residence on the outskirts of Moscow, Putin said he shared the pain of loss with those who had lost a child and urged them against trusting so-called “fake news” and “lies.”
“Life is more complicated and diverse than what is shown on TV screens or on the Internet. You can’t trust anything there at all. There are a lot of fake [news], deceit, lies. There are a lot of information attacks,” he claimed.
Putin went on to say that he had personally spoken over the phone to some of servicemen, calling those on the frontline “heroes.”
“This gives me every reason to say that they are heroes,” Putin added.
The Council of Mothers and Wives [of Russian soldiers], one of the most well-known groups advocating for soldiers, said in a Telegram post Friday that they had not been invited to the meeting.
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Satellite photos show lack of electricity in Ukraine
A greyscale satellite image indicating the night radiance of Europe from space on November 23.
(NASA Worldview/Reuters)
These satellite images illustrate just how much Russia’s war has affected infrastructure in Ukraine.
Above, while surrounding parts of Europe and Russia are illuminated in light, much of Ukraine is dark.
And below, a composite image from NASA shows Ukraine’s network lit up before Russia invaded, and how much it has changed until this month.
Satellite photos show the difference in illumination from Ukraine from January, on the left, to November, on the right.
The UN also estimates that more than 7.2 million Ukrainian refugees have been recorded across Europe, while more than 6.9 million have been internally displaced.
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NATO chief expresses confidence Finland and Sweden’s accessions will be ratified
From CNN's Andrew Millman
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg addresses a press conference ahead of a foreign ministers' meeting at the NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on November 25.
(Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images)
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told CNN that he’s “confident” that both Hungary and Turkey will ratify the accession of Finland and Sweden to the alliance, following Hungary’s announcement that it would support membership for both countries next year.
“I can’t tell you exactly when,” he said, but added on “CNN This Morning” that it was “one of fastest ever accession processes in history.”
He commended the United States in particular “for providing unprecedented support to Ukraine.”
Stoltenberg told CNN that supporting Ukraine was important, “because our own security interest is to ensure that President Putin does not win in Ukraine.”
When asked about comments from Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley that there may be a window for negotiations to end the war, Stoltenberg replied, “what happens around the negotiating table is dependent on what happens on the battlefield.”
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Hundreds of power points set up for Kyiv residents without electricity at home
From CNN’s Jo Shelley
Local residents charge their devices, use internet connection and warm up inside Centre of Invincibility in Kyiv, Ukraine, on November 24.
(Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto/Getty Images)
Schools in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv have opened their doors to residents who don’t have power at home.
Mayor Vitalii Klitschko said the city had set up hundreds of power supply points in educational and other facilities, where people can get warm, drink tea and recharge telephones and flashlights.
“Kyiv has launched more than 400 heating points. These points will work every day,” Klitschko said in a post on Telegram. “The majority of them are located in schools and other social facilities. In case there is no electricity supply in your house for more than a day, you will be able to come to the heating point to recharge gadgets or flashlights, drink tea and find out information about the nearest water pumps, shops and pharmacies.”
Here’s why: Half of the city’s households were still without power on Friday morning after a large-scale Russian missile assault two days earlier hit power generation facilities across the country.