UN calls on Russia to stop attacks on Ukraine energy sites

The United Nations has called on Russia to stop its attacks on Ukraine’s energy sites, which have plunged entire cities into darkness in the coldest winter of the four-year war.

Moscow has stepped up strikes on Ukraine’s power and heating infrastructure, and conducted another nationwide attack on energy facilities overnight that killed two people, AFP reported.

UN rights chief Volker Turk said in a statement:

The relentless attacks by the Russian Federation on energy infrastructure across Ukraine are depriving an already long-suffering civilian population of adequate warmth, water and electricity in an unbearably bitter and dark winter.

UN high commissioner for human rights, Volker Turk, speaks during a press conference, on June 26, 2025.
UN high commissioner for human rights, Volker Turk, speaks during a press conference, on June 26, 2025. Photograph: AP

He said civilians had faced continual bombardment and now had to face temperatures as low as minus 20C. Turk added:

Last night, the Russian Federation again carried out a large-scale attack targeting energy infrastructure across Ukraine. Hundreds of thousands of civilians woke up without electricity and heating.

The targeting of civilian infrastructure is prohibited under international humanitarian law. I call upon the Russian Federation to immediately cease these attacks.

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Key events

Time for US and Europe to march out together, says Colby

Dan Sabbagh

Dan Sabbagh

Meanwhile, at Nato HQ, Elbridge Colby, the US undersecretary for war, said it was time for the US and Europe to “march out together,” sounding a rare conciliatory note as he arrived in Brussels for a meeting of alliance defence ministers earlier today.

The hawkish Colby is representing the US instead of defence secretary Pete Hegseth, but his high status as arguably the leading military adviser to Donald Trump means his presence instead of his immediate boss is not being taken as a significant snub.

After a turbulent start to 2026 in which the US president repeatedly demanded to acquire Greenland from Nato ally Denmark – and at one point even refusing to rule out force – Colby’s initial remarks appeared to soothe tensions.

Elbridge Colby, the US undersecretary for war, speaks at the start of a meeting of Nato defence ministers in Brussels, Belgium. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images

Colby said that in 2025 “you saw a reframing and a real, genuine commitment, because of the president’s leadership and the sec gen’s [secretary general’s] leadership, to actually have a Europe that leads the conventional defence of Nato”.

He was referring to the agreement at the Nato summit in The Hague last summer, where European members of Nato agreed to match US levels of defence spending at 3.5% of GDP.

“I think this year we actually have a good message to say, which is, now it’s time to march out together,” he said. The future of Nato would be “based on a partnership rather than dependency” by Europe on the US, he added.

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