EU’s Kaja Kallas warns of a humanitarian catastrophe in Ukraine as Russian strikes on power grids leave civilians in darkness and cold this winter.
BRUSSELS: EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas (pic) warned that Ukraine was facing a “humanitarian catastrophe” as Russian strikes cut power in frigid winter conditions.
Kallas said that despite US-led talks to end the war, Russia was “bombing Ukrainians, trying to bomb and freeze them to surrender”.
“It’s a very hard winter and Ukrainians are really suffering. There is a humanitarian catastrophe coming there,” she said at the start of an EU meeting.
Russia has stepped up its strikes against Ukraine’s power and heating infrastructure, plunging residents into darkness and cold as temperatures have dropped as low as -20C.
The EU is looking to step up support for Ukraine’s power grid and is preparing a new round of sanctions on Moscow for the fourth anniversary of its invasion next month.
Sweden’s foreign minister Maria Stenergard called for “a full services maritime ban on all Russian vessels that transport energy” to further curb Moscow’s revenues.
She also urged a ban on fertiliser imports from Russia and a prohibition on exporting luxury goods from the EU to the country.
“We need to put more pressure on Russia. That is the only way to stop the killing,” she said.
The EU has already imposed 19 rounds of sanctions on Russia since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Kallas said the EU would also add Russia to the bloc’s money-laundering blacklist.
In a separate initiative, Estonia’s foreign minister called for EU countries to impose a coordinated Schengen visa ban on Russians who have fought in Ukraine.
“They are really bad people, and we need to put together the blacklist of these people,” said minister Margus Tsahkna.
Estonia has already taken the first step itself by blacklisting hundreds of fighters from specific Russian military units.








