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Two years after explosions destroyed the Russian-occupied Kakhovka dam, the death toll from the catastrophic flood remains ...
Spontaneous willow woods and intense biodiversity have flourished in the wake of the Kakhovka Dam breach, caused by an ...
Russian troops blew up the dam of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power station in Kherson region. This caused one of the largest ...
which Russian forces had occupied for months, a week and a half ago, threatening the vital cooling water supply to the sprawling nuclear plant. The explosion at the dam sent water gushing out of ...
In recent months it had endured bombardment at the hands of Ukrainian forces and at least one explosion, believed to be caused by retreating Russian troops who blew up a road over the dam.
In the hours after the explosion, floodwaters quickly began ... of the occupied city of Nova Kakhovka adjacent to the dam, reported that Russian forces had also blown up the machine hall of ...
A defiant President Volodymyr Zelenskyy held an emergency meeting of his National Security Council on Tuesday and blamed "Russian terrorists" for the dam explosion. In an address to the nation ...
Source: press service of Ukraine's Defence Intelligence Quote: "The joint efforts of Ukraine's intelligence community have provided information that a Russian ... The dam explosion should 'wash ...
The dam has been under Russian control for months ... at 2:54 a.m. NORSAR said the data indicates the second event was an explosion equivalent to between 1 and 2 on the seismic chart for measuring ...
But the evidence clearly suggests the dam was crippled by an explosion set off by the side ... and retreating Russian troops later blew up another. Last month, satellite images showed water ...
Engineering and munitions experts have said a deliberate explosion inside ... soldiers and was evidence that Russian forces orchestrated the destruction of the dam. One of the speakers on the ...
Jon Jackson is a News Editor at Newsweek based in New York. His focus is on reporting on the Ukraine and Russia war. Jon previously worked at The Week, the River Journal, Den of Geek and Maxim.