Kyiv's metro system is back in service, and all residents had been reconnected to water supply a day after the latest wave of Russian air strikes on critical infrastructure, the mayor of Ukraine's capital said early Saturday.
Ukrainian officials said Russia fired more than 70 missiles on Friday in one of its most significant attacks since the Kremlin's February 24 invasion, forcing emergency blackouts nationwide.
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko also said heating had been restored to half the city, and electricity had been returned to two-thirds.
"But schedules of emergency outages are being implemented," he wrote on the Telegram messaging app. "Because the deficit of electricity is significant."
Klitschko had warned of an "apocalypse" scenario for the Ukrainian capital earlier this month if Russian air strikes on infrastructure continued but also said there was no need yet for people to evacuate.
"We are fighting and doing everything we can to make sure that this does not happen," he told Reuters on December 7.
The Pentagon said on Wednesday that US strikes 10 days ago had degraded Iran's nuclear programme by up to two years, suggesting the US military operation likely achieved its goals despite a far more cautious initial assessment that leaked to the public.
Five people were injured, including a seven-year-old boy and a nine-year-old girl, in a Russian attack on the southern Ukraine port of Odesa overnight, Ukrainian authorities said on Thursday.
Four people died, 38 were missing and 23 survived after a ferry carrying 65 people sank near the Indonesian island of Bali, the country's Search and Rescue agency said on Thursday.