Russian shelling on the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson killed 15 civilians Friday, officials said, as engineers across the country sought to restore heat, water and power to major cities.
Throughout the country, Russian air strikes over recent weeks have brought Ukraine's energy infrastructure to its knees as winter approaches and temperatures approach freezing, spurring fears of a health crisis and a further exodus.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said that more six million households in the country were still affected by power cuts, two days after targeted Russian strikes on Ukraine's energy infrastructure.
The deadliest Russian bombardment in recent days hit Kherson, a key city in the east recently recaptured by Ukrainian forces.
A total of "15 residents were killed and 35 injured, including one child, as a result of enemy shelling", city official Galyna Lugova said. Several "private houses and high-rise buildings" had been damaged, she added.
"The Russian invaders opened fire on a residential area with multiple rocket launchers. A large building caught fire," said Yarovslav Yanushovich, head of the Kherson military administration.
Earlier Friday, the governor of Kherson region said hospital patients in the city and patients at a psychiatric unit had been evacuated because of "constant Russian shelling".
Kherson city council said it was offering to evacuate civilians to other regions.
The attacks on power stations and other infrastructure resources throughout Ukraine are Russia's latest attempt to force Ukrainian capitulation after Moscow's forces failed to topple the government and capture Kyiv.
- Critical infrastructure -
Meanwhile, for the first time since he launched the war in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin met the mothers of soldiers fighting in Ukraine, assuring those whose children had been killed that he and Russia's elite "share this pain".
In Kyiv, where around half of residents were still without power two days after Russian strikes hammered the country's energy grid, engineers worked to restore services.
"We have to endure this winter, a winter that everyone will remember," Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said on social media, as UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly visited to announce a new aid package.
Prime Minister Denys Shmygal told a government meeting, "Almost all Ukraine's critical infrastructure has been reconnected."
Critical infrastructure includes water utilities, heat generation plants, hospitals and emergency services.
But Shmygal said ordinary consumers continued to face scheduled power cuts across every region of the country.
Ukraine's Western allies have denounced the Russian attacks on energy infrastructure as a "war crime". They come in the wake of a string of military setbacks for Russia on the frontlines.
Moscow insists it targets only military linked infrastructure and has blamed Kyiv for the blackouts. It says Ukraine can end the suffering by agreeing to Russian demands.
- Putin meets mothers -
Putin meanwhile met the mothers and wives of soldiers fighting in Ukraine.
"I want you to know I, personally, and the entire leadership of the country share this pain," he told them.
He said a lot of news reports about the conflict could not be trusted, describing them as "fake news, deceit and lies".
Russia has introduced legislation that effectively bans public criticism of the war.
Kremlin critics accuse authorities of concealing the real number of dead and wounded Russian troops.
Anger and concern have built across Russia since the Kremlin announced in September that hundreds of thousands of well-trained and well-equipped men would be conscripted and sent to the battlefield to bolster Moscow's struggling campaign.
But chaos ensued, with widespread reports of exempted men -- the elderly or infirm -- being dispatched to the front or conscripts dying after receiving nearly no training, forcing the Kremlin to concede "mistakes".
Putin's meeting with the soldiers' mothers is a sign the Kremlin takes the growing malaise seriously.
Visiting Kyiv on Friday, Britain's foreign minister announced new aid for Ukraine, including ambulances and support for victims of sexual violence by Russian soldiers.
"Russia is continuing to try and break Ukrainian resolve through its brutal attacks on civilians, hospitals and energy infrastructure," Cleverly said.
"Russia will fail," he said, vowing UK support "will continue for as long as it takes".
Meanwhile the head of Russian mercenary outfit Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin, said on Friday that a former US Marine general and several British and Finnish fighters were operating with the group in Ukraine.
"(Finns) are fighting in a British battalion (as part of Wagner PMC), which is commanded by a US citizen, a former general of the Marine Corps," Prigozhin's press service said he told Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)