24 November 2022
People wait in line to collect water, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2022. Residents of Ukraine's bombed but undaunted capital clutched empty bottles in search of water and crowded into cafés for power and warmth Thursday, switching defiantly into survival mode after new Russian missile strikes a day earlier plunged the city and much of the country into the dark in winter.
— Photo by Evgeniy Maloletka / AP Photo
People collect water, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2022.
— Photo by Evgeniy Maloletka / AP Photo
Kateryna Luchkina, a 31-year-old worker at Kyiv’s Department of Health, collects rainwater from a drainpipe in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. Nov. 24, 2022.
— Photo by John Leicester / AP Photo
People collect water, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2022.
— Photo by Evgeniy Maloletka / AP Photo
Local residents stand in line to fill up bottles with fresh drinking water after critical civil infrastructure was hit by Russian missile attacks in Kyiv, Ukraine November 24, 2022.
— Photo by Valentyn Ogirenko / Reuters
This photo shows a city center during a blackout after a Russian rocket attack in Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2022. Russia unleashed a new missile onslaught on Ukraine's battered energy grid Wednesday, robbing cities of power and some of water and public transport, too, compounding the hardship of winter for millions. The aerial mauling of power supplies also took nuclear plants and internet links offline and spilled blackouts into neighbor Moldova.
— Photo by Andrew Kravchenko / AP Photo
Ukrainian doctors perform surgery by torchlight in Kyiv on November 24.
— Photo by Borys Todurov / Instagram