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Doctors wearing headlamps have carried out heart surgery on a child in a Kyiv hospital after a Russian missile attack on Ukrainian infrastructure knocked out power to the facility.
Power outages across the country are so severe they are visible in NASA images from space.
According to Borys Todurov, a cardiac surgeon at Kyiv Children's Heart Hospital, the surgery on a child was underway as the electricity went off.
"The electricity is gone. The surgeons operate with their headlamps on," said Dr Todurov as he filmed doctors working.
"Try to complete it as fast as possible. We will start the generator now."
Illia Yemets, another surgeon at the hospital, later said the baby survived.
"I explained to parents that we have a choice: not to do anything and the baby will die, or to give it a chance," Dr Yemets said, describing the conditions as "the worst I have seen in my surgical life".
Russian missiles rained down on Ukraine on Wednesday, knocking out electricity in the Kyiv region, home to three million people, and elsewhere across the country.
At least 10 people were killed during attacks that targeted energy facilities as Moscow pushed its campaign to plunge Ukrainian cities into darkness and cold with winter setting in.
Since October, Russia has openly acknowledged targeting Ukraine's civil power and heating systems with long-range missiles and drones.
Moscow says the aim is to reduce Kyiv's ability to fight and push it to negotiate. Ukraine says the strikes on infrastructure are war crimes.
Night-time satellite images released by NASA show the majority of Ukraine in darkness in November compared to neighbouring countries in Europe.
The images, captured over the month, show the Earth's surface in the region in dark conditions.
City lights can be seen in detail on a daily basis in the images, which were grey-scaled by NASA.
NASA used its Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the joint NASA/NOAA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite, combined with a specialised imaging layer to reveal the extent of Ukraine's blackout.
Officials across the border in Moldova said electricity was also lost to more than half of their country, the first time a neighbouring state has reported such extensive damage from the war in Ukraine, triggered by Russia's invasion nine months ago.
Reuters
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