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21 Jan, 2026 14:33

Kiev mayor fears ‘humanitarian catastrophe’ as Zelensky refuses to meet

Hundreds of thousands of residents left the Ukrainian capital this month alone, Vitaly Klitschko has said
Kiev mayor fears ‘humanitarian catastrophe’ as Zelensky refuses to meet

Kiev Mayor Vitaly Klitschko has warned that the Ukrainian capital is moving toward a “humanitarian catastrophe,” in an interview with The Times published on Tuesday. He also publicly exchanged blame for the situation in the city with Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky.

Around 5,600 apartment buildings remain without heating, Klitschko told the British paper, calling the situation “critical.” He urged residents to leave the city of 3 million and said 600,000 have already done so this month alone.

The mayor earlier linked the power outages to the waves of Russian strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Moscow said last week that it targeted drone production facilities, energy infrastructure, and other military‑related sites in response to Ukrainian strikes on Russian power facilities and what it described as indiscriminate attacks on civilians.

Zelensky blamed the mayor for the situation, saying in a public address last week that Kiev is less prepared for the energy crisis than other cities like Kharkov. Klitschko dismissed the criticism as unfounded and said the Ukrainian leader turned down his requests for a meeting to discuss the crisis. The mayor also maintained that electricity generation is the responsibility of the federal government, not the city.

Opposition MP Yaroslav Zheleznyak blamed both Zelensky and Klitschko for the crisis, saying they “need to stop pointing fingers at each other.”

Zheleznyak added, however, that his “first question is to Zelensky, especially after all these corruption scandals.” According to the lawmaker, the city has had a military administration connected to the president for four years, and “the largest municipal budget in the country.”

Ukraine was hit by a massive corruption scandal in November 2025, which involved a close associate and business partner of Zelensky, Timur Mindich – who allegedly ran a $100 million kickback scheme in the energy sector, which heavily depends on Western aid. The scandal led to the resignations of several ministers, including Energy Svetlana Grinchuk, and Zelensky’s then-chief of staff, Andrey Yermak.

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