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16 June 2023

Eco-crisis unleashed. Consequences of Kakhovka Dam destruction trigger international investigation

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June 2023, Ukraine. A child against the backdrop of a city flooded after the Khakhovka Dam collapse.

Picture from: Volodymyr Zelenski | Twitter

On June 6, 2023, the Kakhovka Dam, the largest object of this type in Ukraine, was blown up. The explosion caused a massive catastrophe for the region’s residents and the environment, prompting an investigation from the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Currently located on Russian-occupied territory in southern Ukraine, in the city of Nova Kakhovka in the Kherson region, the dam on the Dnipro River was a major hydroelectric power provider and secured water needed for the cooling systems of nearby Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station. The destruction of the dam resulted in large swathes of land below to be flooded.

Ukrainian Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko posted on Facebook that “2,718 people were evacuated, including 190 children, and that five people had died due to the accident and 35 are currently considered missing, among whom seven are children”.

Later, the Ukrainian authorities informed that 40,000 people needed to be evacuated.

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  • June 2023, Ukraine. 40,000 people had to be evacuated following the collapse of the dam in Nova Khakhovka, according to the Ukrainian authorities.

    Picture from: Volodymyr Zelenski | Twitter

  • Zelensky strongly denounced the assault on the Kakhovka dam. In a recent national address, he referred to the attack as an “environmental bomb of mass destruction” and on June 11 announced that the ICC in Hague launched an investigation into the breach of the dam, as it can be considered a war crime.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin denied Russia’s responsibility for the explosion and labelled the destruction of a strategic object as “barbaric.” 

    The responsibility for the destruction of the Kakhovka dam remains officially unattributed, as there are no independent experts present there, but available data indicate that Russia destroyed the object to impede the Ukrainian counteroffensive.

    The attack raised concerns about the safety of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station but the damage to Ukraine’s environment didn’t stop there. On Monday June 12, a smaller dam located in the Donetsk region was blasted. Again, Ukraine accused Russian forces of purposefully demolishing it in order to hinder Kyiv’s counteroffensive, claiming that these efforts were unsuccessful. 

    According to experts, the occurrence of such events has the potential to trigger grave ramifications for the environment extending beyond regional boundaries.

    Written by:

    author_bio

    ​​Sofia Vorobei

    Culture Section Editor 2026

    Vergel, Spain

    I’m Sofia Vorobei, with a passion for quality cinema. It all started when I was around eight. While watching one of those Nickelodeon sitcoms, I couldn’t stop thinking about how fun it must be for the actors and how I wished I could be part of something like that. Ever since then, I’ve wanted my life to have something to do with it. I’ve wanted to act, create, write, direct…

    In middle school, however, my perception of that changed. I wasn’t eight anymore, and I understood that this path is an uphill battle. It’s demanding, messy, and a bit like a lottery: you either get very lucky and win, or you don’t.

    Still, that realisation didn’t push me away from my dream; it was simply a reality check. I began to understand that passion alone isn’t enough — it takes hard work and making the most of every resource available, while continuing to improve without rushing the process. The industry may be unpredictable, but I believe that if you truly put everything into something, it has a way of standing out.

    I was born in 2009 in Kyiv, Ukraine, and moved to Vergel, Spain, near Valencia, in 2020.

    I joined Harbingers’ Magazine in the summer of 2023 and have since written about the intersections of culture, creativity and society. My work with the magazine led to my appointment as Culture Section Editor in March 2025. 

    I also serve as Afghanistan Newsroom Editor, roles I continue to hold in 2026, helping shape the magazine’s cultural coverage and coordinate reporting within the newsroom.

    I speak Ukrainian, Spanish, English and Russian.

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