ConflictsUkraine strikes back: Russian-controlled Boika platforms ablaze

Ukraine strikes back: Russian-controlled Boika platforms ablaze

All Ukrainian drilling platforms controlled by Russia in the Black Sea have caught fire, (illustrative photo)
All Ukrainian drilling platforms controlled by Russia in the Black Sea have caught fire, (illustrative photo)
Images source: © getyy | Vincent Mundy
Malwina Gadawa

5:09 PM EDT, August 26, 2024

All Ukrainian drilling platforms controlled by Russia, known as Boika platforms, caught fire in the Black Sea, as reported on Monday by the Krymskij Wietier channel on Telegram, citing satellite image data.

"All three drilling platforms east of Snake Island have been attacked. Since August 24, the middle platform has been burning, and from platform number 3, a column of smoke is emerging," the statement said.

Ukrainian platforms caught fire in the Black Sea

These drilling platforms, built in 2010 and 2012 off the coast of Crimea in the Black Sea and known in Ukraine as Boika platforms, were seized by Russia in March 2014. Previously, the purchase of floating gas extraction platforms sparked public outrage in Ukraine due to possible legal violations and embezzlement of public funds in particularly large amounts by former energy minister and pro-Russian politician Yuriy Boiko.

In previous months, Ukrainian forces had already carried out attacks on these installations. Russian soldiers were hiding surveillance equipment in the Black Sea, used for monitoring the movements of the Ukrainian army.

Authorities in Kyiv regained control of the drilling platforms Petro Hodovanets and Ukraine, as well as Tauryda and Syvash, in September 2023. During these operations, special forces managed to seize ammunition supplies carried by helicopters and a Neva radar, which can track the movement of ships in the Black Sea.

Representative of Ukrainian military intelligence (HUR) Andriy Yusov explained that after Ukraine regained the platforms, the Russian armed forces lost the capability to conduct surveillance in the air, on water, and on land. In contrast, Ukrainian forces increased their ability to conduct further successful operations in the Black Sea and Crimea.

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