This article needs to be updated.(April 2024) |
Kherson Oblast
Херсонская область | |
---|---|
Occupied country | Ukraine |
Occupying power | Russia |
Russian-installed occupation regime | Kherson military-civilian administration[a] (28 April[1] – 30 September 2022) |
Disputed oblast of Russia | Kherson Oblast[c] (2022–present) |
Battle of Kherson | 2 March 2022 |
Annexation by Russia | 30 September 2022 |
Kherson counteroffensive (Liberation of Kherson) | 10–11 November 2022 |
Administrative centre[d] | Kherson (2 March 2022 – 9 November 2022; de jure since 9 November 2022) Henichesk (de facto, 9 November – present) |
Largest settlement | Kherson (until 11 November 2022) Nova Kakhovka (since 11 November 2022) |
Government | |
• Governor | Vladimir Saldo (United Russia)[2] |
• Prime Minister | Andrey Alekseyenko (United Russia) |
Website | khogov |
The ongoing military occupation of Ukraine's Kherson Oblast (Russian: Херсонская область, romanized: Khersonskaya oblast) by Russian forces began on 2 March 2022 during the Russian invasion of Ukraine as part of the southern Ukraine campaign. It was administrated under a Russian-controlled military-civilian administration until 30 September 2022, when it was illegally annexed to become an unrecognized federal subject of Russia.
Russia captured the city of Kherson on 2 March 2022. Kherson was the first major Ukrainian city to fall during the invasion, and the only regional capital that Russia managed to capture in the 2022 invasion, though the cities of Donetsk and Luhansk had been controlled by Russian-backed separatists since 2014. Most of the rest of Kherson Oblast fell to Russian forces in the early months of the invasion.[3]
Russia laid the groundwork for annexation in the following months by introducing the Russian ruble as official currency and forcibly removing the hryvnia from circulation.[4] After holding staged referendums in September 2022,[5] Russia declared that it had annexed Kherson Oblast on 30 September, including parts of the oblast that it did not control at the time and small occupied areas of neighboring Mykolaiv Oblast.[e][6][7] The United Nations condemned the annexations as violating international law.
In October 2022, as Ukraine's 2022 Kherson counteroffensive approached the city of Kherson itself, the Russian administration's executive bodies evacuated from Kherson to the left bank of the Dnieper River.[8] They set up a new administrative centre in Henichesk, in the far south of the Kherson region.[9] Throughout early November 2022, Russian forces fully withdrew from all the areas of Kherson and Mykolaiv regions on the right bank of the Dnieper, including the city of Kherson proper.[10][11] Ukrainian forces entered the city of Kherson on 11 November. According to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, the Kherson region remained a "subject of the Russian Federation" despite the withdrawal.
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