Skip to main contentSkip to navigation Close dialogue1/5 Next image Previous image Toggle captionSkip to navigation The arson attack on Saturday cut the electricity to south-west Berlin for more than three days. Photograph: Lisi Niesner/Reuters View image in fullscreen The arson attack on Saturday cut the electricity to south-west Berlin for more than three days. Photograph: Lisi Niesner/Reuters ‘How is it possible?’: Berliners demand answers after sabotage causes blackoutArson attack that left parts of German capital in darkness for days stirs outrage over infrastructure insecurity
Europe live – latest updates When Silke Peters bought a crank radio and a camping stove just after the start of Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine, her husband thought she was “a little crazy”. “He put me down, only half-jokingly, as a prepper,” she said, referring to the kind of person who stockpiles in case of catastrophe. For almost four years, the items gathered dust in the cellar of the Peters’ two-room flat in Zehlendorf, a well-to-do district of Berlin. But in recent days the windup radio – with its inbuilt torch and charge point – has come into its own during Germany’s longest power cut since the second world war.
Published: January 7, 2026 4:27 pm
Source: The Guardian — Read original