Crimean authorities suspend civilian gasoline sales following Ukrainian attacks on fuel infrastructure.
Russian-appointed officials in Crimea halted civilian gasoline sales after Ukrainian strikes on fuel supplies killed at least five people and wounded dozens. The attacks targeted a Crimean oil depot and an oil terminal in Russia's Krasnodar region, triggering the worst fuel crisis in the peninsula since Russia's 2014 annexation.
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Divergence score
3 outlets covered it, splitting into 1 framing camp across 3 bias groups.
1 camp
3 bias groups
The spectrum · how 3 outlets placed this story
LeftCenterRight
NPR
Globe and Mail
Washington Times
Supportive of action
Neutral
Dismissive
Critical
Alarmist
International angle
The split, in one line
All three outlets ran nearly identical copy on the fuel suspension and Ukrainian strikes, with only minor formatting differences and unit conversions between metric and imperial measurements.
How each outlet covered it
Lightly covered so far
Too few outlets to map a left-right split. Here is each take as it stands.
Sparse coverage · 3 outlets
“Russian-held Crimea halts civilian gasoline sales as Ukraine attacks fuel supplies”
“Ukrainian attacks prompt Russian-held Crimea to halt civilian gasoline sales”
“Ukrainian attacks prompt Russian-held Crimea to halt civilian gasoline sales”
Tracked claims from across the political spectrum
Fact ledger
Corroborated
Disputed