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AmextaFinance > News > Russia pounds Ukraine with missile and drone barrage
News

Russia pounds Ukraine with missile and drone barrage

News Room
Last updated: 2023/05/29 at 8:28 AM
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Kyiv was hit by another barrage of missile attacks hours after Russia conducted a second day of overnight strikes on the capital and other targets including an air base in western Ukraine.

“Only six hours after the night attack, the aggressor country again launched a missile attack on Kyiv,” said Serhiy Popko, head of Kyiv’s military administration, on Monday.

Popko said the strikes were intended to “exhaust the resources of our air defence” as Kyiv prepared to launch a counter-offensive to retake occupied eastern and southern regions, which account for 18 per cent of Ukraine’s territory. The attacks came as a Russian official said artillery strikes had hit several targets in a region bordering north-east Ukraine.

“The attack on Kyiv continues. Don’t leave the shelters!” Kyiv’s mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said on social media. Rescue workers and fire department services were at multiple scenes where rocket fragments had landed, including a road in Kyiv’s northern Obolon district, he added. Surface-to-air defence missiles were spotted intercepting incoming aerial projectiles over downtown Kyiv.

The extent of damage and number of casualties from the latest barrages were not immediately clear. But Ukraine’s air force, increasingly equipped with Nato-grade air defence systems provided by western backers, said that it had downed 37 of 40 Russian missiles fired overnight across the country and 29 of 35 Iran-supplied “kamikaze” drones.

Rescue workers in Kyiv hose down parts of a downed missile © Kyiv City Military Administration/Handout/Reuters

“We are waiting for another reinforcement from our partners of new air defence systems,” said Mykola Oleshchuk, commander of Ukraine’s air force.

General Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, commander of Ukraine’s armed forces, said Russia fired 11 missiles on Monday afternoon but “all targets were destroyed by Ukraine’s air defence forces”. Earlier, officials in Khmelnytsky region west of Kyiv said one strike hit an airbase, damaging five aircraft and a runway.

The attacks come a day after Ukraine’s air force said it had intercepted 58 of 59 drones fired in the early hours of Sunday, including 40 targeting the capital as Kyiv’s citizens prepared to celebrate the city’s founding.

Russia’s defence ministry has in recent days said its forces had struck multiple military targets, but did not mention the strikes on Kyiv and other regions far from the front lines. Such attacks have been a feature of Russia’s air campaign since the autumn.

Ukraine, meanwhile, has carried out a number of cross-border attacks in recent weeks targeting Russian infrastructure and raising tensions about spillover effects from the invasion launched by President Vladimir Putin 15 months ago.

Viacheslav Gladkov, governor of Belgorod, on Monday said Ukrainian artillery strikes knocked out the power supply, damaged two industrial sites and wounded four people.

The Belgorod region, about 50km from Ukraine’s second-biggest city Kharkiv, has become a focal point for worries about Kyiv’s capacity to strike inside Russian territory. Ukraine does not admit to conducting such strikes but has celebrated them.

Gladkov, who voiced rare criticism of Russia’s defence ministry last week after two Ukraine-backed groups of far-right Russian partisans raided the region, said the border had been insecure for some time.

“We are living in a de facto state of war . . . It’s happening. The enemy is intruding,” Gladkov said, claiming that at least five Ukraine-backed militias had conducted similar raids before last week.

Gladkov said the best way to stop the shelling was for Russia to annex Kharkiv region — an unlikely prospect after Ukraine routed Russia’s army from the area in September.

Oleg Synegubov, governor of Kharkiv region, said on social media that Russian forces had on Monday struck a village called Kivsharivka with Iskander missiles, injuring five people.

Additional reporting by Christopher Miller in Kyiv

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News Room May 29, 2023 May 29, 2023
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