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4 people killed, multiple others injured in Russia and Ukraine as they trade aerial attacks
4 people killed, multiple others injured in Russia and Ukraine as they trade aerial attacks

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

4 people killed, multiple others injured in Russia and Ukraine as they trade aerial attacks

Russia and Ukraine traded aerial attacks overnight, resulting in two deaths in each country and many people wounded on both sides, according to officials. On the battlefield, the Russian military said Saturday that it seized the village of Zelenyi Hai in the eastern Donetsk region that Moscow illegally annexed but only partially controls, and the village of Maliivka in the Dnipro region. There was no immediate comment on the claim from Ukrainian officials. Ukraine's southern Dnipro and northeastern Sumy regions came under combined rocket and drone attack, local officials reported. Head of the Dnipro regional administration Serhii Lysak said at least two people had died and five were wounded in the barrage. In the city of Dnipro, a multi-story building and business were damaged during the strike and outside of the city a fire engulfed a shopping center. In Sumy, the military administration said three people were injured. On Saturday, Russian drones hit a central square in the city of Sumy, and damaged the building of the regional administration. Kharkiv sustained an intense aerial bombardment overnight. Ukraine's State Emergency Situations Service said six people were hurt in Kharkiv, including four rescuers who were wounded in a double tap strike — where a second attack targets emergency workers trying to help people wounded in the initial attack. According to the daily air force report, in total Russia targeted Ukraine with 208 drones and 27 missiles overnight. It said according to preliminary data, air defense and electronic warfare took down or intercepted 183 drones and 17 missiles but hits from 10 missiles and 25 drones had been recorded in nine locations. Russia's Defense Ministry on Saturday claimed that it successfully struck military facilities in Ukraine that 'manufacture components for missile weapons, as well as produce ammunition and explosives.' The claim could not be independently verified. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in an online statement that 'there can be absolutely no silence in response to such strikes, and Ukrainian long-range drones ensure this.' 'Russian military enterprises, Russian logistics, Russian airports must feel that the Russian war has real consequences for them,' Zelenskyy wrote. In Russia, officials said that Ukrainian drones targeted multiple regions overnight. A drone attack on the Rostov region, on the border with Ukraine, killed two people, acting governor Yuri Slyusar reported. In the neighboring Stavropol region, drones hit an unspecified industrial facility, governor Vladimir Vladimirov said on Telegram. He added that the attack sparked a brief fire, but didn't specify where exactly. Vladimirov said cellphone internet in the region was restricted because of the attack — a measure authorities regularly take across the vast country that critics say helps widespread online censorship. An unconfirmed media report said videos posted online by local residents showed that the drones hit the Signal radio plant that makes jamming equipment. The Associated Press was unable to verify the claim. Drones also targeted Moscow, but were shot down, according to Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, and an unspecified industrial facility in the Penza region southeast of the capital, Gov. Oleg Melnichenko said. Russia's Defense Ministry said that its air defenses shot down or intercepted a total of 54 Ukrainian drones, including 24 over the Bryansk region on the border with Ukraine, 12 over the Rostov region, six over the annexed Crimean Peninsula, four over the Azov sea, three over the Black Sea and a few others over the Orlov, Tula and Belgorod regions. In Russia's Ingushetia region in the North Caucasus, a woman and three children were injured after a drone fell on a private house, regional health officials said. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine at

Five killed as Ukraine and Russia trade drone attacks
Five killed as Ukraine and Russia trade drone attacks

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Five killed as Ukraine and Russia trade drone attacks

Five people have been killed in overnight strikes in Russia and Ukraine, as the two sides continue to trade drone officials said on Saturday that more than 200 drones and almost 30 missiles were fired by Russia, with most targeting Dnipropetrovsk where three people Russia, Rostov's actor governor said two people died in the region after a car caught fire following a Ukrainian drone attacks came as both sides gave updates on their military operations - Russia claimed to have taken two villages in Ukraine's east, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said troops were "gradually pushing Russian forces out" of the Sumy region. Zelensky said Russian strikes also targeted Kharkiv and Sumy, and added on X that the strikes "cannot be left without response, and Ukrainian long-range drones ensure one".He added that Russian military sites and airports "must see that Russia's own war is now hitting them back with real consequences" and said Ukraine's drone attacks were "some of the arguments that will surely bring peace closer".Six people were injured in the strikes on Dnipropetrovsk, the region's head said. A residential block and industrial areas were hit in the city of Dnipro while a shopping centre was hit in the wider on Saturday, Russia's ministry of defence claimed its army had captured two villages, Zelenyi Hai in the Donetsk region and Maliivka in the Dnipropetrovsk an update on X, Zelensky said that Ukrainian forces were pushing Russian troops back in said: "Although this region remains one of the enemy's priority directions, our forces consistently block Russian attempts to advance deeper into the Sumy region from the border areas."There were reports that a village in the region - Kindrativka - had been liberated from Russian control. Zelensky added there had been "51 intense combat engagements" in the Pokrovsk area of Donetsk in the past day, where he said troops were defending sides continue to trade drone attacks, after a brief third round of ceasefire talks took place in Istanbul earlier in the and Russian delegations met on Wednesday evening but the talks failed to make steps towards ending the conflict. Both sides accused the other of rejecting their first two rounds of ceasefire talks were held in May and June at the request of US President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly said he wants to see the end of the "horrible, bloody war" that was sparked by Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

‘I have Star Wars going on outside my window': How Kyiv is coping with upsurge in Russia's attacks
‘I have Star Wars going on outside my window': How Kyiv is coping with upsurge in Russia's attacks

Irish Times

time21-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Times

‘I have Star Wars going on outside my window': How Kyiv is coping with upsurge in Russia's attacks

Kyiv residents who managed to sleep on another night of intense Russian air attacks woke to an increasingly familiar scene on Monday morning, as smoke wreathed several districts of the city, hospitals treated the wounded, and damage to civilian buildings and transport infrastructure made journeys to work slower and more stressful. At least one person was killed and eight injured during a night of drone and missile attacks on the city of 3.5 million. Apartment blocks, office buildings and a kindergarten were set on fire and the entrance to a metro station was hit, sending smoke pouring down on to platforms where people were taking shelter. Russian drone attacks on Ukraine – and particularly Kyiv – have intensified sharply in recent weeks, and the two heaviest strikes of the war took place this month, peaking overnight from July 8th-9th with the launch of 728 drones and 13 missiles. Graphic: Paul Scott/ IRISH TIMES GRAPHICS Ukrainian officials said on Monday morning that Russia fired 426 drones and 24 missiles overnight, most of which were shot down or electronically jammed. But the toll on the country and its people from direct strikes, falling debris and stress and tiredness accumulated over more than three years of full-scale war continues to mount. READ MORE A young girl takes a selfie as locals hide in a shelter during an air-raid alarm, near a site of a drone strike on a residential building in Kyiv. Photograph: Sergey Dolzhenko/European Pressphoto Agency 'When people asked me whether I was worried about living in Kyiv, I would say that yes, it's being shelled and bombed, but it's well protected. That's how it felt until a few weeks ago. There were drone attacks every other night but they would hardly reach the actual city – they were usually shot down in the regions,' says Nazar, a Kyiv resident. 'But in the past month there have been lots of occasions when suddenly lots of drones have come into the city. I've started hearing explosions closer and closer, to the point where I couldn't ignore it like before. That's when it started feeling less safe.' In Kyiv and other towns and cities where air-raid alerts can last for most of the day and night, Ukrainians must decide whether to take a risk by doing what they had planned – from staying in bed and trying to sleep to following a normal work routine – or to seek shelter in a basement, underground car park or metro station. 'Seeing drones over my residential area, over my actual apartment building, is a scary thing. They make a particular annoying, threatening noise, which speeds up as they're about to hit a target. It sounds like something from a second World War movie,' says Nazar, who lives in a 16-floor flat in Kyiv's western Nyvky district. A local man carries his dog at a damaged stairwell after a drone strike on a residential building in Kyiv on Monday. Photograph: Sergey Dolzhenko/EPA 'Now a few buildings have been destroyed not far from me and you hear about hundreds of these drones coming. You don't feel safe. So now I go to the underground shelter at 3 or 4am.' The Shahed drones fired at Kyiv and other cities are not the small, light models – similar to hobby drones but carrying explosives – that both sides use on the front line. The Iranian-made Shaheds are 3.5m long, have a wingspan of 2.5m and weigh 200kg, and can fly for some 2,000km before plunging into a target and detonating a 40kg warhead. Russia now mass produces its own version of the Shahed, called the Geran. A Ukrainian explosives expert examines parts of a Shahed military drone that fell following an air attack last month. Photograph: Sergey Bobok/AFP 'It's a guessing game. A matter of luck,' Olesya, who lives on the eighth floor of an apartment building in northwestern Kyiv, says of the danger of being killed or hurt. 'While before I would have stayed in my flat during an alert, now, if there are too many drones flying overhead, I go into the corridor of the building (for greater protection) or to a lower floor,' she adds. 'People who have stayed in Kyiv tend to find some kind of rational decision in terms of everyday functioning. So if you stay in your apartment there is a chance that you'll be killed there, but there is also a chance that you'll get a good night's sleep and not be hit ... But sometimes it's very hard to sleep and function normally afterwards.' Russia's escalating attacks have coincided with fresh concerns over Ukraine's air defences, as the United States halted supplies of some crucial weaponry and then announced that some would be delivered after all. That was followed by a White House decision this month to send more air defence systems and other arms to Kyiv via a new deal with Nato. Germany and other European states are expected to provide Ukraine with advanced US-made Patriot air defence units from their stocks and then 'backfill' with equipment bought from the US. As ever during nearly 3½ years of all-out war – and 11 years of conflict since Russia occupied Crimea and created heavily armed militias in eastern Ukraine – the timing and scale of western help for Ukraine is still unclear. People with their belongings leave a damaged metro station after a Russian attack in Kyiv last week. Photograph: Oleksii Filippov/AFP 'I live on the 14th floor and I have Star Wars going on outside my window. Not just tracers but I can see Shaheds flying past,' says Viktoriya, whose flat on the eastern bank of the Dnipro river is on an approach route for many drones and missiles targeting Kyiv. 'Before, the majority was repelled. But now I don't think we have enough air-defence assets or manpower to track everything, so they do get through,' she adds, calling Russia's tactics 'terror for the sake of terror'. 'Now I see more people going at night to metro stations and other shelters with sleeping bags, mats, dogs, backpacks and other necessities. They're becoming more systematic and going fully prepared. But there are also those who don't go, and feel the chance of being hit while going to the shelter is higher than when being at home.' On July 8th – the night of the heaviest Russian air attack so far – 32,000 people took refuge in Kyiv's metro stations, including almost 2,200 children, according to city officials. Figures for night-time visits to the metro system in July are expected to surpass those for June, when 165,000 visits were recorded, up from 65,000 in May. A man carries a dog in a damaged metro station following a Russian attack in Kyiv last week. Photograph: Oleksi Filippov/AFP Russia has also launched intense drone and missile strikes on western Ukraine this month, shaking the residents of cities that are 1,000km from the frontline: the mayor of Ivano-Frankivsk said it had suffered its heaviest attack of the war in the early hours of Monday, and that four people had been injured in nearby villages. There is fear in Kyiv and other cities, just as there is anger at the West's failure to back up rhetoric with action, but such feelings are by now familiar to Ukrainians – as are Russia's demands for a settlement that would amount to capitulation. 'I wouldn't say there's a catastrophic shift in how it feels ... But it does feel very targeted, very instrumentalised, this terror against civilians,' Olesya says. 'It feels very thought-out, to make people scared and panic and potentially put pressure on the authorities and demand talks – any talks just to stop this. I don't feel this is working for now, at least on a mass scale.' 'I don't think we are depressed or saying this is the end of Ukraine,' says Nazar. 'Surprisingly, I have more resilience than I thought, and I think people are on same page in that way.'

Russian ‘alligator' obliterates Ukrainian drone (VIDEO)
Russian ‘alligator' obliterates Ukrainian drone (VIDEO)

Russia Today

time17-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Russia Today

Russian ‘alligator' obliterates Ukrainian drone (VIDEO)

A new video appeared online on Thursday purportedly showing the moment a Russian Ka-52 'Alligator' attack helicopter took down a Ukrainian kamikaze drone. The video, said to be taken by fishermen in Lipetsk Region, shows a large fixed-wing UAV flying at low altitude. The aircraft is chased by the attack helicopter, which shoots an anti-aircraft missile at the drone out of view of the camera. The blast shatters the drone into small bits to the cheers of the fishermen, the video shows. Moscow has been actively using attack helicopters as interceptors to repel Ukrainian long-range drone attacks. Conventional fighter jets are not suited for such a role, as the low speeds and altitudes of the drones pose a danger to intercepting aircraft. Kiev's attempts to use fighter jets to repel Russian Geran-2 kamikaze drone strikes have repeatedly resulted in loss of the aircraft due to technical reasons, friendly fire from the ground, and damage sustained by the jets from UAVs exploding mid-air. Both sides of the conflict have actively exchanged long-range strikes lately. In recent days, for instance, the Russian military repeatedly attacked so-called Territorial Centers of Recruitment and Social Support (TCR) enlistment offices overseeing Ukraine's chaotic mobilization drive, as well as other military and dual-use targets. The Ukrainian military has continued its apparently indiscriminate attack on Russia. This week, Voronezh became one of the prime targets for Kiev's troops, who scored multiple hits on residential buildings across the city. The Russian authorities have accused Ukraine of resorting to attacks on civilian infrastructure to compensate for military setbacks on the front line. Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky reiterated on Sunday his intention to 'bring the war to Russian territory,' saying his government is planning additional long-range strikes against the country.

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