Oman Daily Observer

Russia says shot down Us-made missiles

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MOSCOW: Russia said on Tuesday it had shot down six Us-supplied tactical missiles launched by Ukraine, with officials in annexed Crimea saying some were downed over the Black Sea peninsula.

Washington has said it had supplied the arms to Ukraine, which has been asking for more powerful weapons for months as it struggles to contain advancing Russian forces.

Moscow’s defence ministry said it had destroyed six Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) rockets “in the last 24 hours”, without saying where they were shot down.

The Russian-installed head of Crimea, Sergei Aksyonov, said one of the missiles was downed in the village of Donskoye, outside the main city of Simferopol.

“After an ATACMS missile was shot down, undetonate­d submunitio­ns scattered,” Aksyonov said on Telegram.

“If you find such a weapon, do not pick it up or come close and call emergency services or the police,” he warned.

Aksyonov posted a photograph of a metal ball which he said was part of the destroyed missile. Russia did not say if the missiles caused any damage in Crimea.

Earlier, an official from Russian-occupied southern Ukraine, Vladimir Rogov, said that air defence had been in operation over Simferopol and the town of Dzankoi, in northern Crimea.

Ukraine has regularly attacked Crimea during Moscow’s more than two-year offensive. But it did not comment on Tuesday’s attack.

Last week, the United States said it had sent ATACMS missiles to Ukraine in February.

Washington has said it had supplied the arms to Ukraine, which has been asking for more powerful weapons for months

Ukrainian forces are now awaiting the arrival of new US weapons, green-lighted by President Joe Biden after months of being blocked by political wrangling in Congress.

Meanwhile, Kyiv authoritie­s on Tuesday began taking down a Soviet-era monument celebratin­g friendship with Russia — more than two years into an attack by Moscow which has cost tens of thousands of lives. “City municipal services have begun dismantlin­g” the monument, the mayor’s office said on social media.

The monument commemorat­es the signing in 1654 of a treaty binding Ukraine to Russian rule.

The structure — a series of stone sculptures depicting the treaty’s Ukrainian and Russian signatorie­s — was installed in a park in central Kyiv as part of an memorial complex celebratin­g the “friendship” between Russians and Ukrainians.

Since the attack began in 2022, Kyiv authoritie­s had already taken down two bronze statues depicting a Ukrainian and a Russian worker at the same site.

“The dismantlem­ent could take several days since the structure is quite massive.

It includes around 20 pieces” weighing between six and seven tonnes each, the mayor’s office said.

 ?? — AFP ?? King Charles III and Queen Camilla receive a bouquet of flowers after a visit to the University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Centre in London.
— AFP King Charles III and Queen Camilla receive a bouquet of flowers after a visit to the University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Centre in London.
 ?? — Reuters ?? Local residents look at damage at a site of a Russian missile strike, in Kharkiv.
— Reuters Local residents look at damage at a site of a Russian missile strike, in Kharkiv.

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