Daily Southtown

Ukraine awakes to grim start to ’23

Many Kyiv residents welcome snippets of peace after attacks

- By Renata Brito

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukrainians faced a grim start to 2023 as Sunday brought more Russian missile and drone attacks following a blistering New Year’s Eve assault that killed at least three civilians across the country, authoritie­s reported.

Air raid sirens sounded in the capital shortly after midnight, followed by a barrage of missiles that interrupte­d the small celebratio­ns residents held at home due to wartime curfews.

Ukrainian officials alleged Moscow was deliberate­ly targeting civilians along with critical infrastruc­ture to create a climate of fear and destroy morale during the long winter months.

In a video address Sunday night, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy praised his citizens’ “sense of unity, of authentici­ty, of life itself.”

The Russians, he said, “will not take away a single year from Ukraine. They will not take away our independen­ce. We will not give them anything.”

Ukrainian forces in the air and on the ground shot down 45 Iranian-made explosive drones fired by Russia on Saturday night and before dawn Sunday, Zelenskyy said.

Another strike at noon Sunday in the southern Zaporizhzh­ia region killed one person, according to the head of the regional military administra­tion, Alexander Starukh.

But Kyiv was largely quiet, and people there on New Year’s Day savored the snippets of peace.

“Of course, it was hard to celebrate fully because we understand that our soldiers can’t be with their family,” Evheniya Shulzhenko said while sitting with her husband on a park bench overlookin­g the city.

But a “really powerful” New Year’s Eve speech by Zelenskyy lifted her spirits and made her proud to be Ukrainian, Shulzhenko said.

She recently moved to Kyiv after living in Bakhmut and Kharkiv, two cities that have experience­d some of the heaviest fighting of the war.

Multiple blasts rocked the capital and other areas of Ukraine on Saturday and through the night, wounding dozens.

Ukraine’s largest university, the Taras Shevchenko National University in Kyiv, reported significan­t damage to its buildings and campus. Mayor Vitali Klitschko said two schools were damaged, including a kindergart­en.

The strikes came 36 hours after widespread missile attacks Russia launched Thursday to damage energy infrastruc­ture facilities. Saturday’s unusually quick follow-up alarmed Ukrainian officials.

Russia has carried out airstrikes on Ukrainian power and water supplies almost weekly since October, increasing the suffering of Ukrainians, while its ground forces struggle to hold territory and advance.

Nighttime shelling in parts of the southern city of Kherson killed one person and blew out hundreds of windows in a children’s hospital, said deputy presidenti­al chief of staff Kyrylo Tymoshenko. Ukrainian forces reclaimed the city in November after Russia’s forces withdrew across the Dnieper River, which bisects the Kherson region.

When shells hit the children’s hospital Saturday night, surgeons were operating on a 13-year-old boy who was seriously wounded in a nearby village that evening, Kherson Gov. Yaroslav Yanushevyc­h said. The boy was transferre­d in serious condition to a hospital 62 miles away in Mykolaiv.

Elsewhere, a 22-year-old woman died of wounds from a Saturday rocket attack in the eastern town of Khmelnytsk­yi, the city’s mayor said.

Instead of New Year’s fireworks, Oleksander Dugyn said he and his friends and family in Kyiv watched the sparks caused by Ukrainian air defense forces countering Russian attacks.

“We already know the sound of rockets, we know the moment they fly, we know the sound of drones. The sound is like the roar of a moped,” said Dugin, who was with his family in a park. “We hold on the best we can.”

Zelenskyy thanked utility workers for helping to keep the lights on during the latest assault.

In separate tweets Sunday, the Ukrainian leader also reminded the European Union of his country’s wish to join the EU. He thanked the Czech Republic and congratula­ted Sweden, which exchanged the EU’s rotating presidency, for their help in securing progress for Ukraine’s bid.

Meanwhile, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g said the Western military alliance’s 30 members need to ramp up arms production in the coming months to maintain their own stockpiles and to keep supplying Ukraine with the weapons it needs to fend off Russia.

The NATO chief said that while Russia has experience­d battlefiel­d setbacks and the fighting on the ground appears at a stalemate, “Russia has shown no sign of giving up its overall goal of taking control over Ukraine,” he told BBC Radio 4’s “The World This Weekend.”

 ?? LAURA BOUSHNAK/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ukrainian workers clear debris Sunday after a Russian missile strike in Kyiv, the capital.
LAURA BOUSHNAK/THE NEW YORK TIMES Ukrainian workers clear debris Sunday after a Russian missile strike in Kyiv, the capital.

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