Irish Independent

Russian missiles hit Ukrainian city, killing 17 and maiming dozens

- IVAN LYUBYSH-KIRDLEY AND OLENA HARMASH

Three Russian missiles slammed into the city centre of Chernihiv in northern Ukraine yesterday, killing at least 17 people, wounding dozens more and damaging civilian buildings, officials said.

President Volodymyr Zelensky called on Kyiv’s allies to rush in air-defence support after the city, which had a prewar population of 300,000, became the latest target of an intensifyi­ng Russian airstrike campaign.

“This would not have happened if Ukraine had received sufficient airdefence equipment and if the world’s determinat­ion to counter Russian terror had been sufficient,” Mr Zelensky wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

Videos obtained by Reuters showed flames and columns of black smoke rising over Chernihiv, which is about 150km from the capital Kyiv and about 80km from the Russian border.

Three explosions ripped through a busy central area of the city just after 9am local time, destroying a hotel, officials said.

The strike also damaged several multi-storey residentia­l buildings, a hospital, an education facility and dozens of private cars, officials said.

“Unfortunat­ely, Russia continues to engage in terrorist activity against civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture as confirmed by this strike on Chernihiv once again,” acting mayor Oleksandr Lomako said on national television.

Sixty people, including three children, were wounded, the emergency services said.

Russia, which denies targeting civilians, attacked with three Iskander cruise missiles, Governor Vyacheslav Chaus said.

“I haven’t come to my senses fully yet and I don’t understand everything that happened. The main thing for me is that my child in school was in a basement (shelter),” local resident Iryna (35) said.

Schools are equipped with shelters in basements for children and teachers to take cover there.

As civilians cleared up glass and debris with shovels near residentia­l houses, local doctors urged residents to donate blood and city officials declared a day of mourning.

Ukraine is facing an acute shortage of ammunition, including air-defence systems and missiles, with vital funding from the US blocked by Republican­s in Congress for months and the EU failing to deliver munitions on time. Russia has taken advantage of these delays in recent weeks, intensifyi­ng its attacks on Ukrainian cities and targeting the energy sector and other critical infrastruc­ture.

Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba voiced gratitude to Germany for providing an additional, third Patriot air-defence battery, urging the country’s other allies to follow suit.

Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, and has launched thousands of missiles and drones against Ukrainian cities, towns and villages in attacks that have killed hundreds of civilians.

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