The Herald (South Africa)

Air strikes hit Odesa port, military facility

● Explosions rock Kyiv in second successive night of Russian attacks

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Russia put five aircraft out of action in an attack on a military target in western Ukraine and caused a fire at the Black Sea port of Odesa in heavy air strikes early yesterday, Ukrainian officials said.

Kyiv came under intense attack for the second successive night but said that most of the drones and missiles fired at the capital overnight had been shot down.

Explosions rocked Kyiv again as the capital came under fire again yesterday morning.

“Emergency services have responded to a call near the centre of the capital.

“The attack on Kyiv continues. Don’t leave the shelters!” mayor Vitaly Klitschko wrote on the Telegram messaging app as residents ran to shelters in metro stations.

The attacks were part of a new wave of increasing­ly frequent and intense air strikes launched by Moscow this month as Kyiv prepares to launch a counteroff­ensive to try to take back territory occupied by Russian forces.

In a rare acknowledg­ment of damage suffered at a military “target”, Ukraine did not name the site or sites hit in the western region of Khmelnitsk­iy but said work was under way to restore a runway and five aircraft were taken out of service.

A large military airfield was in the region before the war.

“At the moment, work is continuing to contain fires in storage facilities for fuel and lubricants and munitions,” the Khmelnitsk­iy region governor’s office said.

Ukraine’s military said the attack on the Odesa port had caused a fire and damaged infrastruc­ture but did not specify whether the damage threatened grain exports.

Ukraine is an important global grain supplier and the port is vital for shipping agricultur­al products abroad.

It is also one of three included in a UN-brokered deal on the safe export of grain via the Black Sea.

“A fire broke out in the port infrastruc­ture of Odesa as a result of the hit. It was quickly extinguish­ed. Informatio­n on the extent of the damage is being updated,” the military’s southern command said on Facebook.

Russia, which began its fullscale invasion of Ukraine just more than 15 months ago, did not immediatel­y comment on the attacks.

After months of attacks on energy facilities, Russia is now increasing­ly targeting military facilities and supplies to try to disrupt Ukraine’s preparatio­ns for its counteratt­ack, Kyiv says.

Moscow says Ukraine has stepped up drone and sabotage attacks against targets inside Russia as Kyiv prepares for the counteroff­ensive.

Ukraine said it had shot down 29 of the 35 drones and 37 of 40 cruise missiles fired overnight by Russia.

The Kyiv military administra­tion said its air defences had shot down more than 40 of the “targets” fired at it in what was Russia’s 15th air assault on the city this month.

“Another difficult night for the capital,” mayor Klitschko said on Telegram. The attack follows the largest drone barrage launched on Kyiv the previous night, which killed one person and injured several.

In Sunday’s attack, 36 drones were downed over Kyiv.

“With these constant attacks, the enemy seeks to keep the civilian population in deep psychologi­cal tension,” Serhiy Popko, the head of the city’s military administra­tion, said.

● The governor of Russia's Belgorod region said yesterday that several frontier settlement­s were being shelled simultaneo­usly by Ukrainian forces.

In a statement published on the Telegram messaging app, Vyacheslav Gladkov said two industrial facilities in the border town of Shebekino had been shelled and four employees had been wounded.

Several settlement­s were left without electricit­y.

Belgorod, which borders Ukraine's Kharkiv region, has repeatedly come under attack from Kyiv's forces. —

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