Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Russian attacks in southern Ukraine kill at least 10, dozens injured

- Tribune News Service dpa

KYIV, Ukraine —

Russia attacked southern Ukrainian cities again on Monday, including the hometown of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, killing at least 10 civilians and injuring dozens more.

In the city of Kryvyi Rih, Zelenskyy’s hometown, two Russian missiles hit a ninestory apartment building and a university building.

The regional military administra­tion said at least six people died — including a mother and her 10-year-old daughter. Some 75 others — including six children — were injured.

“There will be no forgivenes­s!” Serhiy

Lysak, the governor of the Dnipropetr­ovsk region, wrote on Telegram.

Local authoritie­s believe that more people may be trapped under both buildings. The apartment building that was hit was partially burnt out and in particular danger of collapse, video footage showed.

Rescue work involving more than 350 volunteers was ongoing, Zelenskyy said.

Four more civilians were killed by Russian fire in the city of Kherson, which was liberated from Russian occupation in October 2022. Another 17 people were injured there.

Among the dead was an employee of a municipal communal enterprise who was killed by Russian artillery fire Monday morning, according to the local military administra­tion. Two of his colleagues were injured.

The greater part of Kherson Province remains occupied by Russian troops.

Zelenskyy expressed his condolence­s to the victims via Telegram and condemned the “Russian terror.”

Russian authoritie­s, meanwhile, reported damage from Ukrainian drone strikes in Russia.

A Russian government building was struck overnight near the town of Trubchevsk in the Bryansk region of Russia, according to the local governor, Alexander Bogomaz. He said there was damage to the roof and windows of the building, but no casualties.

The Bryansk region is north and slightly to the east of the Ukrainian border.

In Russia’s Rostov region, Gov. Vasily Golubev also reported destructio­n in the settlement of Daraganovk­a after an incident with a drone. The area is about 65 miles east of Mariupol in southern Ukraine.

A house and a car were damaged, Golubev said, but no one was injured. Videos circulated on social networks of a destroyed building after an explosion, with smoke rising from the rubble.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov derrided alleged Ukrainian attacks as an “act of desperatio­n” by Kiev after failures in its counteroff­ensive, according to Russian news agencies.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu echoed those remarks and said Russia would intensify its strikes against Ukrainian military targets from which “these terrorist attacks” were being carried out.

Substantia­l areas of Ukraine have repeatedly been struck by massive

Russian drone and missile attacks since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, killing scores of civilians.

Russia’s border regions have repeatedly complained of attacks from the Ukrainian side, with casualties and damage in these areas minimal compared to the Russian destructio­n of Ukraine.

Moscow consistent­ly blames Kyiv for the shelling in the border region. Over the weekend, Moscow was also once again the target of drone attacks.

Kyiv has not officially admitted any involvemen­t in these attacks.

In fighting along the front lines, meanwhile, Ukrainian troops have managed to recapture nearly 6 square miles of land from occupying Russian troops in their counteroff­ensive last week, according to a post from Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar on Monday.

Maliar said that territory along the front lines in southern Ukraine accounted for the bulk of the gains.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States