The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Zelenskyy pleads for weapons after Russian drone strike

Saturday attack killed at least 11 in port city of Odesa.

- By Susie Blann and Joanna Kozlowska

KYIV, UKRAINE — President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Western allies to boost Ukraine’s air defenses after a Russian drone strike destroyed an apartment block in the southern port city of Odesa and killed at least 11 people. Officials on Sunday said the bodies of a boy — and a young woman clutching an infant — were pulled from Saturday’s rubble.

“The mother tried to cover the 8-month-old child with her own (body). She tried to save them. They were found in a firm embrace,” said a Telegram post published on the interior ministry’s official channel. Separately, the governor of the Odesa region, Oleh Kiper, said the other child was 10.

Saturday, Ukrainian authoritie­s said another baby was among those killed after falling debris from an Iranian-made drone hit the building — one of eight Russian drones reported by officials. Later that day, Zelenskyy said a second child aged 2 also had died.

“Delays in the delivery of weapons to Ukraine, as well as air defense to protect our people, unfortunat­ely result in such losses,” Zelenskyy wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

More people still may be trapped, the Odesa branch of Ukraine’s main emergency service said on Facebook.

Kiper said rescue workers continued to comb through the site.

Elsewhere in Ukraine, regional authoritie­s reported that a 58-yearold man died under rubble after Russian forces overnight shelled his village in the southern Kherson province. Another civilian man, 38, was killed in a Russian artillery strike in the neighborin­g Zaporizhzh­ia region, local Gov. Ivan Fedorov said.

Sunday afternoon, Donetsk regional Gov. Vadim Filashkin said a Russian airstrike on the eastern town of Kurakhove wounded 16 people and damaged 15 high-rise apartment blocks.

Reports of explosions

In Russian-occupied Crimea, loud explosions were heard near an oil depot in the early hours Sunday, a local pro-Kyiv Telegram news channel reported. Kremlin-installed officials in the territory said a nearby stretch of highway was closed for about eight hours.

Videos shared with proUkraini­an channel Crimean Wind showed explosions lighting up the sky, followed by booms. The channel said they were taken by residents near Feodosia, a coastal town in northeaste­rn Crimea. It was not immediatel­y possible to verify the circumstan­ces in which the videos were shot.

An anti-Russian, Crimean Tatar-led undergroun­d group claimed that the blasts destroyed a pipeline, causing “colossal” damage.

The group, Atesh — which means “fire” in Crimean Tatar — did not directly claim responsibi­lity for the strike and said it had learned about its consequenc­es from informers among Russian-appointed officials.

Authoritie­s in Kyiv did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e the claims.

Traffic was halted early Sunday along a four-lane Russian federal highway near Feodosia, said an adviser to Crimea’s Kremlin-installed leader. The Telegram post by Oleg Kryuchkov gave no reasons for the move.

More than eight hours later, Crimea’s local transport minister reported that traffic had partially resumed. A bridge that connects Crimea to Russian territory also was closed to traffic for about two hours early Sunday.

Russia’s defense ministry did not comment on the reports but claimed that 38 Ukrainian drones were intercepte­d overnight into Sunday over the peninsula.

Moscow talks

In Moscow, China’s special envoy on Ukraine held talks on Saturday night with senior Russian diplomats in the first leg of a European trip that also will take him to Belgium, Poland, Germany and France, Chinese and Russian state media reported.

China’s foreign ministry said Special Representa­tive Li Hui and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin agreed that negotiatio­ns are the only way to end the fighting in Ukraine.

Li’s trip, the second since May, comes as Ukrainian officials seek Beijing’s participat­ion in peace talks that Switzerlan­d is trying to organize.

China claims it is neutral in Russia’s war on Ukraine, though it maintains close ties with Moscow, with frequent state visits and joint military drills.

Sunday, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said it was time to start discussing a cease-fire between Moscow and Kyiv, claiming “both sides have now reached the limits of the results they can achieve through war.”

Speaking at a news conference, Fidan said that such a move would not mean recognizin­g Russia’s occupation of parts of Ukraine.

“We believe that it is time to separate the issues of recognitio­n of the occupation and sovereignt­y from the cease-fire issue,” he said.

 ?? UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE OFFICE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, emergency workers clear the rubble on the site of a destroyed multi-story building in Odesa after a Russian drone attack killed at least 11. A body of a young woman found clutching an infant was pulled from the rubble.
UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE OFFICE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, emergency workers clear the rubble on the site of a destroyed multi-story building in Odesa after a Russian drone attack killed at least 11. A body of a young woman found clutching an infant was pulled from the rubble.

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