The Guardian (USA)

Blaze at Russian fuel depot in Crimea put out after suspected drone strike

- Peter Beaumont in Kyiv

A fire at a fuel storage facility in the Crimean port city of Sevastopol, caused by an apparent drone strike, has been extinguish­ed, the Moscow-installed governor has said. .

Video footage posted on social media earlier on Saturday showed a large waterside area on fire, with a column of black smoke rising from the burning fuel. Other images showed a huge pall of smoke hanging over the area. More than a dozen fuel tanks are situated at the site in Kozacha Bay.

The strike, reportedly by a “kamikaze” drone, came a day after a wave of missile attacks on Ukrainian cities killed 26 people, including many in an apartment block in Uman in the Cherkasy region.

After the drone strike at 4.30am, a firefighti­ng train was reportedly brought in to try to extinguish the blaze.

“According to preliminar­y informatio­n, the fire was caused by a drone hit,” the city’s Russia-installed governor, Mikhail Razvozhaye­v, wrote on Telegram.

“The situation is under the control of our firefighte­rs and all operative services,” he said. “Since the volume of fuel is large, it will take time to localise the fire.”

Razvozhaye­v said the fire was assigned the highest ranking – level four – in terms of how complicate­d it would be to extinguish. He said it had not caused any casualties and would not hinder fuel supplies in Sevastopol.

Razvozhaye­v reported earlier this week that the Russian military had destroyed a Ukrainian sea drone that attempted to attack the harbour, and another one had blown up, shattering windows in several apartment buildings but not inflicting any other damage.

Sevastopol has been a regular target of drone attacks, especially in recent weeks. The city, on the Crimean peninsula that Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014, has come under repeated air attacks since Russia’s invasion of its neighbour in February last year.

Russian officials have blamed the attacks on Ukraine. The Ukrainian military did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Saturday. Kyiv almost never publicly claims responsibi­lity for attacks inside Russia or on Russian-controlled territory in Ukraine.

Russia’s missile strikes on Friday killed 26 people, including five children, as Kyiv said preparatio­ns for a counteroff­ensive against Moscow’s forces were nearly complete.

The most serious casualties were caused by a strike on a residentia­l block in Uman that killed 23 people.

Rescue workers in Uman, the site of an annual Hasidic Jewish pilgrimage, pulled the body of another child from under the rubble on Friday evening.

Authoritie­s said four children in the city had been killed by the cruise missile strikes.

Earlier in the day, Dmitry, a 33-yearold resident from Luhansk, an eastern city under Russian control, was looking for his children. “I want to see my children. They are under the rubble,” he said.

Rescuers were using cranes to search for survivors among the remains of the multi-storey housing block in the city of 80,000 inhabitant­s.

“I’ve seen a lot, but I haven’t lost my children before. Now I want to see my children, alive or dead,” Dmitry said.

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