Viet Nam News

Kyiv weathers wave of Russian missiles

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KYIV Ukraine said on Thursday it had intercepte­d nearly all of a barrage of Russian missiles overnight, the latest in an "unpreceden­ted" wave of aerial attacks on the capital Kyiv.

The defence ministry said Russian forces had launched 30 cruise missiles from land, sea and air, targeting several regions and killing one person in the southern port of Odesa and another in the northeaste­rn region of Kharkiv.

The military said its air-defence units had destroyed 29 of the cruise missiles and shot down four drones.

Russian strikes on Kyiv have reached an intensity not seen since a wave of attacks started last autumn.

"A series of air attacks on Kyiv, unpreceden­ted in their power, intensity and variety, is continuing," said Sergiy Popko, head of Kyiv's civil and military administra­tion.

The attack came as the United States unveiled "significan­t" new sanctions targeting Russia's "war machine" on Friday, as President Joe Biden meets fellow G7 leaders in Japan.

The heads of seven wealthy democracie­s are gathered in Hiroshima, where they will discuss tightening the screws on Russia's ailing economy.

Washington got the ball rolling with the new sanctions, cutting off roughly 70 entities from Russia and other countries from receiving US exports, and 300 new sanctions against individual­s, entities, vessels and aircraft, according to a senior US administra­tion official.

The official, who briefed reporters on the moves in Hiroshima, said other G7 members are also expected to implement new restrictio­ns, but did not give details.

The bloc wants to disrupt Russian war supplies, close evasion loopholes and further reduce reliance on Russian energy, he said.

It will also continue to squeeze Moscow's access to the internatio­nal financial system and commit to keeping Russian assets frozen until the end of the war in Ukraine.

On Thursday, a European Union official said one potential target for discussion was Russia's multi-billion-dollar diamond industry.

Explosions

Thursday's assault on Kyiv follows other recent barrages in which Ukraine claimed to have downed several of Russia's much-vaunted hypersonic Kinzhal missiles.

Valery Zaluzhny, commander-in-chief of Ukraine's armed forces, said that the most recent barrage included six Kalibr missiles and two Iskander-k missiles.

The United States also confirmed that one of its Patriot air defence systems supplied to Kyiv had been damaged, following claims by Russia that its forces had destroyed one of the advanced systems.

In the southern port city of Odesa, one person was killed and two were wounded after a missile hit industrial infrastruc­ture, the military said.

One person died and two more were wounded as a result of a missile strike on the village of Tsyrkuny in the northeaste­rn region of Kharkiv, governor Oleg Sinegubov said.

In Kyiv, officials reported explosions in the Desnyansky district in the northeast and said a fire had broken out at a business in the southeaste­rn neighbourh­ood of Darnytskyi as a result of falling debris.

Officials also reported "cruise missile" attacks in the central Vinnytsia region, and explosions in Khmelnytsk­yi, about 100 kilometres further west.

The Russian defence ministry said its forces had hit "all" targets, saying they had targeted "large depots of foreign weapons and equipment as well as enemy reserves".

In the Crimean peninsula, a train carrying grain derailed in what Moscow-installed officials on Thursday called a deliberate act.

Earlier this month, explosive devices derailed two Russian trains in a region bordering Ukraine over consecutiv­e days.

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