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Russia’s biggest air attack of war kills 31 in Ukraine



Russia unleashed its biggest air attack of the war on Ukraine on Friday, killing 31 civilians, wounding more than 160 others and hitting cities and infrastructure across the country, officials said.

NATO member Poland said a Russian missile appeared to have flown into its airspace for some 40km before returning to Ukraine under three minutes later.

However the Russian charge d’affaires, summoned to the Polish Foreign Ministry, said Polish officials had provided no evidence of a missile entering its airspace.

The Ukrainian foreign ministry said the assault showed there should be “no talk of a truce” with Russia at a time when uncertainty hangs over the future of western support for Kyiv.

“Today, millions of Ukrainians awoke to the loud sound of explosions. I wish those sounds of explosions in Ukraine could be heard all around the world,” Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said, urging allies to keep sending long-term aid.

At a hastily-convened UN Security Council session, most council members, including the United States, France and Britain, condemned the attacks.

Russia’s UN ambassador Vasily Nebenzya said Russia had attacked only military infrastructure and that Ukraine’s air defence systems were responsible for civilian casualties.


Read more about the Russian invasion of Ukraine


In the capital Kyiv at least nine people were killed and 30 wounded after a warehouse, residential buildings and another uninhabited property were hit, officials said.

The air force said it shot down 87 cruise missiles and 27 drones of a total 158 aerial “targets” fired by Russia. Defence Minister Rustem Umerov said it was the “most massive air attack of this war” and involved 18 strategic bombers.

Army chief General Valeriy Zaluzhnyi said infrastructure and industrial and military facilities had been targeted.

“Russia attacked with everything it has in its arsenal…Approximately 110 missiles were fired, most of which were shot down,” President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Telegram messenger.

Anticipating more attacks on energy systems

Ukraine has been warning for weeks that Russia could be stockpiling missiles to launch major air attacks on the energy system like it did last winter.

“It is obvious that with the stocks of missiles that the aggressor state has, it can and will continue such attacks,” Mr Umerov said.

In a roundup of military activities this week, the Russian defence ministry said its forces had performed one “massive” strike on Ukraine since 23 December, but provided no specifics.

The interior ministry put the death toll at 30, however statements from the regions indicated at least 31 people had been killed.

Eight people were killed and 13 wounded in the southeastern Zaporizhzhya region, the governor said. Civilian infrastructure facilities were also struck, he said.

Six people were also killed in the central region of Dnipropetrovsk where missiles struck a shopping centre, a house and a six-storey residential building, the governor said.

Four people were killed in the Black Sea port of Odessa and at least 22 wounded, including two children, the regional governor said, reporting hits on residential buildings.

One person was killed in a residential building in the city of Lviv and 30 were wounded, the regional governor said. Three schools and a kindergarten were damaged, the mayor said.

In the northeastern city of Kharkiv, a missile strike damaged a warehouse, an industrial facility, a medical facility and a transport depot, the regional governor said. Three people were killed and 13 wounded.



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