The New Zealand Herald

Russia attacks targets in Ukraine with missiles, drones

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Civilian casualties in the war have begun mounting again after falling last year.

Russia fired cruise and ballistic missiles and Shahed-type drones at six regions across Ukraine yesterday, authoritie­s reported, killing at least five civilians and wounding almost 50 others, including a pregnant woman.

The attacks hit at least three major cities, including the capital, Kyiv, where the European Union’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, was discussing military aid and financial support for Ukraine. He said that he started his day in an air raid shelter, calling it part of Ukraine’s “daily reality” after almost two years of war.

The West’s help is desperatel­y needed by Ukraine, which is struggling with ammunition and personnel shortages. Some long-term foreign funding is also in doubt as the latest effort to clinch a deal on Ukraine aid in the United States Senate collapsed on Wednesday. Though the roughly 1500km front line has barely budged in recent months, the Kremlin’s forces have the upper hand in stocks of missiles and artillery ammunition used for long-range strikes. Russia has repeatedly used missiles to blast civilian targets during the conflict.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said last month that air defence and electronic warfare systems that can stop drones are Kyiv’s top priorities.

The United Nations Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine said yesterday that civilian casualties in the war have begun mounting again after falling last year. Last month, it documented 158 civilian deaths and 483 wounded, up 37 per cent from last November.

So far, the conflict has killed more than 10,000 civilians and wounded nearly 20,000 others, the UN says.

Borrell visited a drone production facility in Ukraine where, he said, 1500 small drones are produced daily.

Ukraine’s armed forces said they intercepte­d 44 Russian drones and missiles out of 64 that were launched in the morning attack.

A preliminar­y assessment concluded that two of the five missiles launched at Kharkiv in northeaste­rn Ukraine were made in North Korea, said Serhii Bolvinov, head of the national police’s investigat­ion unit in the region.

The US, Ukraine and six allies have previously accused Russia of using North Korean ballistic missiles and launchers supplied by Pyongyang in aerial attacks against Ukraine, in violation of UN sanctions.

The Russian Defence Ministry said that it used long-range precision weapons and drones against Ukrainian factories that manufactur­e sea drones, coastal defence missile systems, rockets and explosives. The ministry said that all targets were hit.

The barrage killed four people in Kyiv, the State Emergency Service said, where explosions rattled the city during the morning rush hour. It was the first bombardmen­t of Kyiv for two weeks. The four people died when missile or drone wreckage hit an 18-storey apartment building, causing a fire that gutted apartments on several floors, officials said.

The attack also killed one man and wounded six people in Mykolaiv, a city in southern Ukraine, where about 20 residentia­l buildings and public infrastruc­ture were damaged, regional Governor Vitalii Kim said.

Forty people were wounded in Kyiv, according to city authoritie­s, including a pregnant woman. Apartment buildings caught fire in multiple Kyiv districts, Mayor Vitalii Klitschko said. Two power lines damaged during the attack left about 20,000 households on Kyiv’s east bank without power.

Missiles also hit as far away as the Lviv region of western Ukraine.

UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine

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