Kyiv residents urged to take cover in air raid shelters as sirens wail

Kyiv residents urged to take cover in air raid shelters as sirens wail

The warning comes a day after Russia executed its biggest aerial assault since Feb 24.

Ukrainian emergency workers remove debris of a house destroyed after a Russian missile strike in Kyiv Thursday. (AP pic)
KYIV:
Residents of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv were urged to head to air raid shelters early on Friday as sirens wailed across the city, a day after Russia carried out the biggest aerial assault since it started the war in February.

Shortly after 2am, Kyiv’s city government issued an alert on its Telegram messaging app channel about the air raid sirens and called on residents to proceed to shelters.

Olekskiy Kuleba, governor of Kyiv region, said on Telegram that an “attack by drones” was underway.

A Reuters witness 20km south of Kyiv heard several explosions and the sound of anti-aircraft fire.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, in a video address on Thursday night, said air commands in central, southern, eastern, and western Ukraine repelled 54 Russian missiles and 11 drones Thursday.

Zelensky acknowledged that most regions were suffering power outages.

The areas where loss of power was “especially difficult” included the capital Kyiv, Odesa, and Kherson in the south and surrounding regions, and the region around Lviv near the western border with Poland, Zelensky said.

“But this is nothing compared with what could have happened if it were not for our heroic anti-aircraft troops and air defence,” he said.

Reuters footage on Thursday showed emergency workers searching through the smouldering wreckage of residential homes in Kyiv destroyed by a blast and smoke trails of missiles in the sky.

Officials had earlier said more than 120 missiles were fired during Thursday’s assault.

More than 18 residential buildings and 10 critical infrastructure installations were destroyed in the latest attacks, the defence ministry said in a statement.

Waves of Russian air strikes in recent months targeting energy infrastructure have left millions without power and heating in often freezing temperatures.

Battlefields

Ukraine’s smaller armed forces have scored several battlefield victories against the invading Russian troops but for months Zelensky has asked Western countries for additional help with air defence.

To that end, the US last week announced nearly US$2 billion in more military aid, including the Patriot air defence system, which offers protection against aircraft, cruise, and ballistic missiles.

Moscow has repeatedly denied targeting civilians, but Ukraine says its daily bombardment is destroying cities, towns, and the country’s power, medical, and other infrastructure.

Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb 24 in what President Vladimir Putin calls a “special military operation” against what it perceives as threats to its security. Ukraine and its Western allies have denounced Russia’s actions as an imperialist-style land grab, and imposed sanctions to try to disrupt the campaign.

The most intense fighting is still in the eastern frontline towns of Bakhmut and Soledar in the Donetsk province, one of four regions Russia claimed to have annexed in September. The others are Luhansk in the east, and Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south.

Russian forces do not fully control any of the four regions, although the Kremlin has said they are making progress in one of the main stated goals of “demilitarising” Ukraine.

Russia is looking for a battlefield victory in eastern Ukraine and has been trying to capture Bakhmut for months.

Russia “has not abandoned the insane idea of capturing the Donetsk region,” Zelensky said Thursday night.

Ukraine’s troops have held on in Donetsk, which together with Luhansk makes up Russian-speaking Donbas, an industrial heartland and part of which was seized by Russia-backed separatists in 2014. The same year, Russia also annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine.

Stay current - Follow FMT on WhatsApp, Google news and Telegram

Subscribe to our newsletter and get news delivered to your mailbox.