On Friday, Russia fired a large number of missiles across Ukraine.
Officials from Ukraine claim that the missiles destroyed electricity in the country’s second-largest city, hit vital infrastructure in the south, and set off explosions in the capital Kyiv.
According to Vitaly Kim, the governor of the southern Ukrainian region of Mykolaiv, up to 60 Russian missiles had been seen flying toward targets within the nation.
Oleksiy Kuleba, the regional governor of the Kyiv region, declared that Russia was “massively attacking” as the latest in a string of assaults on Ukraine’s infrastructure since October began.
The eastern city of Kharkiv, home to more than a million people, was left entirely without electricity as was the smaller city of Poltava in central Ukraine, the Oblenergo energy provider and Poltava Mayor Oleksandr Mamai said.
In the northern Sumy region, the attacks caused power outages, the governor there said, while in the south, officials said critical infrastructure in the Black Sea region of Odesa had been hit.
In Kryvyi Rih, also in the south, a residential building was hit, governor Oleksandr Vilkul said, adding that people could be trapped under the rubble. Several railway lines were left without power, the railway operator said.
Reuters heard explosions in the capital Kyiv but it was not clear if any were caused by missiles getting through air defences.
Earlier this week, Russia launched the first major drone attack on Kyiv in weeks. Two administrative buildings were hit but air defences largely repelled the attack, with 13 drones reportedly shot down.
Russia has attacked Ukrainian energy infrastructure almost weekly since October, causing power outages across the country even as its troops are bogged down in fighting to hold on to territory in the south and east, around a fifth of Ukraine.
Russia’s TASS state news agency said at least eight people had been killed and 23 wounded by Ukrainian shelling in the village of Lantrativka in the Russia-controlled Luhansk region in eastern Ukraine.
Ukrainian defence chiefs have predicted Russia will launch a new offensive early next year that could include a second attempt to take the capital Kyiv.
It could happen as soon as January, President Volodymyr Zelensky, General Valery Zaluzhniy and General Oleksandr Syrskiy were quoted as saying in interviews with The Economist magazine on Thursday.
The push could be launched from the eastern Donbas area, the south or neighbouring Belarus, and could include another ground assault on Kyiv, which Moscow failed to capture early in its invasion, the officials said.
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