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Six dead in massive Russian attack

Reuters: People seek shelter in a subway station in Kyiv during the barrage Reuters

People sought shelter in a subway station in Kyiv during the barrage

At least six people have been killed after Russia launched a massive attack in Ukraine, severely damaging electricity and water supplies.

Explosions occurred in several cities, including Kyiv, on Monday morning as more than half of the country's regions were attacked with missiles and drones.

Authorities in Zaporizhia, Lutsk, Kharkiv, Zhytomyr and It was reported from the Dnipropetrovsk region that people had been killed in the massive airstrike.

Russia confirmed that it had targeted Ukraine's energy infrastructure – one of its long-term tactics – and said all targets had been hit.

The barrage of drone and missile attacks began across the country on Monday night and continued into the morning.

Since air raid warnings were in place throughout the country, people were asked to stay in their shelters.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had fired more than 100 missiles and about 100 drones.

“This was one of the worst strikes,” he said, adding that there had been significant damage to energy plants.

The main target of this attack was energy infrastructure, but Moscow also sought to attack Ukraine's reserves of another important resource: morale.

Ukrainians are elated by their troops' recent successful advance deep into Russian territory in the Kursk region.

With Monday's attacks, Russia wanted to bring the people of Ukraine back down to earth and remind them and politicians in Western capitals that the Kremlin still has the upper hand in this war.

The message from Moscow was: Do not be fooled. Russia can continue to inflict suffering on the Ukrainian people whenever it wants.

Dozens injured

About 15 regions of Ukraine were the target of the Russian attacks, said Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmygal. The Russians used drones, cruise missiles and supersonic missiles, among other things.

“There are injured and dead,” Mr Shmyhal said on the social media app Telegram.

Dozens of people were injured, among the dead were:

  • Two men – one aged 69 and one aged 47 – were killed in separate attacks in the Dnipropetrovsk region, the region's governor Sergiy Lysak said. Others were injured, including a 14-year-old girl, he added.
  • A man was killed when his house was hit in Zaporizhia, the region's governor said
  • The mayor of Lutsk said one person was killed when an “infrastructure facility” was hit. Five others were injured and there is no running water in most parts of the city, he added.
  • In Izyum in the Kharkiv region, a man was killed in a rocket attack, the regional head said
  • And in the Zhytomyr region of western Ukraine, a woman died after houses and infrastructure buildings were hit by rockets, the governor said.
EPA: The site of a rocket hit in a village in Zaporizhia region (Ukraine) on August 26, 2024, after the entire territory of Ukraine came under combined shelling in the morning. EPA

After the attacks, a house was destroyed in a village in the Zaporizhia region

The attacks caused severe damage to infrastructure. Many cities, including Kyiv, experienced power outages and water supply disruptions.

Emergency power outages have been imposed, energy utility DTEK warned, adding that its technicians were working to restore power across the country.

Russia targeted Ukraine's energy infrastructure early on in its large-scale invasion, which began in February 2022.

In recent months, the organization has renewed its campaign of attacks on the power grid, causing frequent blackouts across the country.

In June President Selenskyj said Russia began attacking the country's energy facilities at the end of March, destroying half of its electricity generation capacity.

Ukraine buys energy from the European Union, but this is not enough, and a nationwide blackout is planned most days to protect vital needs such as hospitals and military sites.

The Russian Defense Ministry said it had attacked electricity and gas facilities as well as Western weapons storage facilities.

“All intended targets were hit, resulting in power outages and disruptions in the rail transport of weapons and ammunition to the front,” it said.

EPA People seek shelter from shelling at a subway station in Kyiv, Ukraine. EPA

People seek shelter from shelling at a subway station in Kyiv, Ukraine, as air strike sirens sound across the country.

For Kyiv, it was a year full of bad news on the battlefield: Russia steadily gained ground in the eastern Donbass region.

There have been problems with mobilization and reports that Ukraine is running out of men.

But after Ukraine's surprise invasion of Kursk, videos of soldiers raising the Ukrainian flag over the Russian villages they had captured gave Ukrainian morale a much-needed boost.

And it has shown the West that Kyiv is still capable of carrying out complex, daring and, most importantly, successful offensives.

On Monday, Zelensky called on Western allies, including Britain, the United States and France, to change their rules and allow Ukraine to strike even deeper inside Russia.

Ukraine may use some Western weapons to attack targets in Russia – but no long-range weapons.

And he said: “We could do much more to protect human lives” if European air forces worked together with Ukrainian air defenses.

Also on Monday, Ukraine attempted to attack an oil refinery in Yaroslavl, a city northeast of Moscow, according to the regional governor. No casualties or damage were reported.

And the Russian Defense Ministry said it had destroyed nine drones over the Saratov region, 900 kilometers from the Ukrainian border.