News Flash
KHARKIV, Ukraine, June 22, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Russia bombed a residential
building in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Saturday, killing three people and
wounding almost 40, as it stepped up renewed hostilities.
Officials said a guided bomb attack hit Ukraine's second largest city,
located close to the Russian border, and President Volodymyr Zelensky posted
footage of the torn-off facade of an apartment block and a crater outside.
"Russian terrorists have again hit Kharkiv with guided bombs," he wrote on
Telegram, announcing three dead while rescuers still searched the rubble.
Regional governor Oleg Synegubov said there were 37 injured. "Doctors are
fighting for the lives of 4 patients - two women and two men, who are in
serious condition."
He posted photos of blown-out windows and cars and a minibus damaged by the
blast, which tore through the walls of flats, leaving tangled wreckage and
rubble.
Rescuers worked with dogs, cutting through doors and spraying water at a
fire in the flats near the city's central bus station.
Bodies in bags were laid on the ground outside, an AFP journalist saw.
One dead woman lay at a bus stop, wearing bright sandals, her bag by her
side.
An elderly woman with blood running down her face and legs was helped onto
a stretcher as she protested she did not want to go to hospital.
Prosecutors said Russia used its new UMPB D-30 SN guided bombs, launched
from the Belgorod region bordering Ukraine.
Russia's Rossiiskaya Gazeta newspaper wrote this month that the weapons are
now being used in the Ukraine war.
They can be fired from the ground at long range as well as from planes, it
wrote, which means "it is almost impossible to anticipate" an attack.
Synegubov said "only civilian infrastructure was damaged".
Russia launched a new offensive in the region in May, taking significant
territory. It has increasingly targeted Kharkiv with air-launched bombs.
In May, a guided bomb attack on a hardware store killed 16 people and
wounded dozens.
Defence Minister Rustem Umerov said last month that Russia has dropped
almost 10,000 guided bombs on Ukraine this year.
"This Russian terror with guided bombs must be stopped and can be stopped.
We need strong decisions from our partners so that we can destroy Russian
terrorists and Russian combat aircraft where they are," Zelensky said.
Russia also launched 16 cruise missiles and 13 attack drones at energy
infrastructure in several regions during the night, Ukraine's military said.
This was Russia's "eighth massive, combined attack on energy infrastructure
facilities" in three months, the energy ministry said.
More than two years into the Russian invasion, missile and drone attacks
have crippled Ukraine's electricity generating capacity and forced Kyiv to
impose blackouts and import supplies from the European Union.
Russia said its troops "carried out a group strike with long-range
high-precision weaponry from air and sea and also drones on Ukrainian energy
facilities that power arms production".
The defence ministry said strikes targeted stores for munitions and
"air-launched weapons provided to the Ukrainian military by western countries".
"All the set targets were hit," the ministry said, justifying the strikes
as retaliation for Ukrainian attacks on Russia's energy network.
Ukraine's energy ministry said energy facilities in the southern
Zaporizhzhia and western Lviv regions was damaged.
Maksym Kozytskyi, governor of the Lviv region, said one attack started a
fire at "a critical energy infrastructure facility".
The country's energy operator, Ukrenergo said two employees were wounded in
the southern Zaporizhzhia region.
Russian attacks have destroyed half of Ukraine's energy capacity, according
to Zelensky.
- Shelling deaths –
In Zaporizhzhia, Russian artillery shelling also killed one civilian,
according to the regional military administration, while a policeman manning a
checkpoint was killed by a drone in the southern Kherson region, police said.
Five civilians were killed by shelling in frontline areas of the Donetsk
region, regional head Vadym Filashkin said.
Frontline clashes were reported in the Donetsk region near the towns of
Pokrovsk and Toretsk, where Moscow "continues to increase the pace of offensive
actions, deploying significant forces," Kyiv's military said.
Russia's defence ministry said troops had improved positions in the
Donetsk, Lugansk and Kharkiv regions.
The head of Russian authorities in the Donetsk region, Denis Pushilin, said
the region had come under attack from Ukraine.
Three men working for a construction firm were killed by cluster munitions,
he said.
In Russia's southern Belgorod region, a man was killed by shelling of a
farm near the border with Ukraine's Kharkiv region, said governor Vyacheslav
Gladkov.