HomeEuropeAt least 23 killed in Russian attack, Ukrainian president says new assault...

At least 23 killed in Russian attack, Ukrainian president says new assault possible

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By Valentyn Ogirenko and Anna Voitenko

KYIV, June 2 (Reuters) - Russia pounded Ukraine ‌with hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles early on Tuesday, killing 23 people and wounding 130, and President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Moscow could launch a ​new assault for the second night in a row.

The strikes on cities including Kyiv and Dnipro followed Russian warnings of "systematic" attacks on the capital after a drone attack on a dormitory in Ukraine's Russian-held region of Luhansk last month. Kyiv denies targeting the dormitory.

It was ⁠the third heavy assault on Kyiv in under a month, but Russia has been relentlessly attacking Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv, since it invaded its smaller neighbour in 2022.

U.S.-brokered talks on the war in Ukraine have stalled, with Washington focused on Iran, while Russian battlefield advances have slowed and Kyiv has boosted strikes on Russian oil refineries.

ZELENSKIY CALLS FOR AIR DEFENCE SUPPLIES 

Zelenskiy said there was evidence Russian forces could strike again on Tuesday night.

"According ​to our intelligence, another large-scale attack may occur tonight," he said in his nightly video address.

"Please, I strongly urge you to pay attention to air raid alerts."

Zelenskiy repeated that Ukraine was short of weapons to counter incoming Russian missiles. "Unfortunately, the current level of supplies for ‌our air defence does not enable us to intercept a significant portion of the missiles," he said.

He said more than 70 missiles and 650 drones had been deployed overnight and Russian forces had deployed 100 more drones throughout the day on Tuesday.

Earlier, the Ukrainian president urged Washington to send additional Patriot missile interceptors.

"If Ukraine is not protected from ballistic and other missile strikes, these attacks will continue," Zelenskiy said on Telegram.

The Kremlin said the war ⁠had entered "a new paradigm" after what it called "inhumane acts of terror" by Ukraine's military against civilians, echoing accusations Kyiv has made against Russian forces. Moscow warned last week of systematic strikes ⁠and urged foreigners to leave Kyiv.

Zelenskiy sent a letter last week to U.S. President Donald Trump and Congress, asking for air defence systems. As of Monday, officials said he had not received a response. 

Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha urged partners to impose tougher sanctions on Moscow and provide more military support.

"Moscow is losing on the battlefield. No number of missiles can change this. What we can change is Russia's ability to continue terror," he said on X.

The U.S. has been Ukraine's main foreign supplier of weapons but Kyiv has also been purchasing Patriot missiles through a NATO initiative, financed by its European allies.     

'SOME KIND OF APOCALYPSE' 

Moscow's war in Ukraine has killed tens of thousands, forced ‌much of the population out of their homes and devastated cities, towns and villages. Russia controls about one-fifth of Ukraine. 

Ukraine has also hit civilian targets during attacks on Russia or Russian-occupied areas, though on a much ⁠smaller scale. Both sides deny targeting civilians.

In New York, U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said Secretary-General Antonio Guterres "strongly condemned" the Russian attacks. He repeated Guterres' appeal for "immediate ‌de-escalation, leading to a full, immediate, and unconditional ceasefire in this conflict."

Photographs on Tuesday showed explosions and smoke billowing over high-rise buildings in ​Kyiv, where officials said seven people were killed, including one person Mayor Vitali Klitschko said had died while being treated in hospital. At least 90 were wounded.

"We couldn't understand what was happening - some kind of apocalypse?" Olha Mudra, her face and clothes covered in dust, said at the site of one strike, accompanied by her six-year-old daughter Natalia.

Sixteen people were killed overnight, including two young boys, in the southeastern city of Dnipro, local ‌officials said. New attacks later on Tuesday injured at least two more people.

In Kyiv, at least nine high-rise buildings, a kindergarten, a clinic, offices and ​administrative buildings were damaged. The attack cut power to 140,000 residents, power company DTEK said.

More than ⁠40,000 took shelter in the Kyiv subway system - the biggest number in recent years. Some carried pets, belongings and mattresses.

The Russia-installed head of parts of Donetsk Region held ‌by Moscow said one person died in a Ukrainian drone attack.

HYPERSONIC MISSILES

Ukraine's Air Force said the attack included 33 hard-to-shoot-down ⁠ballistic missiles and eight Zircon hypersonic missiles, which appeared to be the largest number of such missiles used at once during the war. 

The Zircon has a range of 1,000 km (625 miles) and travels at nine times the speed of sound, Moscow says. Ukrainian Air Force units shot down or neutralised 40 missiles and 602 drones, but no Zircon was listed among them.

Russia's defence ministry said it had launched a "massive strike" on defence industry targets using ​high-precision long-range weapons, hitting 10 military production sites in Kyiv.

Russian regions also ‌came under attack. The Ilsky oil refinery, in the southern Krasnodar region, caught fire after a drone attack, local authorities said on Telegram. Ukraine's military confirmed the strike.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said air defence units had destroyed ⁠eight Ukrainian drones headed for the capital in the hours leading up to midnight on Tuesday.

Russia downed 148 ​Ukrainian drones overnight, Russian news agencies said, citing the defence ministry.

Reuters could not independently verify all the reports. 

(Reporting Reuters, Writing by Jekaterina Golubkova, Lincoln Feast and Anna Pruchnicka, Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom in ​Washington; Editing by Daniel Flynn, Clarence Fernandez, Timothy Heritage, Gareth Jones, Rod Nickel and Ron Popeski)

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