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Russia strikes Ukraine’s critical infrastructure in war’s largest drone attack

Kyiv, Ukraine
Reuters

Russian forces staged their largest ever drone attack on Ukraine overnight, cutting power to much of the western region of Ternopil and damaging residential buildings in Kyiv region, Ukraine’s officials said on Tuesday.

Intensified nightly drone attacks on Ukrainian cities are coinciding with a major push by Russia along frontlines in Ukraine’s east, where Russian forces have made some of the largest monthly territorial gains since 2022.


People take shelter inside a metro station during a Russian missile attack, amid Russia’s attacks on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine on 26th November, 2024. PICTURE: Reuters/Alina Smutko.

Of 188 drones used overnight, Ukraine shot down 76 and lost track of 96, likely due to active electronic warfare, the air force said. Five drones headed towards Belarus.

“The enemy launched a record number of Shahed attack UAVs and unidentified drones…” it said, in addition to using four Iskander-M ballistic missiles. Russia uses cheaply-produced “suicide” drones and low-cost “decoy” drones, which tie up Ukrainian air defences.

“Unfortunately, there were hits to critical infrastructure facilities, and private and apartment buildings were damaged in several regions due to the massive drone attack,” an air force statement said, adding that no casualties had been reported.

The attack damaged the power grid in Ternopil, a major city in western Ukraine, and cut power to around 70 per cent of the region, Governor Vyacheslav Nehoda said on national television.

Ternopil, some 220 kilometres east of NATO-member Poland, and the surrounding region had a population of more than a million before the February, 2022, Russian invasion, which drove many Ukrainians west.

“The consequences are bad because the facility was significantly affected and this will have impact on the power supply of the entire region for a long time,” Nehoda said.



Water cut off
The attack also cut off water and disrupted heat supplies, the head of the regional defence headquarters Serhiy Nadal said via the Telegram messaging app.

Nehoda said the emergency services had mostly restored the water supply by morning and the local authorities were planning to introduce planned power cuts in the attack’s aftermath.

Ukraine’s national power grid operator Ukrenergo said emergency power cuts were in effect in the region and that engineers were working to restore power supply.


RUSSIAN SHELLING KILLS TWO IN UKRAINE’S SUMY, PRESIDENT ZELENSKIY SAYS

Russian shelling killed two civilians in the city of Sumy in northeastern Ukraine on Tuesday, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said.

Zelenskiy said in a video on the Telegram messaging app that a rescue operation was underway at the site and more people could be under debris.

City officials earlier said that Sumy, located about 30 kilometres from the Russian border, had been hit by a Russian airstrike at about 12.10 pm. They said a car servicing station, several houses, and an educational building were damaged in the attack.

But Zelenskiy, citing preliminary findings, later said Sumy had been struck by a multiple-launch rocket system.

“It is realistic to protect against it only by destroying Russian weapons, the Russian launch systems on Russian territory. That is why the ability to strike at Russian territory is so important for us,” Zelenskiy said.

Russia’s defence ministry said that Ukraine hit Russia with US-produced ATACMS missiles twice over the last three days, adding that Moscow was preparing retaliatory measures.

The war between Russia and Ukraine is at a critical stage, with Moscow reported to be using North Korean troops and Kyiv using Western-supplied missiles to strike back inside Russia.

– OLENA HARMASH, Kyiv, Ukraine/Reuters



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Electric buses that service the city would be replaced with regular buses and generators would help with power shortages in schools, hospitals and government institutions, Nadal said.

Russia also targeted the capital Kyiv overnight, the military administration of the city said on Telegram, adding that air defence units destroyed more than 10 Russian drones.

Falling debris damaged four private residences, two high-rise apartment buildings, two garages and a car in the region surrounding the capital, its governor Ruslan Kravchenko said.

The drones approached Kyiv in waves and from different directions, but there was no damage or injuries in the city, Serhiy Popko, head of Kyiv’s military administration said on Telegram.

Most of Ukraine was under overnight air raid alert for hours, air force data showed.

– With reporting by VALENTYN OGIRENKO.

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