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#lviv missile attack
anastasiamaru · 9 months
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At night while everyone is asleep nasty vile enemy launched missiles at residential buildings
ruzzian"soldiers"struck critical infrastructure in Lviv early in the morning on July 6
36 people injured 5 dead
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russia is a terrorist state
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niveditaabaidya · 9 months
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Five People Killed After Russian Missile Attack In Lviv. #ukraine #lviv ...
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aapaww · 3 months
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Massive missile attack on Ukraine. Today, 12/29/23.
Kharkiv has been under missile attack since 4 am, which cannot be shot down by air defense. More than 20 explosions counted during one of the 4 attacks through the entire period. The number of victims is unknown.
Odesa, missiles hit 3 residential buildings. The number of victims is unknown.
Lviv, hit an apartment building and school. The number of victims is unknown.
Dnipro, missiles hit a shopping center and a maternity hospital. The number of victims is unknown.
Kyiv, many missile fragments exploded, hitting residential buildings and yards. During this period, more than 15 people there were injured.
And that's not all the cities.
Some people are being searched under the rubble of destroyed buildings. It is already known about dead people in many cities, but number of them is unknown by now.
russia used about 7 different types of weapons. The attack lasted from midnight on 12/28/23 until this moment.
russia is a scum.
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You can help people who suffered in this terrible war. Here's some funds for help:
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mariacallous · 3 months
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This is dated 12-29-2023, for the record.
It was a nightmare scenario that Ukrainian and Western officials had feared for months. Western officials have watched as Russia stacked up precision-guided munitions to launch targeted attacks on Ukrainian critical infrastructure in the winter while keeping up the pace of strikes on cities using unguided “dumb” bombs. 
And on Friday morning, it became a reality. Russia conducted a hailstorm of strikes across Ukraine, hitting Kyiv, Dnipro, Lviv, Zaporizhzhia, Odesa, and Kharkiv. There were at least 158 drone and missile strikes in all, which damaged hospitals, a shopping mall, and schools, killing at least 31 people and injuring more than 160. 
The numbers are still going up as search and rescue teams pick through the rubble. Russia fired its missiles with so much abandon that the Polish government confirmed one of the Kremlin’s projectiles entered its airspace. In the chaos that engulfed the Kyiv streets, one man tried to stop the fires from spreading by driving his burning car away from his neighbors. 
The renewed barrages have Ukrainian officials and U.S. experts questioning how long they’ll be able to keep the lights on during winter—or hold territory—especially with the long tail of U.S. military aid running out, unless Congress acts soon. 
Ukrainian officials believe that Russia’s capacity to strike is even greater than what it just showed off: The Kremlin can fire off about 300 Iranian-made suicide drones in one attack on Ukraine and about 150 ballistic missiles in one shot on Kyiv, said Sasha Ustinova, a Ukrainian lawmaker.  
And with the Ukrainian counteroffensive stalled and fresh weapons not flowing until January at the earliest, how resilient will the Ukrainians be? 
“The Ukrainians are heading for a tough winter, for obvious reasons,” Swedish Defense Minister Pal Jonson said in an interview earlier this month. “But I think that the Ukrainian morale is much, much higher than the Russian morale. What is crucial right now, of course, is that we all will step up support.”
But that morale is now getting tested, as Ukrainians were shaken out of bed by dozens of air raid alerts that lit up their phones. And the aid isn’t coming—at least until the U.S. Congress gets back from recess in the second week of January, and maybe for even longer. 
“Ukraine needs funding now to continue to fight for freedom from such horror in 2024,” Bridget Brink, the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, wrote in a tweet screenshotting the numerous air raid alerts sent to Kyiv residents.
U.S. officials have seen movement across the nearly stagnant front lines slow considerably in recent weeks, a trend that is expected to continue. The weather in Ukraine has hit subzero temperatures and piles of snow have mostly halted forward movement along the 600-mile front, underscoring the prospect of several months of attrition warfare. Ukraine is already making moves to lower the draft age to get more men onto the battlefield.  
Ukraine doesn’t need any silver bullets, experts say. It just needs the regular kind. 
“We’re clearly past the ground counteroffensive now,” said Peter Rough, a senior fellow and director of the Center on Europe and Eurasia at Hudson Institute. “Since it won’t get large numbers of longer-range precision fires, Ukraine probably needs to entrench and defend right now—and absent Congress passing the supplemental, even those defensive lines may not remain stable.” 
Still, Jonson said the Ukrainian military has been getting some access to more long-range strike weapons, which has forced Russian ships and aircraft to move farther away from the front lines. But Ukraine has had to build its military while fending off the invasion: Jonson said that Kyiv is operating about 600 types of Western weapons systems, while ferrying fuel and spare parts across the front line. All that on roads that will be coated with sleet, snow, and ice. 
Even with its limited arsenal of Western-provided long-range weapons like British-made Storm Shadows and the cluster variant of the U.S. Army Tactical Missile System, Ukraine has still made a dent, knocking out a Russian tank landing ship in Crimea on Tuesday. And experts believe that Russia’s fragile logistics system—which was never designed for continuous military operations across Europe’s second-largest country—is a good target.  
“If they had longer-range weapons, they could completely wreck the logistics system,” said Ben Hodges, the former head of U.S. Army Europe. “I think they know this is a real vulnerability for the Russians, particularly in winter.” 
But Ukrainians fear they are already running out of munitions—and time. Though Western-provided air defenses blanket much of Kyiv, they are not enough to defend against far-flung Russian attacks that could dot the country during winter. As much as Ukraine needs more air defenses to blunt attacks like Friday’s firestorm, Ukrainian officials have indicated that the falling temperatures have already shifted their priorities: Attrition warfare means a premium on artillery fire, and Europe is far behind on its target to produce a million artillery shells by March 2024.
“The biggest problem we’re going to run into is when they start shelling us heavily,” Ustinova said. “Because we will not have enough munitions.” 
But Ukraine has been forced to cut military operations as aid has dried up. Ukrainian Brig. Gen. Oleksandr Tarnavskyi, who heads up a group of forces in the southern push, told the BBC this week that Ukraine is facing particularly acute shortages of Soviet-era 122 mm and 152 mm shells, which still make up a large portion of Kyiv’s military arsenal. And if the Ukrainians want to apply forward pressure in spite of the snow, they have to clear entire minefields in front of them, only for the Russians to reseed the deadly explosives from the air. 
The Russian war chest is still heavily stocked. Hanno Pevkur, the Estonian defense minister, said in November that Russia still has about 7,000 to 8,000 tanks in reserve. Meanwhile, Russia has turned its sanctions-battered economy into a war economy. The Kremlin plans to spend 6 percent of GDP on defense next year. And Russian President Vladimir Putin’s deals for drones with Iran and ammunition with North Korea have indicated to Western officials that Russia’s game is quantity, not quality. 
“It doesn’t matter. As long as it fires, as long as it unfortunately kills Ukrainians, it is good for Russians,” Pevkur said. “They are increasing their production, especially ammunition. They don’t care about the quality. They care about the quantity.” 
Western officials believe that there are 300,000 to 400,000 Russian troops on Ukrainian soil, across a swath of occupied territory that is about the size of the contiguous Baltic states. Russian casualties have totaled about that many troops in the 22 months since the Kremlin’s full-scale invasion began. But experts caution that the cannon fodder won’t last forever. It might not have to last that much longer, though.
In November, Russian forces claimed to gain ground around the eastern city of Avdiivka, where Western officials believe the Kremlin is trying to make a pincer move to encircle the town, the site of a major coke fuel and chemical plant. They’ve also set their sights on the important railway junction of Kupyansk. 
“They just keep pushing these guys into a meat grinder to convey the sense that they have endless resources,” Hodges said. “They don’t have endless resources.” 
For now, though, absent Western aid, Russia’s focus on eastern Ukraine could lead Kyiv to cede more ground. 
“That’s very painful for us, because we pay thousands of lives to get every single kilometer,” Ustinova said.  
“They are already taking more territory,” she added. “Look at the map.”
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blue-sky-and-stars · 3 months
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"At least 39 people were killed in Friday’s strikes, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said. Ukrainian forces have called it the most ferocious airstrike launched by Russia since the beginning of the full-scale invasion."
"More than 160 people were injured as Russia hit Kyiv, Odesa, Dnipro, Kharkiv and Lviv in the early hours of Friday morning."
"Russia launched 158 missiles and drones on cities and towns across Ukraine on Friday in what Ukrainian officials described as the worst aerial bombardment since the start of the war in February 2022."
"Works to clear up the consequences of yesterday's Russian attack are still underway. Almost 120 cities and villages, hundreds of civilian objects have suffered," Zelenskiy said on the Telegram.
That's what I read yesterday, when I woke up. I didn't actually sleep more than 3 hours that night, because I was afraid. Not for myself - I was on a trip abroad - but for my family. I was also furious, livid.
Those terrorists are destroying everything they can. They hit a maternity hospital - mothers, pregnant women and infants survived only because they hid in time.
At least 39 people are dead. In one day. Can you even imagine how many people have they killed since the invasion in 2014? Do you have any idea how many families have they ruined? They don't target strategic buildings, they target schools, hospitals and kindergartens.
Every day, first thing I do after waking up is checking news. And when I hear about such horrible, terrible, inhumane terroristic attacks, I think: "if some deity or godlike entity or karma exist, why does this keep happening? Why do They allow russia to kill civilians, kids, even infants - innocents?"
Stand with Ukraine.
Слава Україні. Вічна пам'ять загиблим.
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kamogryadeshi · 9 months
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The Russians hit a high-rise building in Lviv with a Kalibr missile, Humenyuk
It can cover 2,500 km, so it actually covers the whole of Ukraine. According to her, Russia used 6 missile carriers with a total salvo of 36 missiles against Ukraine at night.
As a result of the attack, the 3rd and 4th floors in the two entrances of the building were destroyed, four people were killed, and 34 were injured.
UPD: In Lviv, another body was recovered from the rubble of a residential building. The number of dead increased to 5, another 40 people were injured
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anastasiareyreed · 3 months
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russia again massively attacked Ukraine just as people were sleeping or going to work
36 russian drones, 122 russian missiles have been launched on Ukraine this morning! russians continue massive shelling of Ukrainian cities. Dnipro, Kharkiv, Konotop, Kyiv, Odesa, Lviv, Zhaporizhzhia.
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it is currently known about dozens of dead and wounded. I'm afraid there are likely to be hundreds once rescuers clear the rubble and find all the victims...
a maternity ward, school and kindergarten, a shopping mall, multi-story residential buildings and private homes, a commercial storage and a parking lot.
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this time russia used almost everything it stockpiled: missiles, drones, deploying around 18 strategic bombers. people were burned alive in cars, someone's morning today was the last...
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the world doesn't have the right to ignore all the tragedies and suffering that the russians bring. if the world wants to show that it is on the side of good, russia must be stopped, Ukraine must be armed so that we can expel these terrorists from our territory.
remember, every time you listen to russian music, spread russian art and popularize russian artists, you spread and popularize the culture of a terrorist state. the culture of a terrorist nation, because all russians are to blame for the fact that Ukrainians and Syrians are dying every day in a genocidal wars. death, wars and suffering — this is the real face of russians. and the russians must feel condemned by the civilized world!
please, don't stand aside, spread the word, don't stop supporting Syria, Ukraine and the Ukrainian army!
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Since yesterday night people all over Ukraine woke up to the air raid alarm because russia yet again started attacking them with Shahed drones.
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As a result, during the night russia terrorised many Ukrainian cities, such as Kyiv, Dnipro, Odesa, Zaporizhzhia, Lviv and Kharkiv.
Just in one night russia hit Ukraine with 158 missiles and drones.
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CONSEQUENCES OF RUSSIAN ATTACK IN LVIV:
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According to the report of the Lviv OVA at the moment:
Residential buildings, three schools and a kindergarten are damaged.
15 people were injured. One person died.
CONSEQUENCES OF RUSSIAN ATTACK IN ODESA:
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According to the report of the Odesa OVA at the moment:
Residential buildings are hit. Rescuers unblocked and pulled out more than 20 people from under the rubbles.
The number of dead is 4.
THIS IS BARELY HALF OF THE ATTACKS IN ONE NIGHT. CONTINUATION OF THE POST.
And all this terror in just one night. As I was writing this post (15:00 Kyiv time) Ukraine is already under another wave of air raid alarms.
This is your daily reminder that russian war in Ukraine DID NOT end. It DID NOT stop. It DID NOT freeze. Russia continues to attack Ukrainians , specifically targeting residential buildings, shopping malls, schools and hospitals at night or the most busy hours to increase civilian casualties. Because this is all they can do. All russia can do is make terror.
This post is a reminder that russians don't want peace and don't plan to live in peace with Ukraine. They want to occupy and take away everything from us and what they cannot take they want to destroy.
Ukraine needs your help. Most of all Ukraine needs weapons to protect itself on ITS OWN territory and to fucking cast out russians from our country.
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anoonimthepoorchad · 3 months
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January 2nd, January 8th and January 13th. It feels like the 2024 year has been going on for more than three weeks already, with each week marked by a massive full scale air raid attack of russia on Ukrainians.
Each night begins the same: a message at around 2 am, reporting from 8 to 11 missile carrying planes getting off at russian airports and moving towards the shooting positions. Then at 6 am the full attack begins. Guided missiles swarm in the air, and around 6:30 am several sonic missile planes also launch the deadly weaponry towards the cities. Our air defenders do their best to protect us and at around 9 or 10 am everything ends.
This feels like nights of hell when you live far away from the frontlines. Cities like Dnipro, Kharkiv, Kherson and thousands and thousands located around the frontlines experience this everyday. But these nights become a nerve-wracking challenge for citizens of every corner of Ukraine (if we don't count all the other air raids which are less full-scaley, less weaponry is launched then). Kyiv, Kharkiv, Myrhorod, Lviv, Khmelnytsky and other cities in the west, north and centre-east of Ukraine have been targeted in these recurring air raids.
About the weaponry, these air raids are different from usual ones because all kinds of weaponry is used by russians during these. Sonic ballistic missiles "kinzhal" or daggers, which you can hear breaking your city apart just two or three minutes after they were launched thousands of kilometers away. These are only destroyed by the Patriot air defense complexes and it's hard af to do so. Our defenders are showing incredible precision but the debris still damages buildings and murders people. Ballistic missiles and guided missiles that can change their direction at any time, even circle around different cities until they are right above the targets. Shaheds, the kamikaze drones. All launched from different parts of russia and from occupated parts of Ukraine.
Personally, I have no right to complain as a person living in well-protected Kyiv, but hearing explosions very close to your home, hiding on the cold floor of the corridor and shaking at the thought that you live on the high enough floor to die in the debris if your home is hit... all this makes me lose sleep at night after I see the dreaded message at 2 am. It hasn't been 2 weeks since the new year but it feels like it's been ages. You try to find new beginnings and motivation to live, but you can't really shake off the feeling that tonight you were lucky to survive but you might not be the next time.
Do I have to repeat how important it is to donate to the Ukrainian army? Do I need to repeat that it's all russians, again and again, killing my people, ruining my home, while others "forgive" them for their horrible deeds? Do I have to say this again, that I'm only here writing this because of all the weaponry given to and bought by Ukraine, due to the support from different countries, and most importantly all the blood and lives of my people given for us to live? What can I do to stop this?
Please, if you read this far, help us survive and win, so that we never have to go through nights and days like these again.
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justacynicalromantic · 3 months
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Your average morning in Ukraine:
Russian terrorist state did another massive missile attack on the whole territory of Ukraine. Kyiv, Kharkiv, Lviv and many other cities were targeted. Many wounded.
A metro station in Kyiv:
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Btw, at the time of the hit my mom was IN that station. She works nearby. Thank God, she is alright. Scared to think what would have happened if her train arrived on the station just some ten minutes earlier - she would have been right outside the station at the time of the attack...
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suratan-zir · 1 year
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I overslept a massive air raid. 81 missiles and 8 "Shahed" drones. They fired pretty much every type of missiles they have at the same time: Х-101/Х-555, Kalibr, Kinzhal, Х-31П, Х-59 and drones. They are still targeting our energy infrastructure, even though by now it should be painfully obvious to them that they are accomplishing nothing with these attacks. Nothing that would bring russia closer to victory.
They do this at night so that people don't know about the air raid and can't take cover. In Lviv oblast russian missiles hit residential buildings, at the moment it's known about 5 deaths.
In Kharkiv there is is no electricity, water or heating. The city and the region are under fire from the russians every day.
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Later in the morning russian terrorists shelled a public transport stop in Kherson. 3 4 people died as a result of the shelling.
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katria485 · 7 days
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This morning ruzzians launched the biggest combined shelling on ukrainian infrastructure sińce the beggining of their agression. They used almost 90 missiles of different types and over 60 irano-russian kamikaze drones "Shahed". There are numerous casualties in Zaporizhzhia and Khmelnytskyi and destroyed residential buildings and energetic infrastructure objects in Kharkiv, Vinnytsia, Odesa, Sumy, Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk and other cities.
In addition they hit the Dnipro Hydroelectric Power Plant. In result a part of the power plant has been damaged beyond repair.
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I would like to remind you all the terrorist attack on the Kakhovka dam they did on 06.06.2023 which resulted in whole villages drowning underwater with lots of animals and immobile people. Espesially on the territories occupied by ruzzians.
And while the american government still wastes time and refuses to send the necessary weapons to Ukraine, I would like to thank the Ukrainian Armed Forces for the incredible hard works they are doing. They saved so many lives today.
Please don't stop supporting Ukraine and let's make ruzzia psy for their crimes!
Slava Ukraini🇺🇦
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thinkingimages · 2 months
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When Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022, Elena Subach found herself unable to photograph those fleeing the conflict. Instead she turned her lens on what they left behind
Elena Subach was born in Chervonohrad, a small coal-mining city in the Lviv region of western Ukraine. Her father was a miner while her grandfather painted icons for local churches. Such buildings are characterised by shiny, Baroque-style domes and ornate interiors, and make a spectacular impression on the city skyline. Subach uses her camera to make sense of the post-industrial landscape, but also the strange foreboding mood that defines cities like hers, and the ways that spirituality and superstition seep into everyday life in Ukraine.
As her artistic practice has evolved, Subach’s projects have become more vivid and evocative. Her work celebrates the inconspicuous objects that often evade attention, elevating them to near iconic status. She turns the fabric of life into a technicoloured patchwork of reality and myth. “Elena Subach is a tender observer of small moments and daily rituals. Ordinary items become totems: old ladies are elevated to the status of goddesses, and a simple hand gesture makes us think of magic,” says Polish photographer Rafał Milach, who nominated her for Ones to Watch. “She mixes memories, tropes and clichés, continuously drawing on and reimaging the visual identity of Ukraine.” 
When Russia launched a large-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, disrupting and devastating the lives of ordinary Ukrainians, it was the biggest military attack in Europe since World War Two. At the time, Subach was living in Lviv and working as a researcher at the Lviv National Art Gallery. With the sound of air-raid sirens warning citizens of incoming missiles, her instinct was to leave the city and go to Poland. Instead, she and her husband drove to Uzhhorod, a city in western Ukraine situated between mountains where she felt they would be better protected.
The following day, the couple joined the local volunteer movement, the Transcarpathian Gastronomy Battalion, which organises shelter, food and psychological support for fleeing Ukrainians seeking asylum in Europe. Subach’s team was stationed closest to the border zone. In March, martial law was imposed in Ukraine, banning adult men from leaving the country, and the days became marked by farewells. Men drove their families to the border and dropped them off; couples parted ways; all of them hugged, kissed and said goodbye.
“All this time, I couldn’t photograph people,” says Subach. “I did not want to, I did not dare to interfere in their already violated personal space, despite understanding the importance of documenting this history.”
Instead she turned her lens on the empty chairs on which people left their belongings, imbuing them with gravitas while preserving a sense of humanity.
“They seemed to me like small islands in a sea of people – places to stop and relax for a minute. In many cases this would be the first time a person had a chance to sit down in 24 hours. Thousands of people have passed by these chairs. I think [the chairs] are very important witnesses to this war.” 
Documentary photography can often reduce the victims of war to wounded bodies, and turn individual refugee experiences into one single story. Subach’s work does not show people encountering war but compels us to imagine them beyond the frame. 
www.elenasubach.com
Subach’s latest photobook, Hidden, is published by Besides Press and launches 15 September 2022.
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alttaritar · 1 year
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Russia attacked Ukraine with more than 120 missiles - Yle reporter in Kyiv's bomb shelter: "The city was still sleeping"
In Kyiv, at least three people were injured in the attacks. 90 percent of the western metropolis of Lviv is without electricity.
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According to Ukraine, this morning, December 29, Russia launched a major missile attack across the country, including the capital, Kyiv.
The Ukrainian Air Force characterizes the attack as "massive". According to it, Russia has attacked Ukraine from different directions with cruise missiles fired from airplanes and from ships at sea.
"The air alert came early this morning, around six, when the city was still sleeping," says Maxim Fedorov, Ylen's reporter in Kyiv.
More than 120 missiles were fired at Ukraine, informs Ukraine's strategic communications center Stratcom Centre.
There have been explosions at least in the regions of Kyiv, Pultava, Odessa, Sumy, Chernihiv and Žytomyr. Anti-aircraft has shot down Russian missiles in several areas across the country. In addition to Kyiv, there have been explosions in major cities in Kharkiv and Lviv, local authorities say.
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Red = areas occupied by Russia
Red stripes = status unknown
Yellow = areas seized back by Ukraine since September 10th.
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Mihailo Podoljak, adviser to the president of Ukraine, writes on Twitter that the aim of the Russian attacks is to "destroy critical infrastructure and kill civilians en masse".
Ukraine has been able to shoot down a large part of the missiles with its anti-aircraft systems. In Kiev, all 16 missiles fired at the city were shot down, the authorities say. The damage was caused by pieces of missiles that fell down.
"I myself heard a few explosions of anti-aircraft missiles over the center of Kyiv before I went to the metro station for shelter," says Yle's reporter Fedorov from the scene.
"The atmosphere in the metro is very calm, there are few people compared to the previous attacks. This is because the air alert came early and people who live on the other side of the Dnieper river cannot take the metro to the city center."
Fedorov says the air raids were silenced a little before 11 o'clock.
Kyiv mayor Vitaly Klytško writes in Telegram that there have been several explosions in the capital, in which at least three people have been injured. One of them is a 14-year-old girl.
According to Klytško, in the morning two people were rescued from the residential building that was hit and taken to the hospital. Klytško warned the people of Kyiv about power outages and urged them to charge their phones and stock up on water.
In Lviv, the largest city in the western parts of Ukraine, 90 percent of the electricity has been cut off due to airstrikes, Mayor Andri Sadovyi informs.
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kamogryadeshi · 3 months
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Mayor Sadovy showed the consequences of the Russian missile attack on Lviv.
Residential buildings were damaged by the blast wave.
UPD: As a result of a Russian missile strike, one person died in Lviv, three were injured, the Regional Military Administration.
UPD2: In Lviv, the number of wounded has increased to 8 people, the mayor said.
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panimoonchild · 5 days
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Russian culture is terror
Just another peaceful happy Sunday for Ukraine. This time, I didn't manage to sleep at all before the warning about the high level of danger. Iranian-Russian drones had already reached my region. 
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I would like to note that this next massive shelling would have been even more horrific if our strikes had not been launched from Crimea. Ballistics from Crimea would have been added.
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Glory to the Heroes!
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Here you can see how "all targets have been destroyed" according to the Russians. Thank our soldiers!
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Poland and its reaction are killing me. My cat and his eating time when missiles fly above my house.
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How close those cities of the Lviv region are to my home.
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Consequences of the night attack. Thank you for the defense of our warriors of the sky!
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Poland doesn't show the weakness to enemy. It is a very stupid thing.
The only right reactions of Poland people are:
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Second attack today.
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Same place. Double-tap tactic in the full glory as always. Thank you, without casualties.
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My cat Mambo. He doesn't get why he must not sit on the window while there are air alarms.
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Ukrainians are unbreakable. Kharkiv 🫂❤️‍🩹
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Ukrainians can't be themselves without jokes😅🤷
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And as this Ukrainian person pointed out, we go to bed knowing that Russian strategic aviation is up. For a Ukrainian, sleeping more than 2-3 hours is a record. You monitor the alarm, the phone falls out of your hands. You are sleep-deprived but alive. You still have time to sleep after the attack.
Please keep spreading our voices and donate to our army and combat medics (savelife.in.ua, prytulafoundation.org, Serhii Sternenko, hospitallers.life, ptahy.vidchui.org and u24.gov.ua).
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