Russia launched more than 600 drones and 47 missiles as it targeted eight regions in Dnpiro, authorities say.
Overnight Russian attacks in eight regions of Ukraine have killed at least five people and wounded 30 others, Ukrainian officials say.
The central Ukrainian city of Dnipro was hardest hit, with more than 20 people reported wounded, including a nine-year-old and two police officers, according to a Telegram statement from Ukraine’s National Police.
Two people died in the city of Nizhyn in the northern region of Chernihiv, while a one-year-old boy was among the wounded in Kharkiv region, police said.
A rescue operation was underway at a residential building in Dnipro, while emergency services worked in regions across Ukraine, including in Chernihiv, Odesa and Kharkiv.
Ukraine’s Air Force tallied 619 Russian drones and 47 missiles launched during the attacks.
Air defences shot down or suppressed 610 of them, it said.
“Russia’s tactics remain unchanged – attack drones, cruise missiles, and a significant number of ballistic missiles.
Most targets are civilian infrastructure in cities,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy posted on X on Saturday, along with a video of emergency workers responding to shelled-out buildings.
The latest attacks came on the heels of the killings of a Ukrainian married couple, both aged 75, during a Russian strike on the port city of Odesa yesterday.
Strikes also destroyed residential buildings and hit a foreign ship, Ukrainian authorities said.
The European Union this week approved a new round of sanctions targeting Russia’s energy, banking and trade sectors.
Discussions had previously stalled amid opposition from Hungary.
The EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, called on Friday for a new package of sanctions, telling reporters in Cyprus that the EU is “really pushing”.
Zelenskyy urged European leaders to expedite the process in light of the latest attacks.
“The pause caused by the blocking of the 20th package gave the aggressor additional time to adapt – it is important to counter this,” he added.
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Source: This article was originally published by Al Jazeera English
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