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 ukrainian strike


Zelenskyy denies Russian claim of Ukrainian strike on Putin residence

Al Jazeera

Could Ukraine hold a presidential election right now? Will Europe use frozen Russian assets to fund war? How can Ukraine rebuild China ties? 'Ukraine is running out of men, money and time' Volodymyr Zelenskyy quickly denied a claim by Moscow that his country's military launched a drone attack on Vladimir Putin's residence in the city of Novgorod. The Ukrainian leader accused Russia of trying to derail peace talks a day after Zelenskyy met with US President Donald Trump.


Russia and Ukraine trade deadly strikes overnight

BBC News

Russia and Ukraine have conducted overnight drone strikes against each other, killing at least five people. Officials in Kyiv said a massive overnight Russian drone strike on the city had killed at least two people and injured six more. The attack in the early hours of Tuesday also hit at least two residential buildings, triggering fires and disrupting electricity and water supplies. Meanwhile, Russian officials said at least three people had been killed in a Ukrainian strike in the Rostov region. The latest attacks come after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed proposed changes to the controversial 28-point US peace plan for ending the war with Russia.


'Imagine if just one dam is hit': Russian-Ukrainian energy war heats up

Al Jazeera

Olena Rozumovska is at the end of her rope. Her two-bedroom apartment in an Soviet-era concrete building has no electricity or water supply, and the central heating is off after Russian drones and missiles struck Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city, on Friday. I want to howl with despair," the 33-year-old, whose husband, Mykhailo, is fighting against Russian forces in southeastern Ukraine, told Al Jazeera over the phone. The outdoor temperatures in Kharkiv barely rose above freezing on Friday, a cold drizzle was falling, and her apartment building "is losing warmth", she said. Early in the morning, she jumped out of bed on hearing the thud of a powerful explosion. More than a dozen heavy, blood-curdling blasts followed as she hid in the frigid basement with her two children, Bohdan, who is seven, and four-year-old Roxana. The children were "hysterical" because they had to leave their Siamese cat behind. Their pet, named Monya, wouldn't come out from under the sofa. What roiled her and millions of Ukrainians was the scope of the bombardment, which became the largest strike on their nation's energy infrastructure since the war began in 2022. "The aim is not just to destroy but to try yet again, like last year, to cause a massive disruption of the energy infrastructure," Energy Minister Herman Halushchenko wrote on Facebook. In the winter of 2022-2023, Moscow switched to massive shelling that targeted energy infrastructure and civilian sites after realising that its blitzkrieg to take over all of Ukraine had failed. Friday's attacks with about 60 drones and 90 missiles killed at least two people, wounded scores, struck Ukraine's largest dam and severed the power supply to the Russia-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, officials said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy rebuked the West for months-long delays in military aid. "Russian missiles have no delays, unlike aid packages for Ukraine.