Monday, 18 Nov 2024

‘Terror on New Year’s Eve’: huge Russian missile attack kills one in Ukraine

‘Terror on New Year’s Eve’: huge Russian missile attack kills one in Ukraine


‘Terror on New Year’s Eve’: huge Russian missile attack kills one in Ukraine
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Russia fired more than 20 cruise missiles at targets in Ukraine on Saturday, killing at least one person in the capital Kyiv and injuring more than a dozen in what one official described as "terror on New Year's Eve".

Moscow's second major missile attack in three days badly damaged a hotel south of Kyiv's centre and a residential building in another district. A Japanese journalist was among the wounded and taken to hospital, mayor Vitali Klitschko said.

Russia has been attacking vital infrastructure in Ukraine since October with barrages of missiles and drones, causing sweeping power blackouts and other outages for millions as the cold weather bites.

"This time, Russia's mass missile attack is deliberately targeting residential areas, not even our energy infrastructure," foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba wrote on Twitter after the attack.

"War criminal Putin 'celebrates' New Year by killing people," Kuleba said, calling for Russia to be deprived of its permanent seat on the UN security council.

The attack was launched as Vladimir Putin said in his new year video message that his country is fighting in Ukraine to protect its "motherland", and to secure "true independence".

In the nine-minute message aired on Russian state television - the longest such address of his two-decade rule - Putin blamed the west for provoking the war and attempting to "weaken and split Russia".

In a speech dominated by Russia's war in Ukraine, Putin lauded all the country's servicemen fighting there as heroes.

The Russian defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, said earlier on Saturday that victory in Ukraine was inevitable. He admitted his country was facing difficulties in the 10-month war as it has been forced to retreat for several months.

"We meet the new year in a difficult military-political situation," he said.

As Putin was delivering his address, the Ukrainian capital was rocked by another wave of Russian attacks that killed at least one person, according to the city's mayor, Vitali Klitschko.

"There are explosions in Kyiv!" he wrote on Telegram. "Stay in shelters!"

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, the deputy head of the office of Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said missiles had hit a hotel and a detached house.

The governor of the surrounding Kyiv region, Oleksiy Kuleba, had warned shortly beforehand of a possible incoming missile attack, and said air defences in the region were engaging targets.

"The terrorist country launched several waves of missiles. They are wishing us a happy new year. But we will persevere," Kuleba wrote on Telegram in a separate post after explosions shook the capital.

Army chief Valeriy Zaluzhnyi said air defences shot down 12 incoming cruise missiles, including six around Kyiv region, five in Zhytomyrskiy region and one in Khmelnytskiy region.

The cruise missiles had been launched from Russian strategic bombers over the Caspian Sea hundreds of miles away and from land-based launchers, he said on Telegram.

Ukraine's human rights ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets described the attack as "Terror on New Year's Eve".

"The terrorist country is congratulating the Ukrainian people with missiles. But we are indestructible and unconquerable. There is no fear, but the fury is rising. We will definitely win," Lubinets said.

Klitschko said 30% of consumers were without electricity in the capital due to the introduction of emergency blackouts, but residents had central heating and running water.

Other cities across Ukraine also came under fire. In the southern region of Mykolaiv, local governor Vitaliy Kim said on television that six people had been wounded.

Zelenskiy repeated his earlier warnings on Thursday that Moscow could be planning to plunge Ukraine into darkness before the New Year's Eve holiday.

"Perhaps the enemy will try once again to make us celebrate the new year in darkness," he said in his overnight address.

He is expected to give his much-anticipated new year address on Saturday night.

Russia has been carrying out mass strikes on Ukraine's critical infrastructure for months, leaving much of the country without electricity.

Ukraine's defence minister, Oleksiy Reznikov, said in a video address late on Friday that Moscow was facing a shortage of high-precision weapons, including its Iskander ballistic missiles.

"We have counted how many they have fired at us, how many they had and how many they have left," he said. "They have dipped into a critical reserve."

Addressing the Russian population, Reznikov also said the Kremlin was planning to close its borders and announce a second wave of mass mobilisation in early January.

"I know for a fact that you have about a week left when you still have a choice," he said in Russian.

"In early January, the Russian authorities will close the borders to men, declare martial law, and begin another wave of mobilisation. Borders will also be closed in Belarus."

Putin earlier denied there were plans to launch a new recruitment drive. "Discussions of additional mobilisation measures simply don't make sense, the state and the ministry of defence have no need for that at present," he said on 5 December.

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