Russia targets Kyiv and Ukraine’s cities as Putin warns of further strikes
Russia
bombed the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and a host of other cities across the country
on Monday morning in a massive series of rush-hour attacks in apparent revenge
for the explosions on a Crimean bridge over the weekend.
At least 11
people were killed and more than 60 injured across the country in initial
casualty figures given by Ukraine authorities. Eight of the fatalities were in
Kyiv.
Among the
locations struck by Russian missiles were a playground, public park and
pedestrian bridge. Moscow said it had hit all “assigned targets”.
Among the
buildings hit was a German consulate building.
The hits
came just hours after Russia’s President Vladimir Putin described the attack in
Crimea as “act of terrorism” and blamed Ukraine. Later on Monday, he also
warned of further attacks on Ukraine at a security council meeting and
officials spoke of wanting to replace the regime in Ukraine.
Explosions
were also reported in the cities of Lviv, Odessa Kharkiv, Mykolaiv, Ternopil,
Kremenchuk and Dnipro, as well as overnight strikes in Zaporizhzhia.
Ukraine’s
foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said the attacks showed that President Vladimir
Putin “is a terrorist who talks with missiles”.
The attack
on Kyiv is thought to have been the largest on the capital since the beginning
of the war back in February.
Gruesome
images showed the body of a man in jeans laying apparently dead in a street at
a busy intersection, surrounded by flaming cars in the aftermath of one attack.
A soldier cut through the clothes of a woman who lay in the grass to try to
treat her wounds. A huge crater was ripped in the mud next to a playground in a
central Kyiv park.
“They are
trying to destroy us and wipe us off the face of the earth... destroy our
people who are sleeping at home in Zaporizhzhia. Kill people who go to work in
Dnipro and Kyiv,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said on the Telegram messaging
app.
“The air raid sirens do not subside throughout
Ukraine. There are missiles hitting. Unfortunately, there are dead and
wounded.”
He added
that Russian forces launched dozens of missiles and Iranian-built drones
against Ukraine.
At one of
Kyiv’s busiest road junctions, a massive crater had been blown in the road.
Cars were destroyed and buildings damaged. Two cars and a van near the crater
were completely wrecked, blacked and pitted from shrapnel.
Windows had
been blown out of buildings at Kyiv’s main Taras Shevchenko University.
National Guard troops in full combat gear and carrying assault rifles were
lined up outside an education union building.
“The capital
is under attack from Russian terrorists! The missiles hit objects in the city
centre (in the Shevchenkivskyi district) and in the Solomyanskyi district. The
air raids sirens are going off, and therefore the threat, continues,” mayor
Vitali Klitschko posted on social media.
Local
reports said that at least four explosions were heard from the city centre. The
attack on the Ukrainian capital comes after months of calm with a majority of
Russian offensive concentrated on the besieged country’s northeast, south and
frontlines.
The last
reported attack on Kyiv was recorded in June. Further air raid sirens sounded
across the capital in the afternoon.
The attacks
brought a chorus of outrage across the world.
French
President Emmanuel Macron expressed “extreme concern, as the strikes caused
civilian casualties” and renewed his pledge of more military aid for Ukraine.
The head of
Nato, Jens Stoltenberg, called the attacks “horrific and indiscriminate”, while
British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly tweeted that “Russia’s firing of missiles
into civilian areas of Ukraine is unacceptable”.
India, which
has criticised Putin’s invasion, said it was “deeply concerned” at the
escalation of conflict in Ukraine, and willing to support all attempts at
de-escalation.
Monday’s
strikes followed the explosion which damaged the only bridge over the Kerch
Strait to the Crimea peninsula, which Putin on Sunday called “an act of
terrorism aimed at destroying critically important civilian infrastructure”.
“This was
devised, carried out and ordered by the Ukrainian special services,” he said in
a video on the Kremlin’s Telegram channel.
Ukraine has
not claimed responsibility for the blast on the bridge but has celebrated it.
Senior Russian officials demanded a swift response from the Kremlin ahead of a
meeting of Putin’s security council on Monday.
The bridge
is a major supply route for Russian forces in southern Ukraine and a symbol of
Russia’s control of Crimea, the peninsula it proclaimed annexed after its
troops seized it in 2014.
Russian
Security Council Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev said ahead of the meeting that
Russia should kill the “terrorists” responsible for the attack.
“Russia can
only respond to this crime by directly killing terrorists, as is the custom
elsewhere in the world. This is what Russian citizens expect,” he was quoted as
saying by state news agency Tass.
He also said
that Moscow should “aim for the complete dismantling of Ukraine’s political
regime” and that “the Ukrainian state in its current configuration with the
Nazi political regime will continue to pose a permanent, direct and clear
threat to Russia.