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Central Kyiv was rocked by explosions on Monday as Ukrainian air defences intercepted incoming Russian missiles and drones during a huge aerial bombardment of targets across the country.
The Ukrainian air force reported that 17 Russian bombers had launched high-powered missiles while dozens of attack drones targeted cities and critical infrastructure in all corners of Ukraine. The attack began around midnight and continued into the morning.
“The enemy is terrorising the whole of Ukraine with missiles again. The energy sector is in the crosshairs,” energy minister German Galushchenko wrote on Facebook.
The Financial Times witnessed two blasts from air defences engaging incoming projectiles over the Ukrainian capital at around 9am local time.
Serhiy Popko, head of Kyiv’s regional military administration, urged residents of the Ukrainian capital to remain in bomb shelters until the air raid alert was lifted.
“Energy workers are working to restore the lights. Keep calm and stay in shelters until the air-raid alarm goes off,” the Kyiv city administration told the capital’s residents. Water supply was also interrupted in some districts.
Explosions were reported by authorities in at least 15 regions, with civilian deaths reported in the western city of Lutsk and south-eastern Dnipro.
The regional military administration of Lviv reported that Russia had attacked energy facilities in the western region, resulting in partial power outages.
Moscow has been targeting Ukrainian energy facilities, leading to rolling blackouts across the country. These Russian attacks have taken out more than 9GW of the country’s power generation capacity, equal to about half of what the peak energy consumption was last winter.
Ukraine’s largest private energy supplier DTEK said on Monday that it and all providers had been ordered by Ukraine’s national transmission system operator to impose emergency blackouts across the country.
The city of Zhytomyr, with a population of about 250,000, was left without power and water after the region’s utility company ordered an emergency suspension after the attacks, according to local news outlets.
Ukraine had been anticipating a new wave of aerial attacks in recent days, with the US embassy last week warning of “an increased risk of both night-time and daytime Russian drone and missile attacks throughout Ukraine in connection with Ukraine’s Independence Day on August 24”.
The attacks come as Ukraine’s own ground forces expanded their incursion into Russia’s western Kursk region, which began on August 6.
Kyiv’s troops have captured more than 1,200 sq km of Russian territory during their operation, and taken captive hundreds of soldiers, including young conscripts. Moscow and Kyiv exchanged 115 prisoners each over the weekend.
Ukrainian long-range suicide drones also struck two buildings in southern Russia on Monday, apparently aiming for a nearby military air base. A video showed a drone exploding into the side of an apartment block in the city of Saratov at dawn. Four people were injured, the state Ria news agency said.
A drone also damaged a residential building in the city of Engels and drones were reportedly shot down in several other Russian regions, mostly bordering Ukraine. The Russian defence ministry claimed to have intercepted 20 drones overnight.
Meanwhile, in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, Russian forces made further advances towards the city of Pokrovsk, a major logistical centre for the Ukrainian military, according to analysts.
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