Kyiv (Ukraine) (TIP): A missile strike on the Russian city of Belgorod near the Ukraine border on February 15 killed six people, including a child, and injured 18 others, a Russian official said. It was the latest in exchanges of long-range missile and rocket fire in Russia‘s war on Ukraine.
Hours earlier, Russia fired two dozen cruise and ballistic missiles at a broad area of Ukraine, hitting multiple regions after a midnight strike in Ukraine’s northeast killed five people in an apartment building, authorities said.
Five of the 18 people injured in Belgorod, a city of around 340,000 people, were children, regional Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said on Telegram. Tass news agency reported that 15 people were hospitalised.
A shopping centre and a school stadium were hit in Belgorod, according to Roman Starovoit, the governor of Russia’s Kursk region, which is next to Belgorod. “There are many casualties: dead and wounded,” he said on Telegram.
Russia’s Ministry of Defence said air defence systems destroyed 14 missiles over the Belgorod region that were launched by Ukraine using a RM-70 Vampire multiple launch rocket system.
Belgorod city, 25 miles (40 kilometres) north of the Ukrainian border, has been a regular target of Ukrainian fire, putting its residents on edge. Dozens of people were killed and injured in an attack there over Russia’s New Year holiday weekend.
Those assaults have undermined President Vladimir Putin’s attempts to reassure Russians that life in the country is largely going on as normal.
In Ukraine, five people were killed and 10 were wounded in the nighttime attack on the village of Velykyi Burluk, in the Kharkiv border region, regional Gov. Oleh Syniehubov said.
Hours later, missiles the targeted the capital Kyiv, the southern Zaporizhzhia region and Lviv in western Ukraine, among other places. The Ukrainian air force said it intercepted 13 of the 26 missiles fired across the country. Frequent Russian long-range bombardments are occurring as the almost two-year war has become bogged down in mostly trench and artillery warfare, which is destructive but is not bringing much change to the 1,500-kilometer (930-mile) front line.
Thursday’s salvos on Ukraine were notable for the geographic spread of its targets and the wide variety of missiles deployed by the Kremlin’s forces.
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says that one of his priorities is improving Ukraine’s air defence systems. (AP)