Five kids, with the youngest only three years old, were killed in a Russian attack in eastern Ukraine.
Vladimir Putin sent S-300 missiles to the city of Pokrovsk in the Donetsk region. It killed 11 people and hurt eight others. The governor of the Ukrainian-controlled part confirmed this.
Vadym Filashkin said that 11 people died in a very cruel attack, including five children between the ages of three and 17.
He said on Telegram that the attack proved that Russian forces are trying to cause as much sadness as they can in our country.
Video from the State Emergency Service of Ukraine showed rescue teams looking through piles of burnt rubble in the dark.
The strike happened around 3pm on Saturday. People kept looking for survivors at night because there was a lot of damage.
President Zelensky said that Russia attacked regular people’s homes.
He said: ‘Russia needs to know that there will be consequences for their actions. ‘
The dangerous attack on Pokrovks was followed by many drones and cruise missiles sent to Ukraine overnight.
The air force said on Telegram that Russia attacked mostly the southern and eastern areas, and they were able to destroy 21 out of the 28 drones.
However, it didn’t explain what happened to the three cruise missiles.
“The enemy is attacking the frontline areas of Kherson and Dnipropetrovsk regions with drones,” said air force spokesperson Yuriy Ihnat on TV.
Tag: President Zelensky
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Russian long-range missile attack claims lives of five youngsters
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11 people killed by rockets in Ukraine-Russian war including children – Officials
A Russian missile attack in eastern Ukraine killed 11 people, including five children, according to a local official.
The governor of Donetsk region said that S-300 missiles hit the town of Pokrovsk, which is in Ukrainian-controlled territory.
“The enemy is cruelly attacking innocent people, trying to cause as much suffering as they can,” Governor Vadim Filashkin wrote on Telegram.
In a video, President Zelensky said Russia’s troops attacked homes in the evening.
Mr Zelensky said Russia should suffer consequences for their attacks.
Russia has not said anything yet.
Pokrovsk is 70 kilometers (43 miles) away from Donetsk city, where Russian forces are in control.
Before the war, there were about 60,000 people living there. Despite being warned about the dangers, some people have been coming back to their homes.
In August, nine people died and many others were hurt in a Russian missile attack on the town.
Earlier this week, Ukraine sent over 70 flying robots into Russia after Russia started a big attack from the air. This caused people to leave their homes in the southwest city of Belgorod. -

73 people hurt as Russian missile hits President Zelensky’s hometown
The hometown of President Zelensky was targeted by a Russian missile, resulting in the death of a policeman and causing injuries to a minimum of 73 individuals, as stated by authorities.
According to the interior minister of Ukraine, Ihor Klymenko, nine police officers were injured in the attack on Kryvyi Rih.
Mr Klymenko shared pictures on Telegram of a building that was on fire. The pictures also showed burned wood and emergency workers helping the injured people leave the area.
According to the interior ministry, 73 people were injured by evening.
Mr Klymenko said that on Friday, three individuals died because a bomb from Russia hit the village of Odradokamianka in southern Ukraine’s Kherson region.
The strikes happened when Russia attacked multiple places in the country during the night.
They arrived a few days later after 16 individuals were murdered in a Russian strike on a market in eastern Ukraine, and pieces of a drone were discovered in Romania.
This made people who live nearby worried that the war could start happening in the country next to Ukraine, which is a member of Nato.
Three people died on Friday when a bomb from Russia hit Odradokamianka village in southern Ukraine, as shared by Mr.
On Friday, a funeral took place for an 18-year-old who was one of 16 people who died on Wednesday during a Russian attack on a market in Kostiantynivka, in the eastern Donetsk region of Ukraine.
The attack injured 33 people and destroyed the market. It happened when US secretary of state Antony Blinken was visiting Ukraine to evaluate their counteroffensive, but the attack became the main focus instead.
At the moment, Russia is organizing elections for local leaders in the portion of the Kherson region that it has authority over. There are elections happening in Donetsk, Luhansk, and Zaporizhzhia regions.
In Kherson, people who live there and Ukrainian activists are saying that election poll workers have been visiting houses, and they are being accompanied by soldiers who are carrying guns.
Ukraine has rejected the elections and wants its allies to condemn what Russia has done. They are asking their allies not to accept or support any government that comes from this voting process.
The war created many problems for other countries who were trying to handle the effects of the war on things like food availability, rising prices, and other important issues.
The UK said on Friday that it will organize an important meeting in November to discuss a global problem with food shortage. This decision was made because Russia decided to no longer be a part of an agreement to trade grain from the Black Sea region, and also because Ukraine’s grain supply has been attacked.
The ex-leader of the government, Boris Johnson, went to Ukraine on Friday and participated in the Yalta European Strategy event.
In a video shared on Mr. Zelensky’s Telegram channel, Mr. Johnson was shown listening to the Ukraine leader’s speech. He was accompanied by Michael McFaul, a former US ambassador to Russia who now leads a group working on sanctions against Moscow, and Mr. Zelensky’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak.
In his speech, Mr. Zelensky said that Ukraine is not only a country in Europe fighting against Russia, it is also a moral choice and a symbol of freedom that people from different countries can relate to and recognize. -

Kiev disputes responsibility for a purported Kremlin drone strike
Ukraine vigorously denied Russia‘s unusual allegation that it attempted to kill Russian President Vladimir Putin by using a drone strike on the Kremlin late on Wednesday.
The attack was stopped, according to the Kremlin, and the supposed drones were destroyed. The Kremlin, the official house of the Russian president and the most prominent emblem of power in Moscow, was visible in a video that surfaced on social media.
The Kremlin said in a statement that it saw the purported attack as terrorism and a calculated attempt on Putin’s life. “Russia reserves the right to take retaliatory measures wherever and whenever it sees fit,” it continued.
Ukraine denied involvement in the alleged strike. “As President Zelensky has stated numerous times before, Ukraine uses all means at its disposal to free its own territory, not to attack others,” the Ukrainian presidential spokesman, Sergiy Nykyforov, told CNN on Wednesday.
US officials said they were still assessing the incident, and had no information about who might have been responsible. Whatever the truth, any admission of a security breach at the heart of the Kremlin is remarkable.
Moscow said the alleged attack took place in the early hours of Wednesday. The Russian president was not in the building at the time, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.
CNN analysis of video showing the incident support the Kremlin’s claim that two drones were flown above the Kremlin early Wednesday, but did not show evidence of Ukrainian involvement:
A video that appeared to show smoke rising from the Kremlin surfaced on a local neighborhood channel on social media platform Telegram at 2:37 a.m. local time Wednesday. The first reports of the incident citing the Kremlin came via Russian state media TASS and RIA around 2.33 pm local time – around 12 hours later.
Shortly after the first media reports, another video appearing to show the moment a drone exploded above the Kremlin began circulating widely on social media. In the video, the drone appears to fly towards the building’s domed roof, followed by what looks like a small explosion.
In this video, two people appear to be climbing on the dome holding flashlights, and can be seen ducking down just before the moment of the explosion. The people climbing the drone are not present in the first of these videos, but appear in the second, suggesting they were responding to the fire caused by the first drone at the time the subsequent drone appeared.
The Kremlin Press Service has called the purported drone attack an “attempt on the President’s life,” said it was an “act of terrorism” and blamed Ukraine.
But Kyiv said that accusation of terrorism was better directed at Russia. “A terror attack destroyed blocks of residential buildings in Dnipro and Uman, or a missile at a line at Kramatorsk rail station and many other tragedies,” said Nykyforov, the Ukrainian presidential spokesman.
“What happened in Moscow is obviously about escalating the mood on the eve of May 9.” That day is known as “Victory Day” inside Russia, commemorating the Soviet Union’s role in defeating Nazi Germany in World War II.
“It’s a trick to be expected from our opponents,” he said.
Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak also denied Kyiv had any involvement and said it made no sense for Ukraine to have carried out the alleged strike.
“First of all, it absolutely does not solve any military goals. And it is very unhelpful in the context of preparing for our offensive actions. And it definitely does not change anything at a battlefield,” he said. “This would allow Russia to justify mass strikes on Ukrainian cities, civilians and infrastructure facilities. Why would we need that? What’s the logic?”
Podolyak also said Moscow’s claims were an attempt at controlling the narrative ahead of a much-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive.
“Russia without a doubt is very afraid of Ukraine starting an offensive on the front line and is trying to seize the initiative, distract the attention and create distractions of a catastrophic nature,” he said. “So, Russian statements on such staged operations need to be taken as an attempt to create pretext for a large-scale terrorist attack in Ukraine.”
A US official said Washington had no warning about the alleged drone attack. “Whatever happened, there was no advanced warning,” the official told CNN, adding that authorities are still trying to find out more.
Another US official told CNN they are still working to assess Russia’s claims, and have not yet validated the Kremlin assertion that Ukraine tried to assassinate Putin.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had seen reports from Moscow about the alleged attack, but “can’t in any way validate them.”
“We simply don’t know,” Blinken said Wednesday at a Washington Post Live event.
“We’ll see what the facts are. And it’s really hard to comment or speculate on this without really knowing what the facts are,” Blinken added.
The founder and financier of the Wagner private military company, Yevgeny Prigozhin, declined to comment on the alleged attack when asked about the incident.
“I can’t comment on this phenomenon in any way. Maybe it was lightning,” Prigozhin said in a post on his official telegram channel. Instead, the Wagner leader asked for more ammunition.
In his response to the attack, Russian State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin called for the use of weapons capable of “stopping and destroying the Kyiv terrorist regime.”
Kyiv is approximately 862 kilometers (about 535 miles) from Moscow. Russia has accused Ukraine of multiple attempted drone strikes deep inside Russian territory, including one earlier this year when the governor of the Moscow region claimed a Ukrainian drone had crashed near the village of Gubastovo, southeast of the capital.
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China ‘stands on the side of peace’ – Xi tells Zelensky
President Zelensky of Ukraine has been informed by Chinese President Xi Jinping that China will send a special representative to his country.
Following Beijing’s declaration that it wished to serve as a peace mediator in Russia’s war against Ukraine, Mr. Xi spoke by phone with Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday, according to state media. This action was long overdue.
The phone call’s contents were not immediately made public.
Zelensky tweeted after the call, “I had a long and meaningful phone call with President Xi Jinping.”
‘I believe that this call, as well as the appointment of Ukraine’s ambassador to China, will give a powerful impetus to the development of our bilateral relations.’
China has tried to appear neutral in the war but refused to criticize Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Chinese government released a peace proposal in February and called for a cease-fire and peace talks.
Mr Xi and Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a joint statement before the February 2020 invasion saying their governments had a ‘no limits friendship.’
‘Negotiation is the only viable way out,’ state TV said in a report on Mr Xi’s comments to Zelenskyy.
‘There is no winner in a nuclear war,’ the report said. ‘All parties concerned should remain calm and restrained in dealing with the nuclear issue and truly look at the future and destiny of themselves and humanity as a whole and work together to manage the crisis.’
China has ‘always stood on the side of peace’, state media reported following the call.
‘On the issue of the Ukraine crisis, China has always stood on the side of peace and its core position is to promote peace talks,’ CCTV reported Xi as saying during the conversation.
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Ukraine war: Odesa port reopens after attack on power grid
Operations have resumed at the Ukrainian Black Sea port of Odesa after Russia attacked energy facilities in the city with Iranian-made drones.
The port in the country’s south was shut after strikes on Saturday knocked out power to 1.5 million people and all non-critical infrastructure.
With sub-zero temperatures expected this week, Ukraine’s president said it could take days to restore power.
Under a UN-brokered agreement, Odesa is one of three ports used to ship grain.
The agreement, mediated by Turkey and the UN, allows Ukrainian products to be transported safely to the rest of the world. The deal has helped bring down soaring global food prices.
Although operations at Odesa port were briefly stopped on Sunday, Ukraine’s agriculture minister said grain exports would not be suspended.
In total, Russia launched 15 Iranian-made drones at the regions of Odesa and neighbouring Mykolaiv, 10 of which were shot down, Ukraine’s armed forces said.
“The situation in the Odesa region is very difficult,” Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address. “Unfortunately the hits were critical, so it takes more than just time to restore electricity. It doesn’t take hours, but a few days.”
Thousands of people have made use of the region’s “points of invincibility” – facilities which supply electricity and warmth to residents during blackouts.
Images posted on social media showed dozens of people crowding round power points charging their phones.
The strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, which intensified in mid-October, have left millions of people in nearly all regions of the country without power, as temperatures drop below zero.
A complete blackout across the entire country is a now realistic scenario, Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told German television on Sunday.
Russia’s frequent attacks on Ukraine’s power grid have led to calls for the West to supply Kyiv with better air defence weapons.On Sunday, US President Joe Biden told President Zelensky that Ukraine’s air defence was a priority for Washington.
The two spoke in a phone call before a meeting of G7 leaders on Monday, where further sanctions against Russia and Iran will be discussed.
The proposed measures would target Iran over its supply of drones to Russia, while EU foreign ministers are set to discuss a ninth package of sanctions which would place almost 200 more individuals and entities on its sanctions list.
East of Odesa, Ukrainian strikes killed two people in the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol over the weekend, according to Moscow-installed local authorities.
The city has been under occupation since early March and is a major logistics hub for Russian forces in the south-east.
It is strategically located between Mariupol to the east, Kherson and the Dnipro River to the west, and Crimea to the south