Russian missile and drone attacks have struck several major Ukrainian cities, killing at least five people and injuring dozens more in one of the most significant waves of assaults in recent weeks, as Kyiv warns that Moscow may be preparing for a broader offensive.
The bombardment targeted multiple regions, including the capital Kyiv, the eastern city of Dnipro, the northeastern Kharkiv region and the southern city of Zaporizhzhia.
The attacks came after Ukrainian authorities issued repeated warnings that intelligence assessments pointed to the possibility of a large-scale Russian strike.
In Dnipro, officials reported four deaths and at least 16 injuries following strikes that damaged residential neighbourhoods and civilian infrastructure.
According to the Regional Governor, Oleksandr Hanzha, all those injured had been hospitalised and were in moderate condition.
Images released by local authorities showed extensive destruction, including heavily damaged apartment buildings, burned-out vehicles and a devastated children’s playground. Emergency crews continued working through the morning to assess the extent of the damage and search affected areas.
The capital Kyiv also came under intense attack, with authorities reporting at least one fatality and 29 injuries. Explosions echoed across the city for hours as air defence systems attempted to intercept incoming missiles and drones.
According to Kyiv’s Military Administration Chief Tymur Tkachenko, attacks were recorded in several districts of the capital. Mayor Vitali Klitschko added that a suspected missile strike caused a partial collapse in a 24-storey residential building, raising fears that people could be trapped beneath the rubble.
“In the Obolon district, cars are burning after being struck by falling missile debris. There are also fires at two locations in open areas, including one near a kindergarten.”
Tymur Tkachenko
Additional fires broke out in residential areas after debris from intercepted missiles fell onto buildings and open spaces.
As air raid sirens sounded across much of the country, thousands of residents sought shelter in metro stations, underground facilities and designated safe zones. Witnesses reported crowded shelters throughout Kyiv as people waited for the attacks to subside.
Zelenskyy’s Fears Come to Pass as Deadly Russian Strikes Hit Ukrainian Cities

The latest attack follows warnings from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who urged citizens earlier to remain vigilant amid intelligence reports suggesting Russia was preparing a significant strike.
“Intelligence warnings regarding Russian strikes remain in effect. A massive strike is possible, they have prepared one. Our defenders are ready 24/7 to the fullest extent possible with the supplies currently available.”
Volodymyr Zelenskyy
In the Kharkiv region, authorities reported that ten people, including a child, were injured in a combination of drone and missile attacks. Mayor Ihor Terekhov said emergency services were responding to multiple impact sites across the region.
Meanwhile, an industrial facility in Zaporizhzhia was also reportedly struck during the overnight assault, although the full extent of the damage had not yet been determined.
Residents in several cities reported power outages and disruptions to essential services as emergency teams worked to restore infrastructure damaged during the attacks.
The strikes come after Russia announced last week that it intended to conduct “systematic strikes” against military targets and decision-making centres in Kyiv.
Moscow also urged foreign nationals to leave the Ukrainian capital, citing security concerns.
Russian officials indicated that the planned escalation was linked to a drone strike on a dormitory in the Russian-controlled Luhansk region last month that killed 21 people. Ukraine denied responsibility for the attack.
The Kremlin has increasingly framed recent military operations as retaliation for Ukrainian strikes carried out inside Russian-held territories and within Russia itself.
At the same time, Ukraine has intensified attacks on energy and military infrastructure inside Russia, including oil facilities and logistical sites. Both sides continue to deny deliberately targeting civilians, although civilian casualties have occurred repeatedly throughout the conflict.
The war, now in its fifth year since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, has settled into a prolonged conflict marked by drone warfare, missile attacks and attritional fighting along several front lines.
Efforts to negotiate an end to the conflict have made little headway in recent months. International diplomatic attention has increasingly shifted toward crises in the Middle East, limiting momentum behind peace initiatives involving Moscow and Kyiv.
Despite those challenges, Ukraine’s military leadership has maintained that its forces remain prepared to respond to any escalation.
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