Explosions rock Kyiv a week after Russian strikes

Several loud explosions rocked the center of the Ukrainian capital Monday, a week after Russia orchestrated a massive, coordinated air strike across the country.

Kyiv city mayor Vitali Klichko said the central Shevchenko district of the capital had been hit, and urged residents to take shelter. The early morning explosions sparked a fire in a non-residential building and damaged several apartment blocks, Klichko said in his Telegram channel. No further details were immediately known. There was no word yet on casualties.

The explosions came from the same central Kyiv district where a week ago a missile struck a children’s playground and intersection near the Kyiv National University’s main buildings.

Social media posts showed a fire in the area of the apparent strike, with black smoke rising into the early morning light.

Smoke rises and fills the streets after a drone fires on buildings in Kyiv.
AP

Russian forces struck Kyiv with Iranian Shahed drones, wrote Andrii Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian president’s office, in a post on the Telegram social media site. Russia has repeatedly been using the so-called suicide drones in recent weeks to target urban centers and infrastructure, including power stations.

Strikes in central Kyiv became a rarity in the last several months after Russian forces failed to capture the capital in the beginning of the war. Last week’s early morning strikes were the first explosions heard in Kyiv’s city center in several months, and put Kyiv as well as the rest of the country back on edge as the war nears nine months. Monday’s blasts seemed to continue what many fear could become more common occurrences in urban centers.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said last week’s strikes were in retaliation for the bombing of a bridge connecting the Crimean peninsula with the Russian mainland. Putin blames Ukraine for masterminding the blast, which suspended traffic over the bridge and curtailed Moscow’s ability to use the bridge to supply Russian troops in the occupied regions of southern Ukraine.

Medics help injured woman after after a drone fired on buildings in Kyiv, Ukraine, Monday, Oct. 17, 2022.
Medics help an injured woman after a drone fired on buildings in Kyiv.
AP

The strike on Kyiv comes as fighting has intensified in the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk in recent days, as well as the continued Ukrainian counteroffensive in the south near Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said last night in his evening address that there was heavy fighting around the cities of Bakhmut and Soledar in the Donetsk region. The Donetsk and Luhansk regions make up the bulk of the industrial east known as the Donbas, and were two of four regions annexed by Russia in September in defiance of international law.

On Sunday, the Russian-backed regime in the Donetsk region said Ukraine had shelled its central administrative building in a direct hit. No casualties were reported.

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Ukraine marks 9,000 dead soldiers in six months of war

Kyiv reported some 9,000 troops killed in action since February, a grim milestone as the Russian invasion reaches its six-month anniversary.

Kyiv’s military chief, Gen. Valerii Zaluzhnyi, referenced the figure at a veterans event on Monday, saying Ukraine’s children must be cared for because “their father went to the front line and, perhaps, is one of those almost 9,000 heroes who died.”

The statement — the first official death toll from Kyiv since the fighting began — is a rare look into the cost of a war that has been hard to quantify. The United Nations has routinely reported civilian casualty figures, most recently reporting 5,587 non-combatants killed.

Irina Tromsa, 55, is comforted by comrades of her son Bogdan, 24, a Ukrainian paratrooper killed during fighting against Russian troops.
AP

But in a war where Russian strategy has involved encircling and shelling cities, the UN has pointed out that access is limited, confirmation of deaths is difficult, and their numbers are almost certainly “considerably higher.”

Russia’s casualty figures have been a mystery for most of the war.

The Kremlin stopped publicly announcing casualty figures in March, after stating that 1,351 soldiers had been killed in a month of the war.

That figure, which was not widely regarded as accurate at the time, remains the last official accounting of Russia’s war losses.

US intelligence earlier this month estimated that some 70,000 to 80,000 Russian troops had been killed or wounded since the fighting began.

Last month, CIA director William Burns said as many as 15,000 Russian soldiers had been killed — roughly as many men as Russia is thought to have lost in its failed ten-year bid to takeover Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Men wearing protective gear, exhume the bodies of civilians killed during the Russian occupation in Bucha.
AP
Monday marks the first time Kyiv has acknowledged the war’s death toll in totality.
AP

Meanwhile, the war continues to be fought by inches, with Russia’s push for the eastern Donbas region effectively paused and a long-expected Ukrainian counterattack in the south near Kherson yet to materialize.

With Post wires

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