At least 19 killed in Russian drone attack on apartment building, Ukraine officials say

More than 470 drones and 48 missiles were fired by Russia in the attack, the Ukrainian president says

A high-rise apartment building targeted in a Russian attack on Ternopil, Ukraine on November 19th. Photograph: State Emergency Service of Ukraine/ Anadolu via Getty Images
A high-rise apartment building targeted in a Russian attack on Ternopil, Ukraine on November 19th. Photograph: State Emergency Service of Ukraine/ Anadolu via Getty Images

Nineteen people were killed in a heavy overnight Russian missile and drone attack that struck an apartment building in the western Ukrainian city of Ternopil, Ukrainian officials said on Wednesday.

Another 66 people were wounded in the overnight strikes on Ukraine that targeted energy and transport infrastructure, forcing emergency power cuts in a number of regions in frigid temperatures.

Russia launched more than 470 drones and 48 missiles in the overnight attack, officials said.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged allies to increase pressure on Russia to end the war, including by providing Kyiv with more air-defence missiles.

The upper floors of the residential building in Ternopil were torn away in the attack. Black smoke poured upwards, while an orange glow burned through the haze from a fire in the tower block.

Poland, a Nato member state bordering western Ukraine, temporarily closed Rzeszow and Lublin airports in the southeast of the country and scrambled Polish and allied aircraft as a precaution to safeguard its airspace.

Mr Zelenskiy, who was due to hold talks in Turkey in efforts to revive peace negotiations with Russia, confirmed multi-storey residential buildings had been hit in Ternopil, and said others may be trapped under the rubble.

“Every brazen attack against ordinary life shows that the pressure on Russia is insufficient. Effective sanctions and assistance to Ukraine can change this,” he said on X.

Ukraine in ‘urgent’ need of funds, von der Leyen warns EU leadersOpens in new window ]

Energy officials said energy infrastructure had been struck in seven Ukrainian regions.

A Reuters witness in the western city of Lviv reported hearing explosions and Kyiv residents took cover in metro stations on Wednesday morning.

The full extent of the damage was not immediately clear but restrictions were placed on power usage for consumers across the country. - Reuters

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