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Russia unleashes a massive assault on Ukraine’s capital, killing at least 30

Victoria Butenko , Kosta Gak , Lex Harvey Lex Harvey , Anna Chernova , Ivana Kottasová Ivana Kottasová

Iryna Moskaeva and her children jumped out of their beds and started running after an explosion rocked their Kyiv apartment early on Thursday, one of many residential buildings hit during a massive Russian attack that killed at least 30 people across the Ukrainian capital.

But there was nowhere to go. “All the windows in the room were shattered, and the door was jammed – I couldn’t open it,” the 61-year-old told CNN.

Moskaeva, who was eventually rescued by firefighters, said this was the second time that a Russian attack had damaged her home. “The first time there was an attack like this, I started crying – I was shaking so badly,” she related. Now unable to enter her apartment and going to stay with relatives, she said she was worried about getting to work on Monday. “How am I supposed to get there? There’s no power, no clothes to change into, there’s nothing.”

Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched nearly 500 drones and more than 70 missiles toward the country in a “massive combined strike,” simultaneously targeting the capital from different directions. While most of the missiles and drones were intercepted, a total of 33 projectiles made impact.

Ukrainian authorities said emergency response teams were deployed to 59 locations across the city to address the aftermath of the attack.

Moscow’s military called the assault a retaliation for Ukrainian attacks on its own civilian infrastructure.

As of Friday morning Ukraine time, 30 people were confirmed dead and at least 91 injured, according to Tymur Tkachenko, head of the Kyiv city military administration. Search and rescue operations continued, with more people feared buried under the rubble.

The strikes damaged dozens of sites across the city, “most of them ordinary residential buildings,” as well as an ambulance station, a research institute, a hotel and other businesses, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said.

During a visit to Moskaeva’s damaged residential building in Kyiv later on Thursday, Zelensky said the Russian attack destroyed 64 apartments there and killed at least three people.

“The attack was specifically designed by the Russians to cause maximum damage,” Zelensky said in a Thursday address.

“Unfortunately, there is a shortage of anti-ballistic systems, a shortage of Patriots, and we need our partners – first and foremost the United States of America and our European partners – to be more active in providing assistance in this regard.”

Some 52,500 Kyiv residents, including 4,500 children, spent the night sheltering in the capital’s subway stations, according to the Kyiv Metro.

“It was a terrible night for Kyiv,” said the city’s mayor Vitaliy Klitschko.

The “most significant destruction” was to a residential building in Darnytskyi, to the southeast of the capital, part of which “was literally blown away,” Klitschko said. Rescuers are continuing to search for people under the rubble, among them a 15-year-old girl and her family, he added.

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