Russia pounds Kharkiv in retaliation for 'terrorist attack' on border city
The Guardian|January 01, 2024
Moscow said yesterday that the wave of drone and missile strikes that wounded at least 28 people in Ukraine's second-biggest city late on Saturday was launched in retaliation for the "terrorist attack" on the Russian border city of Belgorod earlier the same day that reportedly killed 24 people.
Artem Mazhulin Kyiv Sam Jones
Russia pounds Kharkiv in retaliation for 'terrorist attack' on border city

Ukraine's national police said yesterday that at least six Russian missiles had reached Kharkiv on Saturday night, injuring more than two dozen people and hitting 12 apartment buildings, 13 residential houses, a kindergarten and a hotel favoured by international media.

The interior minister, Ihor Klymenko, said a British journalist was among the wounded, while the public German broadcaster ZDF said one of its television crews had been in the Kharkiv Palace hotel.

A Ukrainian translator was hit by debris and seriously wounded, with one of the team's security guards also sustaining injuries, ZDF said.

The missile strikes, which came as Kharkiv prepared for New Year celebrations, were followed by waves of drone attacks on housing blocks.

The Ukrainian air force said it had destroyed 21 of 49 Iranian-made Shahed drones that Russia had used to target "the frontline of defence, as well as civilian, military and infrastructure facilities".

In a statement yesterday, Russia said it had attacked military facilities in Kharkiv overnight - including a hotel housing military commanders and "foreign mercenaries" - in response to Ukraine's strikes on Belgorod on Saturday.

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