Russia launched a rare daytime drone attack on Ukraine, injuring dozens – National
More than 550 drones were launched at Ukraine in the middle of the day, Ukraine’s air force said, an abrupt change from Russia’s usual tactic of launching similarly massive aerial attacks at night during its more than four-year-old war.
It followed an earlier attack overnight in which it fired hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles. Taken altogether, Russia had launched nearly 1,000 long-range drones at Ukraine since Monday evening, Kyiv said.
There was no immediate comment from Russia.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, speaking in his nightly video address, said the scale of the attacks showed that more pressure had to be exerted on Russia.
“The scale of this attack clearly shows that Russia has no real intention of ending this war. And considering that Russia is also helping the Iranian regime carry out strikes in the region, the conclusion is obvious,” he said.
“Without additional and strong pressure on Russia, without tangible losses for them there in Moscow, no desire will develop to move away from the war or return to peace.”

Video footage posted online showed a drone crashing into an old building next to a church in the historic center of Lviv, 60 km (37 miles) from the Polish border, and Warsaw said it scrambled fighter jets.
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Twenty-two people in the city were wounded, officials said.
Russia attack hits UNESCO World Heritage site
The attack stunned residents of Lviv, which lies closer to Vienna than to the nearest active frontline on the other side of Ukraine. Although it has seen some lethal bombardments, they are far less frequent than in other major cities.
Resident Tetiana Kachkovska saw the drone glide past the fifth floor window of her workplace.
“My hands were shaking, my legs were shaking,” she recalled. “You can’t get used to this.”
Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi said a residential building was hit by a second drone. Debris from a third fell in a street.
“Russia is attacking a crowded city center in broad daylight,” Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko wrote on X.
Lviv regional governor Maksym Kozytskyi said part of the Bernardine monastery complex in the historic center of Lviv, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, had been damaged.
In another western Ukrainian city, Ivano-Frankivsk, a national guard soldier and his 15-year-old daughter were killed by a strike, according to regional Governor Svitlana Onyshchuk.
She said he had attended the birth of his daughter at a nearby maternity hospital several days ago. Mayor Ruslan Martsinkiv said windows at that hospital had been blown out, but nobody inside was harmed.
Vinnytsia Governor Natalia Zabolotna said one person had been killed and 13 wounded in her region, southwest of Kyiv.

Air defenses engaged drones throughout the day near Kyiv.
Officials in the western region of Ternopil said two energy facilities were attacked.
Moscow denies targeting civilians, although its attacks have killed thousands since it invaded in February 2022. It says Ukraine’s civil infrastructure is a legitimate target because striking it can reduce Kyiv’s ability to wage war.
Ukraine has also targeted Russia’s energy system, particularly oil refineries, depots and transport terminals.
Earlier overnight attacks killed five people across Ukraine and caused disruption to power supplies in Moldova, where parliament declared a 60-day energy state of emergency.
Ukraine’s air force said Russia had launched 34 missiles and 392 drones overnight and that 25 missiles and 365 drones had been downed or neutralized.
Two people were killed and 12 wounded, including a five-year-old child, near the eastern city of Poltava, a regional official said.
Zelenskiy said damage had been reported in 11 regions and issued a new appeal for allies to provide air defense munitions.
He has repeatedly warned that Kyiv, whose main supplier of air defense systems against ballistic missiles is the United States, will face a deficit of missiles while Washington is focused on the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.
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