City of Kryvyi Rih hit by ‘massive’ Russian missile strike
Russia launched a “massive missile attack” overnight on the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, killing and wounding people and damaging civilian infrastructure, officials said early on Tuesday.
“There are dead and wounded,” Serhiy Lisak, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region where Kryvyi Rih is located, said on the Telegram messaging app.
Russian airstrikes hit several civilian structures in the city, including a five-storey building, said the mayor of Kryvyi Rih, Oleksandr Vilkul, adding “likely, there are people under the rubble”.
The governor posted a photograph of a five-storey apartment block with all windows blown out and smoke coming out of the building.
During the early hours of Tuesday, air raid sirens blared across the whole of Ukraine. Kyiv military officials said air defence systems destroyed all Russian missiles targeting the Ukrainian capital.
Ukraine’s top military command said that 10 out of the 14 cruise missiles Russia launched on the country were destroyed, as well as one of the four Iranian-made drones.
The mayor of Kharkiv said that Russian drones hit civilian infrastructure there, striking a warehouse and a utility firm’s building. There was no immediate information about casualties.
Key events
Citing regional head Oleksandr Prokudin, Suspilne reports that there are currently 3,600 houses in 31 settlements that remain flooded on the Ukraine-controlled right bank of the Dnipro. It reports that the water level has dropped by 27cm, and that in the past day water has receded from 200 houses in the Kherson region.
The head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog will arrive in Kyiv on Tuesday to meet Volodymyr Zelenskiy, before heading to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
Since the beginning of the conflict, Rafael Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency has warned of the potential for a nuclear accident at the plant, which he has previously visited twice and where a permanent IAEA team is based.
The Russian-held Kakhovka dam – which was breached last week in an incident blamed by Kyiv on Moscow – forms a reservoir that provides the cooling water for the Russian-occupied plant.
The IAEA has warned that the Kakhovka dam disaster has “[complicated] an already precarious nuclear safety and security situation”.
Grossi said he would “present a programme of assistance in the aftermath of the catastrophic Nova Kakhovka dam flooding.”
Rescue operations are under way in Kryvyi Rih, at the site of the five-storey apartment building and destroyed warehouse that were hit by Russian strikes overnight, the governor of the local region has said.
The city’s mayor, Oleksandr Vilkul, said at least seven people were believed to be trapped under the rubble, without providing more details. Previously, governor Serhiy Lysak said “there are still people under the rubble of a building. There was a fire there.”
Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who was born in Kryvyi Rih, also condemned the attack on his home town.
On Monday, Ukraine accused Russian forces of destroying another dam with the aim of slowing Kyiv’s counteroffensive.
As rescue and relief efforts entered their seventh day for victims of the destruction of the Kakhovka dam, the Russian military was accused of blowing up a much smaller dam along the Mokri Yaly River, which has become the most successful axis so far for Ukraine’s advances in western Donetsk.
Ukrainian troops have moved along both sides of the river over the last week, liberating villages along the way.
Valeriy Shershen, a Ukrainian military spokesperson for that sector of the front, told the Ukrainska Pravda news agency that a dam upstream along the Mokri Yaly had been blown up by occupation forces, causing flooding on both banks.
Shershen said the Russian aim had been to “slow down Ukraine’s counteroffensive” but claimed it had failed. The dam appears to have been at the village of Klyuchove but its destruction could not be independently verified.
Death toll in Kakhovka dam disaster rises
Forty-one people are still missing in the floods caused by the collapse of the Kakhovka dam, while the death toll now stands at 10, Ukrainian officials have said.
The dam, which sat in Russian-controlled territory along the frontline in the Kherson region, was destroyed on 6 June, forcing thousands to flee and sparking fears of a humanitarian as well as environmental catastrophe.
“Currently, we know about 10 dead in Kherson and the region,” Ukrainian interior minister Igor Klymenko said on Telegram. “We are also reporting 41 people as missing.”
The governor of the Kherson region, the area most affected by the flooding, said two bodies were found on Monday in the regional capital.
“Today, an unidentified woman and a 50-year-old man were found drowned in one of the city’s districts,” the Oleksandr Prokudin said on Telegram.
A day earlier, Prokudin said three people were killed as Russia shelled a rescue boat evacuating people after the devastating floods.
Ukraine making small gains in ‘tough’ counteroffensive
Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has described fighting in the long awaited counteroffensive as “tough” but added “we are moving forward”.
“I thank our guys for every Ukrainian flag that is now returning to its rightful place in villages on the newly de-occupied territory,” he said in his nightly address.
The country’s defence ministry said “seven settlements were liberated” in the last week of fighting in Donetsk.
“The area of the territory taken under control amounted to 90 square kilometres,” the deputy defence minister said.
In the last few days, Ukrainian forces have declared the liberation of a string of villages along the Mokri Yaly river: Blahodatne, Neskuchne, Makarivka and Storozheve among them.
However, sources reported that Russian troops launched a large counterattack against Ukrainian forces on Monday, according to thinktank, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
Some Russian sources reported that the village of Makarivka was retaken in this operation, the ISW reports.
At least three dead in Russian strike on Kryvyi Rih
At least three people were killed and 25 injured after the Russian missile strike on Kryvyi Rih destroyed a five-storey residential building, Serhiy Lisak, the governor of Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region said on Tuesday.
“There are still people under the rubble,” Lisak wrote on the Telegram messaging app.
Four people were injured at another location in the city, he added.
President Zelenskiy shared video footage of the aftermath of the Kryvyi Rih strike, saying “unfortunately, there are dead and wounded … Terrorists will never be forgiven, and they will be held accountable for every missile they launch.”
City of Kryvyi Rih hit by ‘massive’ Russian missile strike
Russia launched a “massive missile attack” overnight on the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, killing and wounding people and damaging civilian infrastructure, officials said early on Tuesday.
“There are dead and wounded,” Serhiy Lisak, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region where Kryvyi Rih is located, said on the Telegram messaging app.
Russian airstrikes hit several civilian structures in the city, including a five-storey building, said the mayor of Kryvyi Rih, Oleksandr Vilkul, adding “likely, there are people under the rubble”.
The governor posted a photograph of a five-storey apartment block with all windows blown out and smoke coming out of the building.
During the early hours of Tuesday, air raid sirens blared across the whole of Ukraine. Kyiv military officials said air defence systems destroyed all Russian missiles targeting the Ukrainian capital.
Ukraine’s top military command said that 10 out of the 14 cruise missiles Russia launched on the country were destroyed, as well as one of the four Iranian-made drones.
The mayor of Kharkiv said that Russian drones hit civilian infrastructure there, striking a warehouse and a utility firm’s building. There was no immediate information about casualties.
Opening summary
Welcome back to our live coverage of the ongoing war in Ukraine. I’m Jonathan Yerushalmy – first here’s a round-up of all the latest news.
A number of people were killed and injured after Russia launched a “massive missile attack” overnight on the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, officials said early on Tuesday.
Russian airstrikes hit several civilian structures in the city, including a five-storey building, said the mayor of Kryvyi Rih, Oleksandr Vilkul. “Likely, there are people under the rubble,” he added.
Elsewhere, Ukraine’s defence ministry has said 90 square km of territory has been retaken in Donetsk in the last week, adding that “seven settlements were liberated”. Over the same period, Ukrainian troops have recaptured 16 square km in the area around Bakhmut, the deputy defence minister said.
More on these stories shortly, before that, here are the other key developments today:
-
Ukraine accused Russian forces of destroying another dam with the aim of slowing Kyiv’s counteroffensive. Valeriy Shershen, a Ukrainian military spokesperson, said the Russian military blew up a dam along the Mokri Yaly River, which has become the most successful axis so far for Ukraine’s advances in western Donetsk.
-
“The fighting is tough, but we are moving forward, this is very important,” said the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in his daily evening address. “I thank our guys for every Ukrainian flag that is now returning to its rightful place in villages on the newly de-occupied territory.”
-
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, said the long-awaited counteroffensive would be under way for weeks if not months. “We want it to be as successful as possible so that we can then start a negotiation phase in good conditions.”
-
The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said on Monday it was too soon to say exactly where Ukraine’s counteroffensive was going, but Washington was confident of its success in trying to take back land seized by Russia. Speaking at a press conference in Washington, Blinken said the US was determined to maximise its support for Ukraine so that it could succeed on the battlefield.
-
Forty-one people were still missing in the floods caused by the collapse of the Kakhovka dam, while the death toll stood at 10 people, Ukraine’s interior minister said.
-
One man was killed and another was wounded in a Russian attack on the small town of Orikhiv, in the Zaporizhzhia region of south-eastern Ukraine, the regional governor, Yuri Malashko, said on Monday. Malashko said three bombs damaged private houses and communications in the small town, about 8km from frontlines. The man killed was 48 and the one who was wounded was 32, Reuters reported Malashko as saying.
-
The UN secretary general, António Guterres, said on Monday he was concerned that Russia would on 17 July quit a deal allowing the safe wartime export of grain and fertilisers from three Ukrainian Black Sea ports. Moscow has been threatening to walk away from the deal, known as the Black Sea grain initiative, brokered by the UN and Turkey in July last year, if obstacles to its own grain and fertiliser shipments are not removed.
-
The Group of Seven (G7) rich nations are working on a scheme to combat the suspected theft of Ukraine’s grain by using chemical identification of its origin, Britain’s food and farming minister, Mark Spencer, said on Monday. Spencer told an International Grains Council (IGC) conference in London that Britain was leading on the scheme and that G7 countries were also working closely with Ukraine, the world’s fourth largest grains exporter.
-
Nato’s largest military jet exercise since its founding took place on Monday in the skies over Germany, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic. About 10,000 soldiers from 25 countries were involved, making use of 250 military jets – 70 from Germany – to prepare for an attack on one of Nato’s members. Although the exercise was planned long before Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, it is nevertheless being viewed as a signal towards the Kremlin.
-
Vladimir Putin marked Russia’s national day on Monday by appealing to Russians’ patriotic pride at what he said was a “difficult time”. Speaking at a lavish award-giving ceremony in the Kremlin, Putin made no direct comment on the latest developments in Ukraine, where Kyiv’s forces have launched a long-awaited counteroffensive.
-
Russia’s defence ministry said on Monday it had signed a contract with the Akhmat group of Chechen special forces, a day after the Wagner mercenary chief, Yevgeny Prigozhin, refused to do so. The signing followed an order that all “volunteer units” should sign contracts by 1 July bringing them under the control of the defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, as Moscow tries to assert its control over private armies fighting on its behalf in Ukraine.
-
The former Russian president and prime minister Dmitry Medvedev celebrated Russia Day by posting an edited image to Telegram that showed Kyiv’s central Maidan square with the Russian flag flying on it and the message “Independence Square. Coming soon – Russia Square”.
-
Work has started in an investigation by the international criminal court over the breach of the Kakhovka dam in Ukraine and the vast flood it triggered, Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said. Suspilne, Ukraine’s state broadcaster, reported that the flood water level in Kherson had dropped by 64cm.