Ukraine: Explosions shake Kyiv while battles rage in east

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Smoke rises above KyivImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

Columns of dark smoke rose above Kyiv's skyline on Sunday

A number of explosions shook parts of Kyiv early on Sunday in the first assault on Ukraine's capital for weeks.

Russia claims it targeted a site storing tanks supplied by Europe, but Ukraine says rockets hit a train repair plant where no tanks were held.

Columns of black smoke could be seen above the city after the attack and at least one person was hurt.

Kyiv has been largely spared in recent months as Russian forces concentrate attacks on Donbas in eastern Ukraine.

The capital has felt like it is returning to some sort of normality; bars and cafes are open and people are back on the streets.

But watching columns of black smoke rising over Kyiv in the early hours of Saturday morning, that illusion was shattered.

Just a few moments before, Russian cruise missiles had slammed into two sites in the east of the city. Dramatic video on social media showed a number of explosions. The man filming cursed the Russians as he ducked for cover.

At the site of one of the strikes, normal life continued. The factory itself was sealed off, but families nearby went about their business, and buses dropped off passengers. One man came and rather angrily demanded we stop filming.

Moscow claimed it was targeting a delivery of tanks and armoured vehicles sent in by Ukraine's eastern European allies. Kyiv denied this, saying it was a train repair plant dealing with "gondola cars and grain trucks".

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The strike damaged a building in the Darnitsky district of Kyiv

It comes as Russia's advances into the eastern Donbas region seem to be stalling, with one Ukrainian politician saying the attack on Kyiv was revenge for Moscow's frustrations.

Some of the fiercest fighting is currently in the city of Severodonetsk - one of the few parts of Luhansk region not fully under Russian control. Luhansk is one of two regions which makes up the Donbas.

Speaking to the BBC, Luhansk regional governor Serhiy Haidai said there was street-fighting in Severodonetsk and that it was still possible for Ukrainian forces to retake it.

"Russians understand that if there is a stable supply of ammunition to Ukrainians, they will not be able to hold the city."

Severodonetsk lies across the river from the city of Lysychansk, which remains under Ukrainian control. Mr Haidai said it held more strategic value.

"Lysychansk is much more important because it is located on the hill. It is easier for the military to defend and strike," he said.

Ukrainian forces are also hoping that more advanced rocket systems promised by the US will arrive soon, tipping the balance in their favour.

But speaking on Russian television on Sunday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that if the West carried through with its promises of sending the weapons to Ukraine, he would hit "new targets they had not attacked before".

It wasn't clear what he meant by that, but it would most likely mean more nights for Kyiv like the one it has just endured.

In other developments:

  • France's President Emmanuel Macron provoked anger from Kyiv after suggesting that Ukraine and the West should avoid humiliating Russia in the war

  • The Russian military said it had shot down a Ukrainian military transport plane carrying weapons near the Black Sea port of Odesa on Saturday

  • Russia continued heavy shelling of Mykolaiv, a key port city on the approaches to Odesa - the BBC's Laura Bicker met shaken but determined civilians there

  • A major fire engulfed a wooden church at the Sviatohirsk Lavra Monastery in Donetsk region; Ukraine blamed Russian shelling, which Russia denied, instead blaming it on retreating Ukrainian troops.

War in Ukraine: More coverage

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