Ukraine issues nationwide air raid alerts as Russian attacks intensify

Mounting attacks and casualties on New Year’s Eve come as both sides settle in for a protracted war

Ukraine on Sunday issued nationwide air raid alerts after several people were killed and dozens injured by Russian attacks in the eastern region of Kharkiv, two days after Moscow’s deadliest strikes on Ukrainian cities in nearly two years of war.

The mounting attacks and casualties on New Year’s Eve come as both sides settle in for a protracted war after Russia’s full-scale invasion, launched in February 2022, failed to achieve its aims but claimed hundreds of thousands of casualties on both sides.

Ukraine’s air force said on Sunday that “the whole of Ukraine is on missile strike alert” after Russian MiG-31 jets had taken off, with “significant activity” recorded in the east and south of the country.

“The threat of aviation being used for destruction remains! Don’t ignore the air alert!” the air force urged Ukrainians as they were preparing for new year’s celebrations. Ukrainian media and regional officials reported explosions on Sunday in the central regions of Kryviy Rih and Kirovohrad.

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In the Kharkiv region, police said Russian artillery strikes had killed a woman and two men in the village of Borova.

The region’s governor Oleg Synegubov said at least six missiles had hit Kharkiv city on Saturday night, with 28 civilians injured in strikes that also hit healthcare buildings and the prominent Kharkiv Palace hotel which is frequented by media.

Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine’s minister for internal affairs, said a journalist from the UK was among those injured in the attack. A German team from public broadcaster ZDF was also in the hotel at the time of the attack and their translator suffered spinal injuries, the TV network said.

“On the eve of the new year, the Russians want to intimidate our city, but we are not scared,” Ihor Terekhov, Kharkiv’s mayor, said in a statement on social media. His posts included photos and videos of rescue workers putting out fires and searching through rubble for survivors at bombed-out residential buildings, a cafe and a bank.

Moscow on Sunday described the Kharkiv attack as retaliation for Ukraine’s alleged attack a day earlier which it said had killed more than 20 people in Russia’s city of Belgorod, just a few kilometres north of the Ukrainian border.

The Kharkiv and Belgorod attacks came after record Russian missile and drone strikes hitting targets across Ukraine on Friday claimed nearly 50 lives, including 23 in Kyiv.

“In retaliation to this terrorist attack, the armed forces of the Russian Federation struck the decision-making centres and military targets in the city of Kharkiv,” Russia’s ministry for defence said on Sunday.

The ministry claimed that troops from Ukraine’s army and GRU military intelligence unit “directly involved in planning and executing the terrorist attack in Belgorod... were neutralised by a precision-guided missile strike at the former Kharkiv Palace hotel complex”.

“Up to 200 foreign mercenaries who were... involved in terrorist raids on the territory of the Russian Federation bordering on Ukraine were also there,” the ministry said, pointing to units of Russian citizens fighting on Ukraine’s side which have routinely conducted cross-border attacks in the region.

Ukraine’s GRU military intelligence service denied these claims.

Ukrainian media, citing domestic intelligence sources, reported that the explosions in Belgorod were caused by debris from projectiles falling upon the city after being “unprofessionally” intercepted by Russian air defences.

In a Saturday address to the nation, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the Russian attack had affected “more than 120 of our cities and villages” and pledged retaliation.

“For every ‘Shahed’ drone, for every Russian missile, there will be a fair responsibility of the terrorist state. Both political and very practical,” he said.

Without directly referring to delayed decisions by the US and EU to approve financial and military assistance for 2024, Zelenskiy said he had discussed with his military chiefs what still needed to be done next year.

“Despite everything that will happen in other countries, despite any political changes and moods, we need sufficient potential to do our own thing,” Zelenskiy said, adding that Ukraine was preparing for increased weapons production in 2024.

In a separate year-end address, Zelenskiy mentioned his forces’ stepped-up long-range strikes on Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula occupied by Russia since 2014, which forced the Russian navy to withdraw to eastern parts of the Black Sea. This, in turn, allowed Kyiv to break Moscow’s blockade of its ports by unilaterally restarting maritime exports of grain, metals and other commodities.

A long-anticipated counteroffensive this year failed to make significant territorial gains, despite modern weaponry supplied by Kyiv’s western allies. Russia has also failed to win any major land offensive this year, though it continues to occupy about 18 per cent of Ukrainian territory.

Zelenskiy highlighted the positives: “This year, Ukraine did not retreat in any direction on earth, regained the sea and made the sky safer.” – Copyright the Financial Times Limited 2023

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