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Ukraine wards off drone offensive




KYIV, January 3 ------ Kyiv said it had destroyed 21 of 49 Iranian-made drones fired after Russia vowed to retaliate for what it called a "terrorist attack" on a border city that left 24 dead. The Ukrainian air force said the "Shahed" drones were particularly targeted at "the front line of defense, as well as at civilian, military and infrastructure facilities in the front-line territories." Six guided missiles had also targeted the northeastern city of Kharkiv, Kyiv said in a statement on Telegram, without specifying whether they had hit their targets. 

  

Oleg Sinegubov, the head of Kharkiv's military administration, said there had been 28 civilians wounded in the attack on the city, including two teenagers and a foreign citizen. Residential buildings, offices and cafes were hit in the latest overnight attacks, said Kharkiv mayor Igor Terekhov. "On the eve of the New Year, Russians want to intimidate our city, but we are not scared," he said. The fresh Russian strikes came a day after the deadliest attack on civilians in Russia since the start of the conflict in February 2022. The official death toll has risen to 24, with 108 wounded in Belgorod — just 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the Ukrainian border, which has been repeatedly struck by what Moscow says is indiscriminate shelling. The two sides took turns to accuse each other of pummeling civilian areas of their shared frontier region over the weekend.   

  

The governor of Belgorod region, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said Sunday that one person had been killed by Ukrainian shelling in a village close to the border. Moscow said that the Belgorod attack had included the use of controversial cluster munitions, and told an emergency meeting at the UN Security Council that Kyiv had targeted a sports center, an ice rink and a university. Russian envoy Vasily Nebenzya called it a "deliberate, indiscriminate attack against a civilian target." Ukraine's allies countered that responsibility ultimately lay with Russian President Vladimir Putin for invading the neighboring country nearly two years ago. "If Russia wants someone to blame for the deaths of Russians in this war, it should start with President Putin," said British envoy to the UN Thomas Phipps. Putin gave his traditional New Year's Eve address on Sunday, in which he praised Russia's soldiers on the front line and called for unity in the face of "difficult tasks." "To all those who are on duty, on the front line of the fight for truth and justice," Putin said, "you are our heroes. Our hearts are with you. We are proud of you, we admire your courage." Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed in his New Year's address to wreak "wrath" against Russian forces in 2024, despite what he said were attempts to "undermine" support for Kyiv. 

  

Source: manilatimes.net 

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