At least 12 killed, 90 injured in Russian airstrikes on Kyiv
Reuters | Posted: April 24, 2025 11:03 AM | Last Updated: April 24
'Not necessary, and very bad timing. Vladimir, STOP!' Trump says in social media post
Russia pounded Kyiv with missiles and drones overnight, killing at least 12 people in the biggest attack on the Ukrainian capital this year, drawing a rare rebuke on social media from U.S. President Donald Trump, directed at Russian President Vladimir Putin: "Vladimir, STOP!"
The attack — which the U.S. president said was "not necessary" and "very bad timing" as his administration tries to broker a peace deal between the two sides — also wounded 90 people, smashed buildings and set off fires, Ukrainian officials said.
Rescuers were still recovering bodies from the rubble more than 12 hours later.
The most serious incident was in the Sviatoshynskyi district west of the city centre, where the rescuers continued to clear the rubble from two buildings, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said.
Updating an earlier death toll, Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the Kyiv city military administration, said: "Rescuers have retrieved two more bodies from under the rubble in the Sviatoshynskyi district. We now have 12 dead."
Pictures posted on Telegram showed rescue teams working with floodlights, moving cautiously through piles of rubble and clambering up ladders extended along the facades of buildings. Police were calling from apartment to apartment to determine whether residents were safe.
Apartment resident speaks of terror
Rescue teams were operating at 13 sites in Kyiv with climbing specialists and sniffer dogs, the emergency services said. Forty fires had broken out.
"Mobile telephones are heard ringing beneath rubble. The search will continue until it becomes clear that they have got everyone," it said.
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Fires had broken out in garages, administrative buildings and falling metal fragments had struck vehicles.
An air raid alert was in effect in the capital for six hours.
"There was the air-raid siren, we did not even have time to dress to go out of the apartment. One blast came after the other, all windows were blown out, doors, walls, my husband and son were thrown to the other side," Kyiv resident Viktoria Bakal said, describing the attack.
Russia launched 145 drones and 70 missiles, including 11 ballistic missiles, in the overnight attack, Ukraine's air force said on Telegram. Air force units shot down 112 targets.
Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said that apart from Kyiv and the surrounding region, seven other regions were under "mass" attack.
Kharkiv, Ukraine's second biggest city, endured overnight waves of Russian missiles and drones, Mayor Ihor Terekhov wrote on Telegram.
Terekhov said the city in northeast Ukraine was attacked 14 times with drones and 10 times with missiles. Multi-storey residential buildings, a city polyclinic, a school building, private yards, industrial enterprises, and a hotel complex were damaged and one person was taken to hospital, he said.
There was also damage in the Zhytomyr region, west of Kyiv, where emergency services said Russian forces launched a repeat strike on rescue teams attending a fire, injuring one worker.
In the industrial city of Pavlohrad, which lies in the central Dnipropetrovsk region, 14 multi-storey buildings were damaged, mostly their windows and balconies, regional governor Serhiy Lysak said on Telegram, adding that no one was hurt in the attack.
The Russian Defence Ministry said it carried out what it described as a massive overnight strike against Ukraine's military-industrial complex using air, land and sea-based long-range high-precision weapons and drones.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Thursday the missile that struck the residential building in Kyiv was supplied by North Korea, confirming an earlier Reuters report. A Ukrainian military source had told Reuters it was a North Korean KN-23 (KN-23A) missile.
"According to preliminary information, the Russians used a ballistic missile manufactured in North Korea. Our special services are verifying all the details," Zelenskyy said on X, without providing further details.
Russia made no comment on Zelenskyy's remarks. Russia and North Korea have denied weapons transfers that would violate UN embargoes.
Diplomatic tensions
The attacks came at a critical moment in Russia's war in Ukraine, which began with Moscow's full-scale invasion in 2022, with both Kyiv and Moscow under pressure from Trump to show progress toward a peace deal.
Trump and his administration have threatened to walk away from efforts to broker a ceasefire if no headway is made, leaving European nations looking for ways to support Kyiv.
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Talks in London on Wednesday aimed at achieving a deal made "significant progress" toward reaching a "common position on the next steps," according to a joint statement from Britain, France and Germany. But the talks were downgraded after a last-minute decision by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio not to attend.
Zelenskyy agreed the talks in London on Wednesday, while not "easy," had been "constructive." He made the remark at a joint news conference in South Africa alongside President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Trump on Wednesday appeared to blame Zelenskyy for a lack of progress after he would not recognize Russia's occupation of the Crimea peninsula, which it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, as part of a peace deal.
Zelenskyy said on Tuesday that recognizing Crimea as part of Russia would violate Ukraine's constitution. Ukraine says it is committed to seeking a full and unconditional ceasefire.
Russia, too, accused Zelenskyy of wrecking diplomacy aimed at reaching a peace deal after he refused this week to agree to recognize Russia's annexation of Crimea.
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova told reporters on Thursday in Russia that it was becoming clearer by the minute that Zelenskyy lacked the capacity to negotiate a deal to end the war.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said on X that the "brutal strikes" in Kyiv showed that Russia, not Ukraine, was the obstacle to peace.