The death toll from a Russian missile strike in the southeastern city of Dnipro rose to 30 on Sunday as first responders picked through the rubble of an apartment building looking for survivors and bodies.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said at least 73 people were injured Saturday when the explosions smashed through all nine floors of the building that housed an estimated 1,700 people.
“It was possible to save dozens of people, wounded, traumatized,” Zelenskyy said. “Among them are children; the youngest girl is 3 years old.”
By Sunday afternoon, 39 people had been rescued and the city government in Dnipro said 43 people were reported missing.
More than 20 of the 30 missiles launched toward Ukrainian targets were shot down, Zelenskyy said. The attacks also targeted the capital, Kyiv, and the northeastern city of Kharkiv. Energy infrastructure again took a pounding, a common theme for Russian attacks in recent months.
“This is clearly terrorism and all this is simply not human,” local Artem Myzychenko, said as he cleared rubble.
Zelenskyy said repair crews would work around the clock to restore power generation .
“The enemy will receive our answer (to the strikes) on the battlefield for sure,” Zelenskyy said. “Our soldiers will do that.”
FATALITIES, TANKS:Fatalities reported after Russian missile attacks in Ukraine; UK pledges tanks: Updates
Other developments:
Three Russian soldiers were killed and 15 injured in a munitions explosion in the village of Tonenkoye in Russia’s southern Belgorod region, state-run TASS reported Sunday. The outlet said a preliminary probe indicated the blast was likely caused by munitions mishandling.
Russia’s Ren-TV said the blast occurred at a community center at or near a military base after a soldier mishandled a hand grenade, causing a fire. The TV station said the victims were new draftees. Fifteen people were evacuated from nearby homes in Belgorod, a city of 340,000 about 25 miles north of the Ukraine border.
The British Defense Ministry said it will begin training thousands of new volunteer recruits who have joined the Armed Forces of Ukraine with little to no previous military experience. The goal is to teach skills “required to survive and be effective in front-line combat” the ministry said in a statement. The course, which is based on training provided to the U.K. army reserve infantry, will take place over a minimum of a five weeks in Britain. It will provide the soldiers with instruction on weapons handling, offensive and defensive tactics, rules of armed conflict, range activity and marksmanship, patrol techniques, battlefield first aid and cybersecurity awareness.
Contributing: Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY; The Associated Press
