One dead and dozens injured as Russian drones hit Ukrainian railway station

One dead and dozens injured as Russian drones hit Ukrainian railway station
A passenger train engulfed in flames (Ukrainian Railway/AP)

Russian drones struck a Ukrainian railway station on Saturday, killing one and wounding dozens, as Moscow stepped up strikes on Ukraine’s rail and power grids ahead of the fourth winter since its all-out invasion.

At least 30 people were injured in the “savage” attack, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, said after the attack on Shostka, a city northeast of Kyiv about 43 miles from the Russian border.

Hours later, local prosecutors said that a 71-year-old man was found dead in one of the wrecked carriages.

“All emergency services are already on the scene and have begun helping people. All information about the injured is being established,” Mr Zelensky he said in a post on X.

Russia struck two passenger trains in quick succession, first targeting a local service and then one bound for Kyiv, said Oleksiy Kuleba, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister and reconstruction minister.

“Medical teams have already transported the injured to hospitals and are providing necessary assistance.

“Others (who were at the site) are in shelters overseen by rescuers,” Mr Kuleba wrote on Telegram on Saturday.

He said an air raid alert was ongoing at the station.

Both Mr Zelensky and local governor Oleh Hryhorov posted what they said were photos from the scene showing a passenger carriage on fire.

Moscow has recently stepped up airstrikes on Ukraine’s railway network, which is essential for military transport, hitting it almost every day over the past two months.

As in previous years since the full-scale invasion on February 24 2022, the Kremlin has also ramped up attacks on Ukraine’s power grid, in what Kyiv calls an attempt to weaponise the approaching winter by denying civilians heat, light and running water.

Overnight into Saturday, Russian drones and missiles pounded Ukraine’s power grid again, a Ukrainian energy firm said, a day after what officials described as the biggest attack on Ukrainian natural gas facilities since Moscow’s all-out invasion more than three-and-a-half-years ago.

The strike damaged energy facilities near Chernihiv, a northern city west of Shostka that lies close to the Russian border, and sparked blackouts set to affect some 50,000 households, according to regional operator Chernihivoblenergo.

The head of Chernihiv’s military administration, Dmytro Bryzhynskyi, confirmed a night time Russian attack on the city caused multiple fires, but did not immediately say what was hit.

The day before, Russia launched its biggest attack of the war against natural gas facilities run by Ukraine’s state-owned Naftogaz Group, Ukrainian officials said.

Russia fired a total of 381 drones and 35 missiles at Ukraine on Friday, according to Ukraine’s air force, in what officials said was an attempt to wreck the Ukrainian power grid ahead of winter and wear down public support for the three-year-old conflict.

Naftogaz’s chief executive, Serhii Koretskyi, said on Friday the attacks had no military purpose, while Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko accused Moscow of “terrorising civilians”.

Moscow claimed the strikes targeted facilities that support Kyiv’s war effort.

Overnight into Saturday, Russian forces launched a further 109 drones and three ballistic missiles at Ukraine, the Ukrainian military reported.

It said 73 of the drones were shot down or sent off course.

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