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Russian strikes kill 11 across Ukraine
Russia fired a volley of missiles and drones across Ukraine overnight on Friday to Saturday, killing 11 people and wounding more than a dozen, including children.
The Ukrainian president said Russia has fired 29 missiles and 480 drones, several of which targeted energy and railway infrastructure.
Authorities in Kharkiv, the second largest city, said a ballistic missile strike destroyed a five-storey apartment block, killing nine people.
AFP reporters saw rescuers sifting through the debris, where several people were believed to be trapped.
"Since last night, the rubble of a residential building in Kharkiv is being cleared following a Russian ballistic missile strike," President Volodymyr Zelensky said on social media.
The victims included two women and their two children, mayor Igor Terekhov said.
"Russia has not abandoned its attempts to destroy Ukraine's residential and critical infrastructure," Zelensky added, urging the country's allies to continue providing military support.
Russia said it had carried out a "massive high-precision strike" against military targets in Ukraine. It routinely denies targeting civilian infrastructure.
The Russian army said earlier it had intercepted over 120 Ukrainian drones overnight.
The Moscow-installed authorities of Ukraine's occupied Kherson region said one person was killed and four were wounded in a Ukrainian drone strike.
- Air defence supplies -
An air raid alert was triggered during the night across the entire country.
The Polish air force said on X it had scrambled military aircraft to protect its airspace in regions bordering Ukraine, as it usually does in the event of large‑scale Russian strikes.
One person died in the eastern region of Dnipropetrovsk and three were wounded in the capital Kyiv, Ukrainian authorities said.
In the Sumy region bordering Russia, a 24-year-old man died in his car when it was hit by a Russian drone, according to local officials.
The drone barrages from either side follow on the heels of an exchange between Moscow and Kyiv of 500 prisoners of war (POWs) each, in line with accords reached during the latest round of peace talks in Geneva.
Negotiations appeared to have stalled amid a lack of progress and since the eruption of war in the Middle East.
Zelensky earlier warned that a prolonged Middle East conflict could hinder deliveries of US-made air defence missiles.
Ukraine is facing a shortage of expensive US PAC-3 air defence ammunition.
Zelensky has offered to the United States an exchange of Ukraine's drone interceptors for the missiles.
He has also suggested sending drone specialists to help shield Washington's Gulf allies from Iranian drones.
A delay in US missile supplies during winter made Ukraine's civil infrastructure more vulnerable to widespread Russian airstrikes that left hundreds of thousands without heating in freezing temperatures.
P.Sousa--PC