Ukraine downs Russian strategic bomber after air strike kills eight, Kyiv says

Ukraine shot down a Russian strategic bomber 300 km from its border on Friday after the warplane took part in a long-range air strike that killed at least eight people including two children in the central Dnipropetrovsk region, Kyiv said.


Reuters | Updated: 19-04-2024 15:40 IST | Created: 19-04-2024 15:40 IST
Ukraine downs Russian strategic bomber after air strike kills eight, Kyiv says

Ukraine shot down a Russian strategic bomber 300 km from its border on Friday after the warplane took part in a long-range air strike that killed at least eight people including two children in the central Dnipropetrovsk region, Kyiv said. Missiles rained down on the city of Dnipro and the surrounding region in the early hours, damaging residential buildings, the main train station and injuring at least 28 civilians, regional officials said.

Russia has stepped up its long-range aerial assaults on Ukraine's energy system and other targets in recent weeks, ratcheting up the pressure on Kyiv far behind the front lines where Russian forces have been slowly advancing in the east. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called for urgent supplies of air defences from Kyiv's allies as Ukraine's stocks dwindle due to a slowdown in vital Western military aid.

"Russia must be held accountable for its terror, and every missile, every Shahed (drone) must be shot down," he said. "The world can guarantee this, and our partners have the necessary capabilities." In a first for Ukraine during the invasion, Kyiv's air force commander and military spy agency said they had shot down a Russian Tu-22M3 strategic bomber that had fired missiles at Ukraine during the overnight attack.

The warplane, they said, had been flying in Russian airspace 300 km from the Ukrainian border. An intelligence source told Reuters that Kyiv had used a modified S-200 air defence missile for the attack, but did not say where it had been fired from. The S-200 is a Soviet-era long-range surface-to-air missile system.

Unconfirmed social media footage showed a warplane with its tail on fire spiralling towards the ground. The Russian defence ministry said the bomber had crashed in Russia's southern Stavropol region, hundreds of kilometres from Ukrainian-controlled territory, as it returned to base after carrying out a combat mission.

But it said the crash appeared to have been caused by technical malfunction. The four Russian air force crew members ejected from the warplane; two were rescued, one died and a rescue operation was under way for the fourth, the Russian regional governor said.

SURVIVING 'HELL' Ukraine's air force said it shot down 15 missiles, including two Kh-22 cruise missiles and 14 drones during the overnight attack.

The Dnipropetrovsk region's governor Serhiy Lysak said air defences shot down 11 out of 16 missiles and nine out of 10 drones that attacked the region. Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal put the death toll at eight. Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said a 14-year-old girl and 8-year-old boy had been killed.

A five-storey residential building in the city of Dnipro was badly damaged and fire fighters battled to put out a fire at the site early in the morning. "Dnipropetrovsk region survived hell. But who do the Russians want to break with their missiles? No one can unite around a shared tragedy like the Ukrainians do," Lysak, the governor, said.

Russia denies targeting civilians during its air strikes and says the energy system is a legitimate target, but hundreds of civilians have been killed during air strikes. State-run railways company Ukrzaliznytsia said Russia targeted its infrastructure in the attack and that one of its workers was killed.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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