Death toll from Russian attack in Kyiv rises to three


On the night of November 29, Russia launched a massive combined attack on Kyiv.
The death toll has risen to three people, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskii reported.
About 36 missiles and almost 600 drones were launched by the Russians against ordinary life. The main targets of the attack are energy and civilian facilities, a lot of damage and fires in residential buildings. As of now, dozens of wounded and three dead are known, — Zelenskii reported.
According to the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, a total of 632 air attack vehicles were used, of which 577 missiles and drones were shot down.

In Kyiv, the consequences of the attack were recorded in seven districts. It is currently known that the dead are in the Svyatoshynskyi and Darnytskyi districts.
Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko reported that 19 victims are in hospitals in Kyiv medical institutions. The police recorded damage to residential buildings, an educational institution, a shopping center and about 20 cars.
More than 500,000 Kyiv residents were left without electricity due to shelling. Parts of the Obolonsky, Solomyansky, Shevchenkivsky, Podilsky, Holosiivsky, and Svyatoshynsky districts were the most affected.
Due to damage on the right bank of the capital, several tram routes were temporarily suspended.



- The loss of the middle class: what a new study on Ukrainian refugees showed
- Thousands of people will be able to receive assistance: how the law for Ukrainian critical infrastructure workers was changed
- No ambulance near the front line: emergency substation being liquidated in Donetsk region
- "War steals their childhood." Ukrainian teenagers forced to take on adult responsibilities
- Economic pressure and a war of attrition: ISW explained what could force Putin to seek peace
- Russia planned to enter Odesa and cut off Ukraine from the Black Sea—Syrsky

Mykola Potyka has a wide range of knowledge and skills in several fields. Mykola writes interestingly about things that interest him.










