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In the night on 2 March, a 9-storey residential building in Odesa was partially destroyed due to Russian drone attack. 12 people (including 5 children) were killed and 9 were injured. The next day was declared a day of mourning in Odesa region. [55] [56] On 6 March, Russian missile attack killed in Odesa 5 people.
The attack occurred at around 10:40 local time (11:40 Moscow time) [1] during a visit by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to Ukraine, during which he met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the city's port area and was to visit a building damaged in a previous attack on 2 March that killed twelve people, including five children, [2] and meet with members of the Greek ...
Missile strikes on Odesa were carried out during the day on March 15, 2024, with a half-hour interval by the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation targeting the city's recreational area. This attack became the most devastating in terms of casualties and injuries to civilian infrastructure of the city since the beginning of the Russian ...
‘Unesco calls for a cessation of attacks against cultural property,’ UN body said Russia-Ukraine war – live: Unesco sounds alarm as historic cathedral badly damaged in deadly Odesa ...
Five civilians have been killed after a Russian missile attack struck an educational institution in the Ukrainian Black Sea port of Odesa.. At least 32 people have been injured, local officials ...
The two attacks in Russia’s Buryatia region, which borders Mongolia and is thousands of kilometres from Ukraine, occurred on Nov. 29 and Nov. 30. ... the governor of Odessa region has said. ...
During the morning of 17 November 2024, Russia launched a massive air attack on cities across Ukraine, killing two people in Mykolaiv, two in Nikopol, two in Odesa and one person in Lviv. [1] [2] [3] According to the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, about 120 missiles and 90 drones were fired overnight and in the early morning.
Roughly 2,000 pro-Russian protesters gathered outside, chanting: "Odesa is a Russian city." [121] There was a heavy police presence, and some minor scuffles between protesters. [120] In another outbreak of unrest, the Interior Ministry's headquarters in Odesa was attacked by several hundred pro-Russian activists on 4 May. [122]