Russian attacks on Ukraine kill 5 people; nearly 20 animals die in fire
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Ukraine’s Emergency Services posted images of rescue workers trying to save the animals — in one instance administering CPR to a dog — at the clinic in Chabany.
April 3, 2026 at 1:39 p.m.
EDT Today
An investigator collects the debris of a Russian drone Friday in a residential area of Vyshneve, Ukraine, outside Kyiv. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)
By David L. Stern, Kostiantyn Khudov and Natalia Abbakumova, The Washington Post
KYIV, At least five people were killed and 36 wounded in Russian drone and missile strikes across Ukraine overnight on Friday, authorities here said, and “close to 20” animals died at a veterinary clinic set ablaze in the barrage.
Ukraine’s Emergency Services posted photos and a video of rescue workers putting out the fire and trying to save the animals — in one instance administering CPR to a dog — at the Dr. Buryak clinic in Chabany, 13 miles south of the capital.
“Rescuers fought for every life: They carried out an emergency evacuation of four-legged animals from the damaged building, administered oxygen to injured animals, and tried to stabilize the condition of wounded patients,” the agency wrote.
But “all the animals were killed — the strike hit the inpatient ward and the intensive care unit,” a veterinarian at the clinic told the animal rights organization UAnimals.
A woman tries to treat a dog injured in a Russian strike on a veterinary clinic in Chabany. (Anatolii Stepanov/Reuters)
Such barrages have been common in recent months as the Kremlin targets Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure and energy facilities. But now, with peace negotiations stalled and international attention focused on the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, the assaults have lasted longer. Last week, Russia unleashed roughly 1,000 drones on Ukraine in a 24-hour period, the largest single-day attack since the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion more than four years ago, according to Ukraine’s Defense Ministry.
The Russian Defense Ministry said Friday that it had executed “a massive strike” using “high-precision long-range air- and ground-based weapons” and “strike drones” against “targets within Ukraine’s military-industrial complex and energy sector that support their operations.” The attack was a “response to Ukraine’s terrorist attacks on civilian targets,” the ministry said.
Ukrainian forces in recent weeks have attacked Russian oil and gas facilities, a key source of revenue for the Russian military. They have hit Ust-Luga, one of Russia’s main ports on the Baltic Sea, five times since Tuesday, Kyiv says. Reuters estimated last week that the attacks, damage to pipelines and sanctions against Russia’s shadow fleet have caused a 40 percent drop in Russian oil exports.
The attack on Ukraine started at 6 p.m. Thursday and continued into Friday morning, authorities here said. The assault came “in waves,” President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on Telegram; one strike hit as he was speaking by telephone to Pope Leo XIV.
“Not a single hour of peace for our people, and this is Russia’s response to our proposal for an Easter ceasefire,” Zelensky said. “Russians have only intensified their strikes, turning what should have been silence in the skies into an Easter escalation.”
A man pushes his bicycle past the ruins of a car in Chabany. (Serhii Okunev/AFP/Getty Images)
Ukraine’s air defenses shot down 26 of 37 missiles and 515 of 542 drones, the Ukrainian air force said.
One person in Kyiv, two in the northeastern city of Sumy and one in the western city of Zhytomyr were killed, authorities said. Nine people in the southern city of Kherson were wounded when a minibus there was hit.
Attacks in the eastern city of Kharkiv have lasted two days and have been among the heaviest during the war, authorities there said. One person there has been killed and seven wounded.
Ukrainian and European officials say President Vladimir V. Putin has become emboldened by a lack of Western pushback. The police inspected the damage to a house caused by debris from a shot-down Russian drone in the village of Wyryki-Wola, eastern Poland on Wednesday. Credit... Wojtek Radwanski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images By Andrew E. Kramer Reporting from Kyiv, Ukraine The New York Times , Sept. 11, 2025 Updated 8:49 a.m. ET An American factory in western Ukraine. Two European diplomatic compounds and a key Ukrainian government building in Kyiv. And now Poland. Over a roughly three-week period, Russian drones and missiles have struck sites of increasing sensitivity for Ukraine and its Western allies, culminating in the volley of Russian drones that buzzed early Wednesday over Poland, a NATO country. For decades, American and European military planners feared something else: a bolt-from-the-blue assault, like an all-out nuclear strike, from the Soviet Union or ...
A bold Ukrainian operation in Kursk has humiliated Russian President Vladimir Putin and upended some of the logic of the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine. Column by Ishaan Tharoor The Washington Post , August 14, 2024 at 12:00 a.m. EDT; see also Ukrainian soldiers pose for a picture as they repair a military vehicle near the Russian border on Sunday. (Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters) Russia’s Kursk oblast is no stranger to war. In medieval times, the district was overrun by the Mongol horde, and was claimed and ceded down the centuries by Eurasian empires. During World War II, the environs of the city of Kursk became the site of the greatest tank battle in history, as Nazi Germany suffered a grievous strategic defeat at the hands of the bloodied yet unbowed Soviet Union . This past week, Kursk has been the site of the first major invasion of Russian territory since then. This time, it’s not the Nazi war machine rolling in — no matter what Kremlin propagandists insi...
Comments
Post a Comment