KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine is investigating the impact of a major overnight Russian aerial assault after a strike in Sofiivska Borshchahivka, a suburb west of Kyiv, left at least one person dead and multiple others injured, as part of a wider barrage targeting energy infrastructure across the country. Ukrainian officials said Russia launched about 50 missiles and 297 drones, one of the heaviest attacks in recent weeks.
The attack began overnight into Saturday and hit several regions, including Kyiv and the surrounding oblast, as well as Odesa and central parts of the country, according to Ukrainian authorities and Reuters. Emergency services worked through the night in damaged residential areas, where homes were destroyed or set ablaze and windows were blown out by blast waves. In the Kyiv region, officials reported one fatality and a rising number of injuries. Reuters said at least one person was killed and several others were wounded in the broader strike wave, while local Ukrainian reporting indicated casualty figures in Kyiv Oblast climbed as rescue operations continued, including injuries among children.
Ukrainian air defenses said they intercepted or neutralized the majority of incoming weapons, reporting 274 drones and 33 missiles downed or disabled. Even so, authorities said damage was recorded in multiple locations, including in the capital region and the Black Sea port city of Odesa. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned the latest strikes, accusing Moscow of escalating attacks rather than moving toward serious diplomacy. Reuters reported that Zelenskyy said Russia had continued large-scale bombardments despite ongoing international efforts to push for talks, and he urged stronger pressure on Moscow.
Ukrainian officials said the strike on the Kyiv suburb was separate from another high-profile security incident in western Ukraine — the deadly twin explosions in Lviv that killed a 23-year-old police officer and wounded dozens — even though both events occurred within the same broader period of heightened tension. The latest barrage again highlights Russia’s continued focus on energy facilities and civilian-adjacent infrastructure, a tactic Kyiv says is designed to weaken public morale and strain essential services. Moscow, for its part, has repeatedly argued that energy sites are legitimate military-related targets — a claim Ukraine rejects.


















