World

Cruise missiles destroy building near Lviv airport, military says – as Klitschko warns of ‘war on civilians’ in Kyiv

Several missiles have struck and destroyed a building near the airport in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, according to the city’s mayor.

Ukraine’s military said the aircraft repair plant was struck by cruise missiles fired from the direction of the Black Sea, which it said were likely Kh-555 weapons launched from heavy strategic bombers.

The plant was not in operation at the time of the strike and there were no casualties after at least three blasts, mayor Andriy Sadovy said.

Similar long-range cruise missiles are thought to have been used in an airstrike on Yavoriv military base in western Ukraine on Sunday.

Sky’s Alistair Bunkall in Lviv said air raid sirens went off at 6.15am and he heard around three to four explosions 15 minutes later “just as the city was waking up, just as the curfew had lifted”.

Key developments
• Air raid sirens heard in port city of Odesa
• UK’s MoD says Russian invasion is “faltering” due to logistical problems
• US President Joe Biden to warn Chinese President Xi Jinping against backing Russia in phone call
• Turkey offers to host talks between Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelenskyy
• More than 150,000 British people register interest in housing refugees as Homes for Ukraine scheme launches

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player


2:01

Residents return to ruined homes in Mariupol.

Russia’s defence ministry said on Friday that separatists in eastern Ukraine with help from Russian armed forces were “tightening the noose” around the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency
reported.

Articles You May Like

Labour is ‘absolutely not’ engaged in class war, Sir Keir Starmer insists
Young people to lose benefits if they refuse work and training, says minister
Microsoft introduces PC that has one job: connect users to their computers in the cloud
Ingram-Moores ‘benefited significantly’ from family link to Captain Tom Foundation, report finds
Ørsted’s largest solar farm in the world is now online in Texas