Welcome to Roya News, stay informed with the most important news at your fingertips.

A Ukrainian rescuer works to extinguish a fire in a damaged residential building following an air strike in Kyiv. (November 14, 2025)

1
Image 1 from gallery

Four killed in “calculated” Russian attack on Ukraine: Zelensky

Listen to this story:
0:00

Note: AI technology was used to generate this article’s audio.

Published :  
3 hours ago|
  • A large-scale Russian attack, primarily targeting Kyiv with 430 drones and 18 missiles, killed four people and damaged dozens of residential buildings across the capital.
  • The attack is the latest in an intensified campaign against Ukrainian infrastructure and comes as Kyiv's Western allies increase pressure on Moscow to agree to a ceasefire.

A Russian attack overnight, mostly targeting the capital Kyiv, killed four people and damaged buildings across the city, Ukrainian authorities said Friday.

Russia, has in recent months intensified its attacks on infrastructure, particularly targeting Ukrainian energy facilities and rail systems, as well as residential areas.

"This was a deliberately calculated attack aimed at causing maximum harm to people and civilian infrastructure," President Volodymyr Zelensky said.

The attack killed four, Zelensky said, and wounded dozens including a pregnant woman.

Zelensky added that Russia had launched around 430 drones and 18 missiles in the attack.

Tracer bullets were used against drones in addition to several anti-missile systems. .

"There are a lot of damaged high-rise buildings throughout Kyiv, almost in every district," Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the city's military administration, wrote on social media.

Ukrainian emergency services rescued dozens from fires and destruction across the city, as the police said 30 residential buildings in nine districts were damaged.

Some parts of the Desnyansky and Podil district were temporarily left without heat, mayor Vitaly Klitschko said.

But local emergency outages caused by the attack were resolved by the morning, he said.

Transport was partially blocked, city administration authorities said, with buses and trams delayed.

Entrenched war

The attack comes as Kyiv's Western allies ratchet up pressure on Russia.

On Wednesday, Canada unveiled new sanctions targeting Russia's drone and energy production, as well as infrastructure used to launch cyberattacks.

On the same day, G7 foreign ministers called for an immediate ceasefire in Ukraine, voicing "unwavering" support for the country's territorial integrity.

And the European Commission is considering using part of Russia's assets frozen after 2022 to provide Kyiv with a loan for budgetary and military support over the next two years.

But after almost four years of war, both sides are heavily entrenched with Moscow rejecting ceasefire calls and efforts by US President Donald Trump to revive a long-stalled peace deal.

Russian forces have been grinding across eastern Ukraine for months, trying to take control of the Donetsk and Lugansk regions.

Experts say Russia's latest strikes on energy infrastructure are putting Ukraine at risk of heating outages ahead of the winter months.

Ukraine has in turn stepped up attacks on Russian infrastructure, and sought to strike further beyond the front.

Russian forces downed more than 200 Ukrainian drones overnight into Friday, Moscow's defence ministry said, including 66 over Krasnodar Krai and 45 over Saratov in the south.

A fire broke out at the Sheskharis oil refinery, one of the largest in Russia, in the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, before being brought under control, Krasnodar Krai authorities said.

A civilian vessel there was also damaged, with three of the crew wounded and hospitalised, they added.