Russian missile attack kills 11 as Ukraine’s Zelensky presses Nato allies for support
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- Russian missile attack on Dnipro, Ukraine, killed at least 11, injuring 153 including 18 children, damaging buildings.
- Zelensky urges Nato allies to invest in Ukraine's defence industry and stop the supply of components to Russia.
- Air strikes on Kyiv and surrounding region on June 23 killed 10 people, increasing recent Russian attacks.
AI generated
DNIPRO, Ukraine - A Russian missile attack in south-eastern Ukraine on June 24 killed at least 11 people, local officials said, as President Volodymyr Zelensky urged Kyiv’s allies at a Nato summit to bolster Ukraine’s defence industry.
The two-wave strike killed nine in the regional capital Dnipro, said governor Serhiy Lysak, where the blast wave also showered scores of train passengers with broken glass, and damaged schools and a hospital.
Mr Lysak said 18 children were among the 153 injured.
Two people were also killed in the town of Samar, around 10km from Dnipro, the state emergencies service said. Officials did not provide details of damage there.
The rare daytime attack came as Mr Zelensky pressed Nato member states in the Netherlands to boost their investment in Ukraine’s growing defence sector and crack down on the supply of the foreign components that he said Russia uses to build its weapons.
“This is not a fight where it’s hard to choose a side,” he wrote on X, in response to the strike.
“Standing with Ukraine means defending life.”
Mr Zelensky was also expected to meet US President Donald Trump
Russia has stepped up air strikes on Ukraine in recent weeks, particularly its capital Kyiv, where 28 people were killed on June 17
Another 10 people were killed in air attacks on Kyiv and the surrounding region on June 23.
After the June 24 attack on Dnipro, stunned residents surveyed a badly damaged apartment building and battered cars.
At a nearby church, windows were blown out and scattered across the altar.
Priest Serhii Narolskyi said he had been holding a service at the time of the attack, which was preceded by an air raid alert.
“It happened in a split second. You opened your eyes, and there were no windows or doors anywhere,” he said.
“Everything was in a half-destroyed state.” REUTERS

