Two loud explosions were heard in the city, then air alert sirens sounded, but no casualties or material damage were reported in the capital on Saturday morning.
Published
Reading time :
1 minute
Air warning sirens sounded in the Ukrainian capital. A missile targeted Kiev on Saturday, November 11, ending nearly two months of relative calm for the Ukrainian capital, with the frontline regions facing a nighttime wave of Russian drone attacks.
“After a long break of 52 days, the enemy has resumed its missile attacks on kyiv!”, declared head of the military administration of the Ukrainian capital Serguii Popko on the Telegram messaging service. He said a missile attack took place Saturday morning. Two loud explosions were heard in the city, then air alert sirens sounded shortly after. No casualties or material damage were reported in the capital during Saturday morning.
A resurgence of these attacks feared
Asked why the alert was only given after the explosion, a military aviation spokesman told television that “Ballistic missiles fly extremely fast, and are not as visible on radar as cruise missiles.” The Ukrainian Air Force is trying to determine whether the capital was targeted by an Iskander ballistic missile, or by an S-400 anti-aircraft missile.
Ukraine fears an increase in attacks of this type with the arrival of cold weather, after last winter’s strikes which targeted the Ukrainian energy network, leaving thousands of people without heat or electricity for long periods.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said Tuesday that Ukraine has deployed more Western air defense systems to deal with new winter attacks on its energy networks. The Ukrainian defense team shot down a missile over kyiv on September 21. The falling debris from the machine injured seven people, including a child.
Other regions of Ukraine faced drone attacks between Friday evening and Saturday, with the army saying that around two-thirds of the 31 Iranian-made aircraft had been destroyed. Over the past 24 hours, two people were killed and eight others injured in the south in Kherson, Governor Oleksandr Produkin said.