One of the missiles that Russia has launched on kyiv this Monday has fallen at the moment in which the BBC correspondent in the Ukrainian capital, Hugo Bachega, made a live connection in the news of the chain. The journalist was reporting on the situation in the country when the whistle of the projectile’s flight began to be heard. Bachega looked up and interrupted his speech to turn back, trying to see what was happening. Then the explosion occurred and the correspondent quickly moved away from his position, disappearing from the shot.
The center of kyiv has suffered during the morning the impact of multiple missiles that have caused the death of at least five civilians, have caused injuries to another 12 and have caused serious damage to residential buildings, offices and public organizations such as the Ministry of Education. Moscow’s offensive has spread to other cities and comes just two days after the sabotage last Saturday of the Kerch Strait bridge, a Russian strategic infrastructure in the annexed Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea.
Other Ukrainian cities are being targeted this Monday by the Russian offensive. Against Lviv, a city in western Ukraine, near the border with Poland, multiple missiles have been fired, as reported by the city council. These projectiles have caused serious damage to railway infrastructure. Large cities closer to the front such as Mikolaiv, Dnipro or Zaporizhia are also being targeted by Russian missiles. Kirilo Tymoshenko, advisor to the Ukrainian president, Volodímir Zelenski, has specified that the missiles had as their main objective energy facilities in 12 provinces of the country.
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