April 28, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

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umam ukraine strike
CNN on scene after fatal missile strike on apartment building
03:31 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Russia unleashed a wave of attacks in central Ukraine on Friday. A missile strike on an apartment building in the city of Uman killed at least 23 people, including four children, and the death toll will likely continue to rise, officials said.
  • The Russian-backed Donetsk People’s Republic said nine people were killed in shelling by Ukrainian forces in the city of Donetsk.
  • President Vladimir Putin signed a decree that allows the deportation of Ukrainian citizens from the territories declared annexed by Russia if they are considered a “national security threat.”
  • The US State Department said it was “deeply disappointed” its request to visit detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in May was denied.
39 Posts

Our live coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news?here?or read through the updates below.

A wave of Russian strikes left 23 people dead in Ukraine. Here's the latest news

Rescuers work at the site of a residential?building?heavily damaged by a Russian missile in Uman, Ukraine?on Friday, April 28.

At least 23 people, including four children, were killed and at least 18 others were injured in a wave of Russian missile attacks in central Ukraine on Friday. The death toll will likely continue to rise, officials said, and rescuers are still searching for missing children thought to be under the rubble of a struck apartment building in Uman.

There were 46 apartments inside one of the buildings that were hit, of which 27 were?completely destroyed, according to the Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko. The strike – by a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile – is thought to have caused the highest number of civilian casualties in a single incident since a missile struck an apartment block in Dnipro in January.

President Volodymyr Zelensky offered condolences to the victims’ families and said the missile attacks underlined the country’s need for modern military aircraft.

If you’re just now catching up, here are other headlines you should know:

Ukrainian shelling: The self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic said nine people were killed in shelling by Ukrainian forces in the city of Donetsk. CNN cannot confirm the reported casualties, but unofficial Telegram channels published?video?and?photos?of?extensive?damage?in several areas of the city.?

Deported children: Zelensky says he appealed to his Chinese counterpart, President Xi Jinping, this week for help returning Ukrainian children who were deported by Russia.

Denied visit request: The US State Department said it was “deeply disappointed” that its request to visit detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in May was denied. The Russian Foreign Ministry on Thursday said it rejected the request in response to Washington’s denial of visas?to Russian reporters accompanying Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s visit to the United Nations this week.

Call for training on military jets: Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba reiterated the country’s call for F-16 fighter jet training from allies in a meeting with foreign ministers from eight countries on Thursday. Getting military training on how to maneuver the aircraft could be the first step in the country gaining access to the jets, Kuleba said.

Visit by Czech Republic and Slovak leaders: The presidents of the Czech Republic and Slovakia visited Ukraine on Friday, their first joint visit abroad, Slovakian President Zuzana ?aputová said in a?tweet?on?Friday. ?aputová said the visit is intended to bring “a message of friendship, solidarity & support,” noting that the three countries “share parts of common history.”

Grain import ban: Zelensky called out the “destructive” impact of bans on Ukrainian grain imposed by several European countries – on the grounds that the imports were undercutting the other nations’ domestic prices. He said Friday he had discussed the issue with the President of the EU Council, Charles Michel.

Putin’s decree: President Vladimir Putin signed a decree Thursday that allows the deportation of Ukrainian citizens from the territories declared annexed by Russia if they are considered a “national security threat.”

Rescuers search for missing children in rubble of apartment building destroyed by missile in Uman

Local residents and rescuers stand amidst the rubble at the site of a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missile in the town of?Uman, Ukraine on Friday, April 28.

Rescuers are still searching for missing children thought to be under the rubble of the apartment building hit by a Russian missile Friday in the central Ukrainian city of Uman.

Firefighters are trying to reach the lower floors of the bombed-out building, where they believe a young boy and girl are trapped, officials told a CNN team on the scene.

The parents of both children survived the attack and have been trying to call the kids’ cell phones. A call went through to one of the phones, but rescuers could not hear anything.

Police at the site have brought in psychologists and a DNA testing center to help local families. A school near the blast site is providing shelter and clothing to families who lost their homes.

The Russian strike killed at least 23 people, including four children, and Ukrainian authorities expect the death toll to climb. The Uman strike came in a wave of attacks by Russia’s forces across central Ukraine early Friday.

An aerial view shows a heavily damaged residential building in the town of?Uman, Ukraine on Friday, April 28.

Zelensky says grain import ban by several EU nations is destructive and "gives dangerous hope to the Kremlin"

A load of corn is poured into a truck at a?grain?storage facility in the village of Bilohiria,?Ukraine?on April 19.

President Volodymyr Zelensky discussed what he called the “destructive” impact of bans on the import of Ukrainian grain by several European countries. The bans were enacted on the grounds that the imports were undercutting the other nations’ domestic prices.

He said Friday he had discussed the issue with the President of the EU Council, Charles Michel.

?Zelensky added: “It is necessary to find a normal, constructive way out of this situation in the European spirit.”

Latest Russian missile attacks underline need for modern aircraft, Zelensky says

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky offered condolences to the families of more than 20 Ukrainians killed in Russian missile strikes on Friday, almost all of them victims of a cruise missile that struck an apartment building in the city of Uman.

?He said Ukraine could “save people only with weapons. Air defense, modern aircraft, without which there is no fully effective air defense.”

Zelensky asks Chinese leader for help getting deported children back from Russia

Zelensky speaks during his nightly address on Friday, April 28.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says he appealed to his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, this week for help returning Ukrainian children who were deported by Russia.

Zelensky shared new details about the diplomatic call, which was held Wednesday, during a joint press conference with the presidents of Slovakia and the Czech Republic Friday.?

Zelensky said he used the “important conversation” to raise the plight of roughly 20,000 Ukrainian children who Kyiv accuses Russia of forcibly deporting. The Ukrainian president said foreign countries, including China, need to help Ukraine bring the kids home.?

Key background: A report published in February by the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab outlined the expansive network of camps where Russia has allegedly detained Ukrainian children since the start of the war last year.

In March, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin and another Kyiv official,?Maria Lvova-Belova, accusing them of playing key roles in the scheme.

Beijing and Moscow: Zelensky’s call with Xi comes at a time of increased Western scrutiny on China’s relationship with Russia.

Putin and Xi?posed as peacebrokers?during a recent visit in Moscow, but the Chinese leader’s proposals on ending the war have not included a call for Moscow to withdraw its troops from Ukrainian land.

Zelensky said Wednesday’s call included a discussion of Ukraine’s territorial integrity.

The Ukrainian leader said he also received a “positive response” from China after outlining the risks faced by any country that supplies weapons to Russia.?

US officials have warned in recent months that China could be considering crossing the “red line” and providing lethal military aid to Russia. While the countries have strengthened ties, US officials say they?have not seen evidence?that China has provided extensive material support to the Kremlin.

CNN’s Sam Fossum contributed to this report.

US to continue requests to visit detained Americans after denial by Russia, State Department says

Wall Street Journal journalist Evan Gershkovich, accused of espionage, appears in the Moscow City Court on April 18.

The US State Department is “deeply disappointed” its request to visit detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in May was denied, principal deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said Friday.

On Thursday, the Russian Foreign Ministry rejected the US request to see Gershkovich, saying the decision was in response to Washington’s denial to provide visas to Russian reporters for Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s visit to the United Nations this week.

Some background: Gershkovich was arrested in Moscow in late March on spying charges, which the Wall Street Journal has vehemently denied. Gershkovich, who faces up to 20 years in prison, is currently being held in a pre-trial detention center at the notorious Lefortovo prison until May 29.

American citizen Paul Whelan has been held in Russia for over four years. His sister attended the UN Security Council meeting that Lavrov chaired on Monday, urging for his release his remarks prior to the meeting.

The US State Department has designated both Gershkovich and Whelan as wrongfully detained.

Death toll climbs to at least 23 after Russian missile strikes apartment building in Uman, Ukraine says

Rescuers work at the site of a damaged residential building in Uman, Ukraine, on Friday.

The death toll from a Russian missile strike on an apartment building in Uman has increased to?at least 23, according to the Ukrainian Interior Ministry. The death toll includes four children, officials said.

The strike in Uman, which is located in the central Cherkasy region, injured at least 18 other people, Ukrainian officials said earlier Friday.

There were 46 apartments inside one of the buildings that were hit, of which 27 were completely destroyed, according to Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine Ihor Klymenko.

East of Uman, a woman and her 2-year-old child were killed in a strike in Dnipro, authorities said.

Russian-backed Donetsk authorities say 9 killed by Ukrainian shelling

A burnt-out minibus is seen in?Donetsk, Ukraine, on Friday, April 28.

The self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic said nine people have been killed in shelling by Ukrainian forces in the city of Donetsk.

The DPR’s Coordination Center said that “massive shelling” killed six women, two men and an 8-year-old girl in the city center, injuring 16 others.

CNN cannot confirm the reported casualties. But unofficial Telegram channels have published video and photos of extensive damage in several areas of the city.?

The coordination center said that most of the strikes had been by Ukrainian artillery using 155 mm shells targeting the central Petrovsky district. But it also claimed that multiple launch rockets had been used.

Meanwhile on Friday, Ukraine said that Russian strikes killed more than 20 people in the central city of Uman.

Investigators stand next to burnt-out cars in an area hit by shelling in?Donetsk, Ukraine, on Friday, April 28.

Ukraine calls for F-16 fighter jet training in meeting with European foreign ministers

Left to right: Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna, Latvian Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, Denmark's Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen, and Iceland's Foreign Minister Thordis Kolbrun Reykfjord Gylfadottir attend a news conference in Odesa, Ukraine, on Friday.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba reiterated the country’s call for F-16 fighter jet training from allies in a meeting with foreign ministers from eight countries Thursday.

Kuleba, during a joint news conference at the summit in Odesa, asked allies “to make every effort to speed up the decision to start training Ukrainian pilots on such aircraft.”

Getting military training on how to maneuver the aircraft could be the first step in the country gaining access to the jets, Kuleba said.

Foreign ministers from Latvia, Denmark, Estonia, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway, Sweden and Finland attended the joint meeting.

Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council, emphasized the need for advanced military equipment and pointed to the death toll in Friday’s strike in Uman, which killed at least 22 people, including three children.

“Every day that the decision to supply Ukraine with modern combat aircraft is delayed means delaying the end of the war,” he said in a tweet.

Some context: Ukraine has long lobbied for the US and other Western allies to send the country F-16s to help stunt Russia’s invasion, but the fighter jets are sophisticated and can take months to learn how to fly.

The US and other Western allies have been skeptical of providing the jets to Ukraine. Russia has extensive anti-aircraft systems that could easily shoot the planes down, and some officials warn providing such equipment could be seen as provoking Russia.

CNN’s Natasha Bertrand and Alex Marquardt contributed to this report.

Video: Recovery efforts begin following Russian strikes on residential buildings

Rescue and recovery efforts are underway following overnight Russian strikes on residential buildings in the central city of Uman, Ukraine.

Ukrainian authorities said in an update that at least 22 people were killed. ?

A CNN team at the site of the attacks witnessed the partial collapse of the floors of one apartment building, where firefighters were set to lower themselves from a top floor into the rubble in an effort to recover bodies that may be buried in the debris. Neighbors in the surrounding area said the?building housed families with young children, some of whom remained missing following the strike.

Watch the report here:

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f4479d55-a996-47b8-8aba-6b63372535a9.mp4
02:46 - Source: CNN

France condemns Russia's?latest strikes in Ukraine

A rescuer observes damage in Uman, Ukraine on Friday.

France has condemned “in the strongest terms the renewed strikes carried out last night by Russia on Ukrainian territory, particularly in the regions of Cherkasy, Dnipropetrovsk and Kyiv,” the French foreign ministry said in a statement Friday.

The statement highlighted Russia’s deliberate targeting of residential buildings in the central city of Uman, which “resulted in a heavy toll of civilian casualties, including children.”

According to the latest update from the Ukrainian interior ministry on Friday, twenty people were killed in the missile strike in Uman.?

About 23 missiles were launched from Russian aircraft in the?Caspian Sea area, along with two drones, according to the?Ukrainian Air Force. Twenty-one of the missiles were intercepted by Ukrainian air defenses, it said.?

“Such targeting of Ukrainian infrastructure and civilian populations underlines Russia’s clear desire to continue escalating its war of aggression in Ukraine,” the ministry said.?

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna stressed they will continue supporting Ukrainian courts and the International Criminal Court “in order to fight against impunity” for Russian war crimes.

First responders remove rubble at a residential building in Uman on Friday.

In photos: See the aftermath of Russian missile strike on residential building in Ukrainian city of?Uman

At least 20 people are confirmed dead in a Russian missile attack on the Ukrainian city of Uman on Friday according to Ukraine’s Interior Ministry.

“Another body was pulled out of the rubble. As of 17:00 (10 a.m. ET), we have 20 dead,” it said.

A CNN team at the site of the attack saw bodies being taken from the apartment building’s basement in?Uman, a city located in Cherkasy. Two rockets hit three high-rise buildings, which included residential buildings and a warehouse.

According to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, Ihor Klymenko, there were 46 apartments inside the building that was hit, 27 of which were completely destroyed. He said it may take a day to clear all the rubble.

The strike – by a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile – is thought to have caused the highest number of civilian casualties in a single incident since a missile struck an apartment block in Dnipro in January.

Here are some photos showing the aftermath of Russia’s latest round of missile strikes in the Ukrainian city of Uman.

Aerial view of a destroyed residential building after missile attack in Uman, Ukraine, on April 28.
First responders remove rubble at a residential building in Uman, central Ukraine, on April 28.
Firefighters carry a body recovered from the rubble of a residential building that was hit during a Russian attack in Uman, central Ukraine, on April 28.
A local resident reacts near the site of a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missile in the town of?Uman, Cherkasy region, Ukraine, on April 28.
Firefighters and search and rescue teams conduct operation after Russian rocket hit residential building in Uman district located in Cherkasy Oblast, Ukraine, on April 28
Medics transport a stretcher carrying a body bag in Uman, Ukraine, on April 28.

CNN’s Julia Kesaieva, Nic Robertson,?AnneClaire Stapleton, Olga Voitovych, Josh Pennington?and Maria Avdeeva contributed to this report.

What we know about the overnight Russian missile strikes on Ukraine

Russia launched a barrage of long-range cruise missiles at Ukraine in the early hours of Friday morning, according to Ukrainian officials.?

At around 4 a.m. local time (9 p.m. ET), 23 missiles were launched from Russian aircraft in the?Caspian Sea area, along with two drones, according to the?Ukrainian Air Force. Twenty-one of the missiles were intercepted by Ukrainian air defenses, it said.?

But missiles did hit the central Ukrainian cities of Uman, in the Cherkasy region south of Kyiv, and Dnipro.

Uman: Officials say the death toll in Uman stands at 20, including three children. At least 18 people have been wounded.?

According to Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine Ihor Klymenko, there were 46 apartments inside one of the buildings that were hit, of which 27 were completely destroyed. He said it may take a day to clear all the rubble.

Emergency workers at the site “have almost finished clearing the ground floor [of the building]” and will continue combing the building, according to Yulia Norovkova, a press officer for the Cherkasy region state emergency service.?

CNN also spoke to a local woman, Liuda, whose friend lived on the eighth floor. When she heard the building had been hit, Liuda rushed there to find that her friend had survived, but her friend’s husband had been hospitalized and their two daughters, aged 7 and 13, were still missing.?

Some context: The strike – by a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile – is thought to have caused the highest number of civilian casualties in a single incident since a missile struck an apartment block in Dnipro in January.

Dnipro: Ukrainian authorities have given more details about a 31-year-old woman who died, along with her 2-year-old child, after a Russian missile strike on the city of Dnipro on Friday morning.

Serhii Lysak, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, said the woman had moved to her parents’ house due to the war.

The woman’s parents are both hospitalized, Lysak said.??

CNN’s Nic Robertson and Julia Kesaieva contributed to this post.

Presidents of Czech Republic and Slovakia pledge solidarity with Ukraine in first joint visit abroad

The presidents of the Czech Republic and Slovakia visited Ukraine on Friday, their first joint visit abroad, Slovakian President Zuzana ?aputová said in a tweet?on?Friday.

?aputová said the visit is intended to bring “a message of friendship, solidarity & support,” noting that the three countries “share parts of common history.”

Czech Republic President Petr Pavel also confirmed the visit on Twitter, saying that he and ?aputová “both value freedom and justice.”

The Czech president shared a picture of himself shaking hands with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and said he would push for accession talks with the European Union to start for Ukraine by the end of the year.

He said EU and NATO membership for Ukraine “is not a question of if, but when.”

The Czech president also tweeted pictures of him visiting Bucha, the Kyiv suburb that was under Russian occupation for over a month last year and has since become synonymous with Russian atrocities.

Some background on Pavel: He won the Czech Republic’s presidential election in January and took office in March of this year, after a campaign featuring strong backing for NATO and the European Union and support for aid to Ukraine.

A former army chief, Pavel became chairman of NATO’s military committee for three years before retiring in 2018.?

The visit comes after recent tensions between Ukraine and several eastern European states. Slovakia temporarily suspended grain imports from Ukraine earlier this month, following similar moves by Poland and Hungary. Farmers in countries neighboring Ukraine have protested the effects of increased imports of Ukrainian grain in their grain prices, the European Commission said in a statement?in?March.

Building in Bakhmut with well-known mural of a family destroyed

A building with a mother and child mural has been destroyed in Bakhmut, Ukraine, on April 27.

A high-rise building with a well-known mural depicting a smiling family has been destroyed in the beleaguered Ukrainian city of Bakhmut in recent days, according to video geolocated by CNN.?

The footage on Telegram shows an explosion at night and then smoke billowing out of the structure.

While the building with a mural of a woman and baby wearing crowns made of leaves appears to have been decimated, the mural with a man and a boy holding a toy airplane remains.

Here’s what it looked like last year:

Murals are painted on the side of apartments blocks, in?Bakhmut, Ukraine, on May 6, 2022.

Putin signs decree allowing deportation of Ukrainians from occupied regions of Ukraine?

President Vladimir Putin signed a decree Thursday that allows the deportation of Ukrainian citizens from the territories declared annexed by Russia if they are considered a “national security threat.”

According to the decree published online, residents from the annexed territories in Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson who have not taken Russian citizenship will be recognized as foreigners. They could be expelled from Russia if they pose a threat to national security, the decree said, including where residents are allegedly advocating for “a violent change in the constitutional order of the Russian Federation, planning or financing terrorist attacks or extremist crimes.”

Some background: In September 2022, Putin announced Russia would seize of nearly a fifth of Ukraine — which is illegal under international law — in the four regions, some of which are not even under full Russian control. It followed so-called referendums in the regions that were universally dismissed as “shams” by Ukraine and Western nations.

The decree also establishes that Ukrainians living in such areas who do not carry a Russian passport would have to apply for a residence permit. They will have to undergo fingerprint registration and provide a package of documents translated into Russian.

Ukrainian officials have repeatedly said that people living in Russian-occupied areas are being denied services when they don’t hold Russian documents.

Responding to the latest decree, Mykhailo Podolyak, adviser to the Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, said, “The occupier has seized a part of foreign territory, killed a certain number of civilians, and is forcibly throwing others out of their homes by the thousands. Only because they do not want to become ‘citizens of the country-murderer’…”?

Remember: In March, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Putin?and a Russian official?for an alleged scheme to deport Ukrainian children to Russia.

CNN sees bodies brought out of residential building in Ukrainian city of Uman as death toll continues to rise

Rescuers carry a covered body as they work at the site of a heavily damaged residential building in the town of?Uman, Cherkasy region, Ukraine, on April 28.

Seventeen people have been confirmed dead in the city of Uman following the Russian missile strike early Friday, officials have said.

A CNN team at the site of the attack saw bodies carried out of a decimated residential building.?

Local officials told the CNN crew that three children were among the dead. Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky?earlier said on Twitter?that two children killed in Uman “can’t be identified” and the fate of their parents was unknown.?

The death toll from Russia’s cruise missile and drone strikes overnight is now 19, according to CNN’s reporting. The other two casualties were a woman and her two-year-old child in Dnipro.?

It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

The death toll from Russia’s strikes across Ukraine on Friday morning has risen to 16 after two more bodies were found in?Uman, with the total of those killed in the city now standing at 14, with two 10-year-old children among the dead.

Two other deaths were reported earlier in the city of?Dnipro - a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child.

Fragments from a missile intercepted over the Kyiv region hit a multi-story residential building and injured two people, including a 13-year-old girl, the Kyiv region police chief Andrii Nebytov said.

Missiles and drones were also shot down over the capital Kyiv, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Ukraine intercepts most missiles: Most missiles launched at Ukraine in the early hours of Friday morning were intercepted, the country’s air force said in a Telegram post, with 21 of 23 cruise missiles intercepted and two drones destroyed.
  • Officials react to night of Russian destruction: Russia’s missile attacks on Ukrainian cities?overnight is Moscow’s “response to all peace initiatives,” Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said, adding: “The way to peace is to arm Ukraine with F-16s and protect children from Russian terror.” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky?sent condolences to the victims of the attack and warned: “This Russian terror must face a fair response from Ukraine and the world. And it will.”
  • Iranian drones powered by stolen Western technology: New research has revealed the extent to which Iran has built a powerful weapons industry based on Western technology, and how that technology is being used by Russia against?Ukrainian?cities. Conflict Armament Research, a UK-based organization which investigates weapons’ components, has established that the Shahed-136 drones sold to Russia by?Iran?are powered by an engine based on German technology – technology illicitly acquired by Iran almost 20 years ago.
  • Ukrainian preparations for counteroffensive “coming to an end”: Ukraine’s armed forces are finishing their preparations for a?counteroffensive?against Russian troops, defense minister Oleksii Reznikov has said. Reznikov said his country had received?Leopard 2?and Challenger tanks and was expecting?Leopard 1?tanks “a little later,” though US-made Abrams tanks would not arrive in time to participate in the counteroffensive.
  • Putin’s war museums: Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered museums dedicated to commemorating the events of the war in Ukraine to be built, the Kremlin said Friday, as it continues its attempts to control the narrative around Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The museums, which will be built across the country, will showcase “the events of the special military operation and the heroic deeds of its participants,” a Kremlin statement added.

Ukrainian preparations for counteroffensive “coming to an end,” defense minister says

A German-made Leopard 1 tank, center, at an OIP Land Systems SA hangar in Tournai, Belgium, on Wednesday, March 15. Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov?said his country had received?Leopard 2?and Challenger tanks and was expecting?Leopard 1?tanks “a little later.”

Ukraine’s armed forces are finishing their preparations for a counteroffensive against Russian troops, defense minister Oleksii Reznikov has said.

Asked whether Ukraine had received the weapons promised by its international allies in order to launch a counteroffensive, Reznikov said his country had received?Leopard 2?and Challenger tanks and was expecting?Leopard 1?tanks “a little later.” He said US-made Abrams tanks would not arrive in time to participate in the counteroffensive.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg?said Thursday?that Ukraine’s foreign allies had delivered more than 98%?of the combat vehicles promised to Kyiv.

Some background: Ukraine has made extraordinary efforts to conceal the start of its strategically vital counteroffensive, and deputy defense minister Hanna Maliar stated last week that the counteroffensive would not be announced.

Death toll rises to 16 as two more bodies found in Uman after Russian strikes

Rescuers carry a bag containing a body next to damaged residential building in Uman, south of Kyiv, Ukraine, on April 28.

The death toll from Russia’s strikes across Ukraine on Friday morning has risen to 16 after two more bodies were found in Uman, with the total of those killed in the city now standing at 14.

Two other deaths were reported earlier in the city of Dnipro.

Children among the dead: Cruise missiles were launched at Ukrainian cities in the early hours of Friday morning.

In Dnipro, a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child died, according to Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office in a post on Telegram. Two 10-year-old children are among the dead in Uman, Ihor Taburets, the head of the Cherkasy region, said.

Missiles and drones were also shot down over the capital Kyiv, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

Fragments from a missile intercepted over the Kyiv region hit a multi-story residential building and injured two people, including a 13-year-old girl, the Kyiv region police chief Andrii Nebytov said.

Putin orders museums to be built across Russia dedicated to "heroic" Ukraine war

Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered museums to be built which are dedicated to commemorating the events of the war in Ukraine, the Kremlin said Friday.

The museums, which will be built across the country, will showcase “the events of the special military operation and the heroic deeds of its participants,” according to a Kremlin statement.

Putin has set a deadline of the end of the year for the heads of the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of Defense, the Ministry of Education and Science, and the Ministry of Education to report on the progress of implementing the galleries which are to be handled by regional and municipal authorities. The Ministry of Defense has also been directed to identify artifacts suitable for display in these museums.

Controlling the narrative: On February 24 2022, Russia launched its all-out invasion of Ukraine and began Europe’s?biggest land war?since 1945 – and the Kremlin has been working hard to control the narrative.

Draconian new?censorship laws?target any media still operating outside the controls of the Kremlin and most independent journalists have left the country.

Meanwhile, a digital Iron Curtain has been reinforced, shutting Russians off from Western news and social media sites, and authorities have rounded up thousands in a crackdown on anti-war protests.

Death toll from Russia’s missile strikes rises to 14

The death toll from Russia’s deadly, early-morning missile strikes across Ukraine on Friday has risen to 14, officials said, after two more bodies were pulled from the rubble of a residential building in the city of Uman.?

“As of 11:50 a.m., the body of one more dead person was removed from the rubble of a residential building,” Ukraine’s state emergency service said on the Telegram messaging app. The press office of Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs later said another body had been found.

The search operation in Uman continues.?

Ukrainian President Volodymyr?Zelensky said on Twitter?earlier that one apartment building in Uman had been “destroyed” and many others damaged before dawn on Friday.?

The damage: According to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, Ihor Klymenko, there were 46 apartments inside the building that was hit, 27 of which were completely destroyed. He said it may take a day to clear all the rubble.

Klymenko said authorities had set up tents for survivors and their neighbors to wait in?“until the local authorities provide them with places of refuge.”

“At the moment, the authorities have provided everyone with food. There is also a hotline that can be contacted by relatives and friends of our citizens who lived in this and other houses that were damaged in this area,” he said.?

Bridget Brink, America’s ambassador to Ukraine, responded to Friday’s attack?in a tweet. “More lives tragically lost as Russia’s missiles hit another apartment building. Russia still hasn’t learned that its brutality only reinforces Ukrainian resolve and deepens our commitment to support in the fight,” she said.?

Missile attacks are "Russia’s response to all peace initiatives," says Ukrainian foreign minister

Family members and neighbours react at the site of a heavily damaged residential building hit in the town of Uman, Cherkasy region,?Ukraine, on?April 28.

Russia’s missile attacks on Ukrainian cities overnight is Moscow’s “response to all peace initiatives,” Ukraine’s foreign minister has said.

Children among the dead: Cruise missiles were launched at Ukrainian cities in the early hours of Friday morning, killing at least 12 people.

In Dnipro, a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child died, according to Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office in a post on Telegram. In Uman, 10 people died, including two 10-year-old children, Ihor Taburets, the head of the Cherkasy region, said.

Missiles and drones were also shot down over the capital Kyiv, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

Fragments from a missile intercepted over the Kyiv region hit a multi-story residential building and injured two people, including a 13-year-old girl, the Kyiv region police chief Andrii Nebytov said.

Most missiles launched at Ukraine Friday were intercepted, air force says

Most missiles launched at Ukraine in the early hours of Friday morning were intercepted, the country’s air force said in a Telegram post.

The Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said it intercepted 21 out of 23 cruise missiles and destroyed two drones.

At least 12 people have been killed in the attacks, Ukrainian officials say. This includes a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child who died in the attack in central Ukraine’s Dnipro, according to the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office.

In the city of Uman in the central Cherkasy region, 10 people were killed when Russian rockets hit several high-rises, including residential buildings, according to Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs.

12 people killed in Russian missile attacks on central Ukraine

Local residents and rescuers stand amidst the rubble at the site of a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missilein Uman, Ukraine on April 28.

Twelve people have now been confirmed dead in Russian missile attacks across Ukraine early Friday.

Three more bodies were pulled from the rubble of a building in the city of Uman, in central Ukraine.

That brings the total of people killed in the Uman attack to 10.

In central Ukraine’s Dnipro, a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child died in the attack, according to the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office.

Death toll from Russian attacks in central Ukraine rises to 9

Rescuers carry the body of a victim as they work at the site of a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missilein in Uman, Cherkasy region, Ukraine on April 28.

At least nine people have been killed in Russian missile attacks on Ukraine early Friday.

In the city of Uman: In the city of Uman in central Cherkasy region, at least seven people, including a child, were killed when Russian rockets hit several high-rises, including residential buildings, according to Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs.

Seventeen people were rescued from under the rubble in Uman. Nine were taken to hospital, with one person in critical condition, Klymenko said.?

Ukrainian President Volodymyr?Zelensky?earlier tweeted: “10 residential buildings are damaged in Uman. The entire block of one of them is destroyed.”

Dnipro: In central Ukraine’s Dnipro, a 31-year-old woman and her 2-year-old child died in the attack, according to the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Prosecutor’s Office.

Three civilians were injured, with two of them taken to hospital, it said.

The Iranian drones deployed by Russia in Ukraine are powered by stolen Western technology, research reveals

A Mado MD-550 engine recovered by Ukrainian security forces on December 30 from the remnants of a Shahed-136 drone that was used in an attack in Ukraine.

New research has revealed the extent to which Iran has built a powerful weapons industry based on Western technology, and how that technology is being used by Russia against?Ukrainian?cities.

Conflict Armament Research (CAR), a UK-based organization which investigates weapons’ components, has established that the Shahed-136 drones sold to Russia by?Iran?are powered by an engine based on German technology – technology illicitly acquired by Iran almost 20 years ago.

The finding – made through detailed examination of components recovered in Ukraine and shared exclusively with CNN – underlines Iran’s ability to mimic and finesse military technology it has obtained illegitimately.

Western officials are also concerned that Russia may share Western-made weapons and equipment recovered on the Ukrainian battlefield with the Iranians. So far, there’s no firm evidence that has happened.

However, relations between Tehran and Moscow have grown much closer. Russia wants Iranian drones and ballistic missiles; Iran wants Russian investment and trade. Russia has become the largest foreign investor in Iran over the past year, according to Iranian officials.

And for the Russians, Iranian drones are a bargain substitute for much more costly missiles, stocks of which are dwindling, according to Western officials. Experts believe that a Shahed-186, for example, costs about $20,000, a tiny fraction of the cost of a Kalibr cruise missile.

Read the full story here.

Zelensky sends condolences to victims of Friday's Russian missile attacks

Volodymyr Zelensky attends a joint press conference in Zhytomyr on April 24.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky sent condolences to victims of Russian missile attacks across the country on Friday.

Zelensky said a child was killed following the shelling on Dnipro in central Ukraine, adding that “my condolences to everyone who lost their loved ones because of the Russian terror!”

Attacks were reported in the central Ukrainian cities of Dnipro, Uman in the Cherkasy region, and the city of Ukrainka, located some 45 kilometres (28 miles) south of the capital Kyiv.

Six dead in Russian missile attack on central Ukrainian city of Uman

Rescuers work at the site of a residential building heavily damaged by a Russian missile in?Uman, Cherkasy region, Ukraine on April 28.

The death toll in a Russian missile attack on the city of Uman in central Ukraine, has risen to six, Ihor Taburets, head of the Cherkasy regional military administration said Friday.

Earlier, Taburets said two rockets hit three high-rises, including residential buildings, in Uman early Friday morning.

Nine people were injured in the strike, he said.

Search and rescue operations at the site of the attack are continuing.

Uman, in Cherkasy region, is a?small Ukrainian city about 201 kilometres (125 miles) south of the capital Kyiv.

The six deaths in the city bring the number of people who have died in a wave of early morning attacks across Ukraine to eight.

In Dnipro,?a woman and a 3-year-old child were killed in an attack that also injured three people, according to Ukraine’s Internal Affairs Minister.?

Russian missile fragments hit residential building, injuring 13-year-old girl?in Kyiv region

A residential building damaged by remains of a Russian missile in the town of Ukrainka, Kyiv region,?Ukraine, on?April 28.

Rescue efforts are underway at a residential building in Ukrainka, Kyiv region, on Friday morning after it was hit by Russian missile fragments,?its regional military administration said.?

A young girl was injured in a “multi-story building” and taken to hospital, according to Ruslan Kravchenko, the governor of Kyiv region.?The injured girl was 13 years old, according to the regional police chief Andrii Nebytov.

A fire started in the building following the attack but was contained at 5:30 a.m. local time, Kravchenko said.

Some context: Russian missile attacks were reported across Ukraine on Friday, as rockets hit central parts of the country and the Kyiv region.

5 dead in Russian missile attacks across Ukraine

This picture shows a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missile in the town of?Uman, Cherkasy region, on April 28.

Five people have been killed in Russian missile attacks across Ukraine on Friday, as rockets hit central parts of the country and the Kyiv region, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said.

Attacks were reported in Ukraine’s central cities of Dnipro and Uman, and Ukrainka in Kyiv region, according to Klymenko.

In Uman, a city located in Cherkasy, two rockets hit three high-rises — including residential buildings and a warehouse — killing three people and injuring eight, according to an update at 7 a.m. local time as search rescue operations continue.?

In Dnipro, a woman and a 3-year-old child were killed in an attack in central Ukraine, which also injured three people, according to the Internal Affairs Minister.?

In Ukrainka, located around 45 kilometres (28 miles) south of the capital Kyiv, two people were injured in missile attacks early Friday morning.?

3 dead as cruise missile hits residential building in central Ukraine

A view shows a heavily damaged residential building hit by a Russian missile in the town of?Uman, Cherkasy region, Ukraine April 28.

Three people were killed and eight injured in Uman, in the central Cherkasy region of Ukraine, after two Russian cruise missiles hit a residential building and warehouse on Friday, according to?a Ukrainian official.

Rescue operations are continuing in Uman, a?small Ukrainian city about 125 miles south of the capital Kyiv, said Ihor Taburets, head of the Cherkasy regional military administration.?

Ukraine’s air defense destroys 11 cruise missiles over Kyiv

The Ukrainian air defense shot down 11 cruise missiles over Kyiv airspace on Friday, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

The air defense also shot down two drones, which type has not yet been established, according to Popko.

There were no reports of civilian casualties or damage to residential buildings or infrastructure, although the fall of debris in the capital’s Obolon district cut off a local power line and damaged the road surface.

Popko said the last attack happened on March 9, 2023.

Alarms sound in several regions of Ukraine overnight as wave of Russian attacks reported

The Kyiv regional military administration reported their air defense systems were working in the capital region early Friday, following a day of hefty shelling from Russia.

No further details have been provided by the military administration.

Central Ukraine: Two cruise missiles hit a residential building and a warehouse in Uman in the Cherkasy region, its regional military administration head Ihor Taburets said on Telegram Friday.

He added that an investigation is underway and response teams are working on the scene as the air alert continues.?

In Dnipro, Mayor Boris Filatov said he has “been awake half the night” due to “high-precision” attacks?that killed a young woman and a three-year-old child, according to his Telegram post.

It's morning in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

Alarms sounded in several regions of Ukraine early Friday, including the capital Kyiv, with Russian attacks reported in Cherkasy and Dnipro, Ukrainian regional military administration officials said.

The Ukrainian air defense shot down 11 cruise missiles over?Kyiv?airspace on Friday, in what authorities called the first missile attack on the Ukrainian capital in 51 days.

Here are the latest headlines:

  • US announces new sanctions: US President Joe Biden?announced new sanctions?against groups in Russia and Iran accused of taking Americans hostage, an effort to prevent future captures and urge the countries to release those currently in captivity.
  • On the ground: Official reports and witness accounts on social media?detailed heavy explosions?in Russian-occupied areas of the south of the country Thursday, including in Kherson, Melitopol and Donetsk. Meanwhile, Russian forces shelled Tokarivka, in Kharkiv, killing at?least one person, according to Ukrainian officials. Zaporizhzhia’s regional military administration said it recorded more than?80 Russian attacks on the region?on Thursday.
  • Counteroffensive expectations “overheated”:?Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov has?spoken about?public expectations of a?counteroffensive?against Russian forces, in an interview with RBC Ukraine. Asked whether “the public’s expectations of a counteroffensive are somewhat overheated” he said: “I agree… Everyone wants another victory.”?
  • Italian journalist injured:?Corrado Zunino, the?Italian journalist injured?in a suspected Russian strike in Kherson, “ignored the warnings of the Ukrainian military,” the Ukrainian Army’s Operational Command South said in a Facebook post. Zunino, who works for the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, “did not inform the responsible press officers about his work in the city,” the command said.
  • Combat vehicles delivered:?Ukraine’s NATO allies have?delivered almost all the combat vehicles?they promised Kyiv, the head of the alliance said Thursday.?
  • UN Nuclear watchdog team completes scheduled rotation:?The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has?successfully carried out a rotation?of its staff at the nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia, which is controlled by the occupying Russian force, according to Russia’s officials.
  • Donetsk facing water crisis: Water supply in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine’s Donetsk region is dangerously low, according to Denis Pushilin, the head of the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic.Many households get just two hours of water supply every three days, the Moscow-backed leader said in an online Q&A session.?

Correction: An earlier version of this post incorrectly described Corrado Zunino’s injuries.

Explosions reported in several Russian-held parts of southern Ukraine

Official reports and witness accounts on social media detailed heavy explosions in Russian-occupied areas of southern Ukraine Thursday.

Kherson region: Unofficial Telegram channels in Kherson said there have been explosions in or near the town of Nova Kakhovka, the site of an important hydro-electric project on the Dnipro River.?Videos showed smoke rising.

CNN is unable to confirm what targets might have been struck, but the Russian-installed Nova Kakhovka district administration claimed the town was left without power supply due to shelling by Ukrainian armed forces.

There was also incoming fire on the Ukrainian-held west bank of the Dnipro River. Shelling killed one woman and seriously injured her husband in a village nearby, the Kherson regional military administration said.

Melitopol: A loud explosion was heard in Melitopol, said its mayor, Ivan Fedorov. The Russian-occupied city has been a hub for Russian forces away from the front lines.

An improvised explosive device detonated near the entrance of an apartment building, according to Vladimir Rogov, a senior official in the Russian-appointed administration in occupied Zaporizhzhia. The building was slightly damaged, he said, but there were no casualties.

Melitopol has been under frequent attack from missiles and long-range rockets, as well as improvised devices apparently planted by Ukrainian partisan groups and aimed at officials in the Russian-backed administration.?

Elsewhere, in eastern Ukraine: Four children in the city of Donetsk were injured when they tried to move an explosive device they found on the road, Russian-appointed authorities in the region said. No further information was available on the incident.

Russian-held Donetsk in eastern Ukraine is experiencing a water crisis, official says

Denis?Pushilin attends a meeting in Amvrosiivka, Donetsk region, on November 6, 2022.

Water supply in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine’s Donetsk region is dangerously low, according to Denis Pushilin, the head of the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic.

Many households get just two hours of water supply every three days, the Moscow-backed leader said in an online Q&A session.?

The city of Donetsk lost its main source of water, a canal that runs through the eastern Ukrainian cities of Chasiv Yar and Bakhmut.

Crews are still working to complete an alternative canal from the Siverskyi Donets River, which should bring relief from the water crisis, according to Pushilin.

“The military is doing everything possible to speed up the resolution of this issue,” he said of the canal work. “But we need water today.”

To address immediate needs, Pushilin said crews are building a water pipeline to the Don River in Russia. It will only improve the situation marginally but will increase water supply overall, he said.

In the meantime, residents are using water pumped from the region’s mines.

“The mine water is of inadequate quality for the supply,” Pushilin said. “This is disastrous for our water networks, which are already in a poor condition.”

Some background: The canal supplying much of Donetsk’s water was built in the mid-20th?century. Its route through Chasiv Yar takes it past heavy fighting between Russian and Ukrainian troops. Its filtration station is near the town of Avdiivka, another scene of constant battles.

Donetsk residents have told CNN the water situation is very difficult, especially on the upper floors of buildings because of inadequate pressure.

Maryna, a 42-year-old artist who lives on the outskirts of Donetsk city, told CNN:

US announces new sanctions against Russia and Iran for holding Americans hostage

The US is imposing new sanctions on groups in Russia and Iran accused of taking Americans hostage as it works to prevent more captive-taking and potentially secure the release of citizens currently being detained.

The move comes amid several high-profile cases of Americans being wrongfully detained. Evan Gershkovich, a Wall Street Journal reporter, and Paul Whelan, a former Marine, are being held in Russia on espionage charges they each vehemently deny.

American citizens Siamak Namazi, Emad Sharghi and Morad Tahbaz are all being held in Iran’s notorious Evin prison, where there have been reports of torture.

The sanctions ordered up Thursday would punish organizations the US accuses of being responsible for holding hostage or wrongfully detaining Americans. In Iran, four individuals are also coming under new sanctions.

The groups are Russia’s Federal Security Service and the Intelligence Organization of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Officials said the steps should act as a warning to those thinking of taking Americans hostage. “We are also showing that one cannot engage in this sort of awful behavior using human beings as pawns, as bargaining chips, without paying consequences and these are some of the consequences,” a senior administration official said.

But questions remain about the real impact of these sanctions because many of the entities hit on Thursday were already sanctioned under different authorities by the US.

Dive deeper:

‘I was scared about my family:’ Why two Ukrainian footballers keep playing despite Russia’s invasion
With Zelensky call, Xi Jinping steps up bid to broker peace – but does he have a plan?
Russian ground forces ‘bigger today’ than at start of the war in Ukraine, US general says

Dive deeper:

‘I was scared about my family:’ Why two Ukrainian footballers keep playing despite Russia’s invasion
With Zelensky call, Xi Jinping steps up bid to broker peace – but does he have a plan?
Russian ground forces ‘bigger today’ than at start of the war in Ukraine, US general says