Kyiv hit by massive missile and drone attack: at least ten dead in residential buildings
Russia launched hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles at Kyiv overnight on 6 July. Apartment buildings were struck across several districts of the capital.
Russia struck Kyiv en masse again in the early hours of Monday 6 July: successive waves of drones and missiles — including dozens of ballistic missiles — killed at least ten people and injured more than fifty, according to Ukrainian authorities. Several apartment blocks took direct hits.
What do we know about the attack on Kyiv?
A residential building in the Podil district was partially destroyed between the fifth and ninth floors, and buildings were hit in at least four other districts of the capital. Thousands of residents spent the night sheltering in metro stations while rescue teams combed the rubble for survivors. The provisional toll stands at ten dead and dozens injured — numbers that may still rise.
Why does the timing matter?
The attack comes on the eve of the NATO summit, which opens on Tuesday in Ankara with the war in Ukraine at the top of the agenda. Hours earlier, President Volodymyr Zelensky had warned that Moscow was preparing yet another large-scale strike on the capital. The pattern repeats: whenever the diplomatic calendar heats up, nights in Kyiv get longer.
For civilians the arithmetic is simpler and crueller — another night spent underground, more buildings to rebuild, more families in mourning.
See also: June’s wave of overnight attacks and what is at stake at the NATO summit. Official statements at president.gov.ua.
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