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Ukrainian rescuers clear rubble as Kyiv mourns 30 killed in Russian attack

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A deadly Russian strike on Kyiv killed at least 30 people, injured dozens, and prompted a day of mourning as rescue teams searched for survivors.

KYIV (Reuters) - Rescuers cleared the rubble in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv on Friday in a search for survivors, as flags were lowered to half ​mast to mark a day of mourning, a day after a ‌Russian missile and drone attack killed at least 30 people.

The attack - the deadliest Russian strike on Ukraine's capital this year - also injured 92 people, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Friday.

The ​parents of a 10-year-old boy, who was hospitalised after the attack, as ​well as a 15-year-old girl were still unaccounted for, he said.

Separately, ⁠a Russian drone attack on a house in the northern Sumy region killed four ​people overnight on Friday, including a woman and her toddler daughter, the Prosecutor ​General's Office said.

DAY OF MOURNING IN KYIV

Klitschko announced a day of mourning in Kyiv for Friday. Rescue operations were continuing for a second day, he said, as forensic experts worked to ​identify body parts.

In recent months, Ukraine has slowed Russian advances to a crawl on ​the 1,200-km front line, and has retaken territory in some areas.

"Russia has no argument left for ‌its ⁠war other than its ballistic missiles," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in his evening address on Thursday.

"(Russian President Vladimir) Putin still intends to 'vanquish' residential buildings rather than end this war."

The scale and spread of destruction across the breadth of the ​capital had little precedent ​even in a war ⁠now in its fifth year. Zelenskiy said more than 100 residential buildings had been damaged.

Moscow said the attacks were retaliation ​for Ukrainian drone strikes on Russia.

After years of enduring long-range ​attacks from ⁠Russia, Ukraine has intensified its own strikes deep into Russian territory, mainly on energy targets. That has triggered a fuel crisis in

Russia, forcing the world's third-biggest oil producer ⁠to ​import gasoline.

Russia has responded with a stepped-up air ​campaign against Ukrainian cities, last month hitting a 1,000-year-old Kyiv cathedral foundational to the Orthodox faith in ​both countries.

 

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