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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

From balconies: Glory to heroes

Ukraine’s Air Force command says it had destroyed 45 Iranian-made Shahed drones overnight

Reuters Kyiv Published 02.01.23, 02:03 AM
Representational image.

Representational image. File Photo.

Ukrainians cheered from their balconies while their air defences blasted Russian missiles and drones out of the sky in the first hours of 2023, as Moscow saw in the new year by attacking civilian targets across Ukraine.

Ukraine’s Air Force command said it had destroyed 45 Iranian-made Shahed drones overnight — 32 of them on Sunday after midnight and 13 late on Saturday.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin signalled no let-up to his assault on Ukraine, in a grim and defiant New Year’s speech that contrasted with a hopeful message of gratitude and unity from Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky.

As sirens blared in Kyiv, some people shouted from their balconies: “Glory to Ukraine! Glory to heroes!”

Fragments from the latenight attack caused minimal damage in the capital’s centre, and preliminarily reports indicated there were no wounded or casualties, Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko said on social media.

US ambassador to Ukraine Bridget Brink said on Twitter: “Russia coldly and cowardly attacked Ukraine in the early hours of the new year. But Putin still does not seem to understand that Ukrainians are made of iron.”

At the front line in Urkaine’s eastern Donetsk province, troops toasted the New Year. Soldier Pavlo Pryzhehodskiy, 27, played a song on guitar he had written at the front after 12 of his comradeswere killed in a single night. “It is sad that instead of meeting friends, celebrating and giving gifts to one another people were forced to seek shelter, some were killed,” he told Reuters. “...That is why the New Year is sad.”

In a nearby front line trench, soldier Oleh Zahrodskiy, 49, said he had signed upas a volunteer after his son was called up to fight as a reservist. His son was now in ahospital in the southern city of Dnipro, fighting for his lifewith a brain injury, while hisfather manned the front. “It is very tough now,” he said, holding back tears.

Andrii Nebytov, chief of Kyiv’s police, posted a photo on his Telegram app, showing what was described as a piece of drone used in an attack on the capital, with a hand-written sign on it in Russian saying “Happy New Year”.

“This wreckage is not at the front, where fierce battles are taking place, this is here, on a sports grounds, where children play,” Nebytov said.

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