Ukrainian drone hits Moscow tower housing ministries for 2nd time

Ukrainian drone hits Moscow tower housing ministries for 2nd time

Ukrainian drones hit a tower block in Moscow for a second time in three days on Tuesday as Russia reportedly thwarted one other wave of drones aimed toward vessels within the Black Sea and the capital.

“Two Ukrainian (unmanned aerial vehicles) were destroyed by air defense systems over the territory of the Odintsovo and Narofominsk districts of Moscow region,” the Russian Defense Ministry stated.

“Another drone was suppressed by electronic warfare and, having lost control, crashed on the territory of Moscow City,” the capital’s predominant business district, the ministry stated.

On Sunday, Russian defenses downed drones in that very same district, with particles damaging two workplace towers, blowing out a number of home windows and scattering paperwork on the pavement beneath.

“One flew into the same tower in (Moscow) City as last time,” Mayor Sergei Sobyanin stated Tuesday on Telegram.

“The facade on the 21st floor was damaged,” and numerous home windows have been smashed, the mayor stated.

He added that emergency providers had gone to the scene and that there was no data on any casualties.

“We heard a big explosion, there was no panic,” native resident Arkady Metler, 29, instructed Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“Nobody should be scared … we cannot do anything but stick together,” stated Metler.

‘In shock’

Other residents have been extra shaken by the renewed explosion of their neighborhood.

“After the last attack, everyone was saying, ‘They don’t hit the same place twice.’ But when we woke up this morning we were in shock,” Anastasia Berseneva, 26, instructed the AFP.

“I’m not sure whether I will move out or not but I’m thinking probably yes.”

Shortly after the drone assault, Moscow’s Vnukovo worldwide airport was briefly closed, TASS state news company reported.

“Vnukovo was temporarily closed for arrivals and departures, the planes are redirected to other airports,” emergency providers stated, based on TASS, which later reported that it had resumed regular operations.

The identical airport, to the southwest of Moscow, was briefly closed after Sunday’s assault and earlier this month, a volley of drone assaults disrupted air visitors at Vnukovo.

Moscow and its environs, situated about 500 kilometers (310 miles) from the Ukrainian border, had not often been focused throughout the battle in Ukraine till a number of drone assaults this 12 months.

The Russian Defense Ministry stated Tuesday it additionally foiled a Ukrainian drone assault focusing on patrol boats within the Black Sea.

‘Act of desperation’

“During the night, Ukrainian armed forces tried without success to attack with three drones the ‘Sergei Kotov’ and ‘Vasily Bykov,’ patrol boats of the Russian fleet,” the Defense Ministry stated in a press release.

The three drones have been skilled on the ships, navigating in waters 340 kilometers southwest of Sevastopol, the bottom of Russia’s Black Sea fleet on the annexed Crimea peninsula.

Tuesday’s assaults have been the newest in a collection of drone assaults – together with on the Kremlin and Russian cities close to the border with Ukraine – that Moscow has blamed on Kyiv.

On Monday, a missile strike on a residential constructing killed seven and wounded dozens in Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s hometown of Kryvyi Rig.

Without mentioning a selected assault, Zelenskyy warned Sunday that the battle was coming to Russia.

“Gradually, the war is returning to the territory of Russia – to its symbolic centers and military bases, and this is an inevitable, natural and absolutely fair process,” Zelenskyy stated Sunday.

The Kremlin on Monday referred to as the current strikes on the capital an “act of desperation” by Ukraine following setbacks on the battlefield.

Ukraine started its long-awaited counteroffensive in June however has made modest advances within the face of stiff resistance from Russian forces on the frontline.

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