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Deadly missile strike hits Lviv as Russia bombards multiple cities

GreenWatch Desk Conflicts 2022-04-18, 4:32pm

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A deadly missile strike struck the western Ukrainian city of Lviv early Monday morning.

Authorities say at least six people have been killed and another 11, including a child, have been injured.

Lviv Regional Governor Maksym Kozytskyy said there were four Russian missile strikes, three of which hit military infrastructure facilities and one struck a tire shop. He said emergency teams were putting out fires caused by the strikes.

The strikes hit near railway facilities, according to officials. Transport hubs in Lviv have been key to evacuating Ukrainians fleeing the war, reports ITV.

One Ukrainian MP tweeted an image, purportedly from Lviv, showing a fire and billowing smoke, claiming a train station and storage units were targeted.

Ukraine is bracing for an all-out Russian assault in the east, as invading forces battered various parts of the country overnight.

Explosions were also reported in Kramatorsk - the eastern city where rockets earlier this month killed at least 57 people at a train station crowded civilians evacuating.

After the humiliating sinking of the flagship of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet last week (in what the Ukrainians boasted was a missile attack) the Kremlin vowed to step up strikes on the capital.

Meanwhile Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has vowed to “fight absolutely to the end” in Mariupol where the ruined port city’s last known pocket of resistance was holed up in a sprawling steel plant laced with tunnels.

With missiles and rockets battering various parts of the country, President Zelenskyy accused Russian soldiers of torture and kidnappings in areas they control.

The fall of Mariupol, which has been reduced to rubble in a seven-week siege, would give Moscow its biggest victory of the war.

But a few thousand fighters, by Russia's estimate, are still holding on to the Azovstal steel mill.

Many Mariupol civilians, including children, are also sheltering at the Azovstal plant, Mikhail Vershinin, head of the city’s patrol police, told Mariupol television.

He said they are hiding from Russian shelling and from Russian soldiers.

Capturing the city on the Sea of Azov would free Russian troops for a new offensive to take control of the Donbas region in Ukraine's industrial east.

Russia also would fully secure a land corridor to the Crimean Peninsula, which it seized from Ukraine in 2014, depriving Ukraine of a major port and prized industrial assets.

Russia is bent on capturing the Donbas, where Moscow-backed separatists already control some territory, after its attempt to take the capital, Kyiv, failed.

“We are doing everything to ensure the defence” of eastern Ukraine, Zelenskyy said in his nightly address to the nation.