Ukraine conflict: Fighting erupts near Kyiv following Russia’s invasion

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Ukraine’s army is trying to repel a full-scale Russian invasion, with fierce battles taking place close to the capital Kyiv.

Fighting is raging at an airfield on the outskirts of the city, and it could become a springboard for the Russian army into Kyiv if its troops seize it.

The Russian assault is being fought on several fronts after it attacked from the east, north and south on Thursday.

Kyiv has been hit by blasts, and at least one block of flats was damaged.

There are also reports of gunfire inside the city and on its northern outskirts, amid Ukrainian government warnings that “saboteurs” may already be operating inside the city.

Footage circulating on social media on Friday appears to show tanks driving down streets in the northern Obolon district. The Ministry of Defence has appealed to the district’s residents to “inform us of troop movements, to make Molotov cocktails [firebombs] and neutralise the enemy” on its Facebook page.

Overnight, families took shelter in Kyiv’s metro stations as aerial attacks struck the city, including the densely-populated Pozniake area, injuring at least eight.

“Putin, we want to see you slaughtered like an animal,” one Kyiv resident told the BBC’s Nick Beake.

Ukrainian officials said there had been missile strikes on the city and a Russian aircraft had been shot down.

Katerina Sergatskova, editor of a Ukrainian news outlet, said a plane “was hit right in front of the windows of my house in Kyiv”. “This is insane,” she wrote on Twitter.

People gather at a metro station as they seek shelter from expected Russian air strikes, in Kyiv
IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS / AFP/ Some Kyiv residents sheltered in metro stations overnight

“They [the Russians] say that civilian objects are not targets. It is a lie,” Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a video released early on Friday. “The reality is that they don’t see a difference in which areas they target.”

Ukraine says at least 137 people – civilians and soldiers – have been killed, with UN estimates suggesting more than 100,000 people have already fled from their homes. Overnight, at least 1,000 Ukrainians arrived by train in Poland’s south-eastern city of Przemysl alone.

British Defence Minister Ben Wallace said the UK estimated Russia had lost 450 personnel since Moscow launched the offensive in the early hours of Thursday morning.

President Vladimir Putin – who declared war in a dramatic televised address – has threatened any country attempting to interfere with “consequences you have never seen”.

Air and missile strikes have rained down on cities and military bases, with tanks rolling in across three sides of Ukraine’s vast border. It followed weeks of escalating tensions, as Russia massed troops around the country.

Western intelligence officials earlier warned that Russia was building an “overwhelming force” to take control of the city.

In the face of stark odds, Ukraine’s President Zelensky has vowed to continue fighting. He said “a new iron curtain” was falling into place and his job was to make sure his country remained on its western side.

There have already been stories of immense bravery – including that of 13 border guards on a tiny island in the Black Sea who refused to surrender to a Russian warship and were massacred in a bombardment.

President Zelensky said they would be given posthumous war hero honours.

Thursday also saw fighting around the site of the former nuclear power plant in Chernobyl. Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhaylo Podolyak said the nuclear site itself had been lost following a “fierce battle”.

On Friday, Ukraine’s nuclear agency said it was recording raised radiation levels in the area. A statement released by Russia’s Ministry of Defence said levels were normal, adding an agreement had been reached “to ensure security of the power plant and sarcophagus of the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant”.

Many said it couldn’t, wouldn’t, happen. Not in 2022.

For weeks, Western officials analysing the intelligence warned of President Putin’s plan to take Kyiv.

For weeks, I’ve asked Ukrainians in Kyiv about it, and ran it past every foreign and defence minister, every Russia-watcher I met at last weekend’s security conference in Munich.

It just didn’t make sense. Just didn’t add up.

And now, with every hour, Russian forces and fighting come ever closer to Kyiv.

A city where Ukrainians tell all of us to “call it Kyiv in Ukrainian, not Kiev in Russian”, a city which feels so European, is now in Moscow’s sights.

“A failure of imagination” is how former British intelligence chief Sir Alex Younger described it, adding “we thought history had changed in 1991” when the Soviet empire collapsed.

Mr Zelensky ordered conscripts and reservists in all of Ukraine’s regions to be called up to fight. The country’s defence minister urged anyone who was able to hold a weapon to join the effort to repel Russia.

Human rights groups warned prior to the invasion that an attack could trigger a major refugee crisis in Europe.

A damaged residential building is seen, after Russia launched a massive military operation against Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine
IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS / AFP/ A residential building was damaged after reports of missile strikes and an aircraft being shot down

Western leaders expressed shock and anger at the scale of the attack. The UK, EU and other allies vowed to impose tough new sanctions to punish Moscow but said they would not send in troops.

French President Emmanuel Macron held a telephone call with his Russian counterpart, in what was Mr Putin’s first conversation with a Western leader in days.

Mr Macron demanded an “immediate halt” to the offensive and threatened Mr Putin with “massive sanctions”, the French government said. The Kremlin, however, simply said the pair had a “serious and frank exchange of views”.

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