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Officials say that ten people were killed and forty wounded by a heavy Russian attack in Ukraine

Officials in Ukraine said that ten people died in an overnight Russian drone and missile attack on a residential tower in Ternopil in western Ukraine.

The overnight attacks on Ukraine, which targeted the energy and transport infrastructures, resulted in 40 more injuries. This forced emergency power cuts across a number regions at freezing temperatures.

In the attack, the upper floors of a residential building in Ternopil was torn off. The tower block was engulfed in a haze of black smoke and orange light.

Officials said that Russia had launched 48 missiles and more than 470 drones during the attack. Poland, a NATO-member state that borders western Ukraine, closed Rzeszow Airport and Lublin Airport in the Southeast of the country. Polish and allies aircraft were scrambled as a precautionary measure to protect its airspace.

ZELENSKIY CALLS FOR MORE PRESSURE OVER RUSSIA

Ihor Klymenko, Minister of Interior, said that all 10 deaths occurred in Ternopil. He added that 12 children were among the 37 people injured.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the president of Ternopil confirmed that multi-storey residential building were hit and that others could be trapped beneath the rubble.

He called on allies to intensify pressure on Russia in order to end the nearly four-year old war in Ukraine. This includes providing Kyiv more air defence missiles.

"Each brazen attack on everyday life shows how insufficient the pressure is on Russia. "Effective sanctions and assistance for Ukraine can change this," said he on X.

Officials from the energy sector said that there were strikes on energy infrastructure in seven Ukrainian regions. Witnesses in Lviv, a western city, reported hearing explosions.

Although the full extent of damage is not yet known, consumers in the entire country have been restricted from using electricity. Reporting by Andriy P. Perun, Lidia Kelly and Anastasiia M. Malenko from Lviv; editing by Himani S. Sarkar and Timothy Heritage

(source: Reuters)