The number of victims following Russia’s massive overnight attack on Kyiv early Sunday, has risen to 87, including three minors, while two women were killed, according to Ukraine’s State Emergency Service (DSNS).
As per the report on Telegram, in Kyiv’s Shevchenkivskyi district, a direct strike destroyed the entrance section of a five-story residential building.
Rescuers recovered the bodies of two women from under the rubble after dismantling 165 square meters (1,776 square feet) of reinforced concrete debris.
Dog handlers searched more than 100 square meters (1,076 square feet) of the site, while DSNS psychologists assisted 112 people affected by the attack.
Emergency crews continue working across the capital.
The overnight barrage also damaged the National Chornobyl Museum in Kyiv’s Podil district. According to Yaroslav Yemelyanenko, head of the Association of Chornobyl Operators, two missiles flew over Saint Sophia Cathedral toward Podil before one struck the museum building.
“It turned out on the spot that the roof of the building was on fire and part of the back wall of the third hall was destroyed,” Yemelyanenko said.
The fire was extinguished, but a newly restored exhibition that had reopened just a month earlier was damaged.
Museum workers are now attempting to save artifacts, including books, embroidered shirts, and exhibits connected to the Chornobyl disaster cleanup effort.
“There is no museum, there is no Chornobyl store. They are beating our history for a reason,” Yemelyanenko said.
He also reported that police detained a suspected looter during the cleanup operation in a nearby apartment damaged by the blast wave.
Elsewhere in the Kyiv region, firefighters extinguished a massive warehouse fire covering 10,000 square meters (107,600 square feet) caused by the attack.
Due to the scale of the blaze, the DSNS deployed helicopters and heavy firefighting equipment. Emergency teams responded to 25 separate sites across the region.
Following the attack, Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha called for an international response and instructed Ukrainian diplomatic missions to raise the issue at the United Nations, OSCE, Council of Europe, and UNESCO.
“Putin is trying to intimidate Ukraine by attacking civilians and destroying residential buildings, museums, schools, and critical infrastructure,” Sybiha wrote on X.
He added that Ukraine is demanding an emergency UN Security Council meeting and a joint OSCE session in response to the strike.
Meanwhile, military analyst and Defense Ministry adviser Serhii “Flash” Beskrestnov said Russia used the tactic of a massive drone assault designed to overload Ukrainian air defenses.
According to him, Russian forces also used new jet-powered Shahed drone variants during the strike on Kyiv, though in limited numbers. He revealed that the main damage was caused by missiles, as the scale of the attack exceeded available air defense resources.
At the same time, Ukrainian air defenses remained highly effective against drones, with interceptor drones accounting for more than 40% of all aerial targets destroyed overnight.
Separately, Ukraine’s Presidential Commissioner for Sanctions Policy, Vladyslav Vlasiuk, said specialists had collected and transferred for analysis all recovered fragments of the Oreshnik ballistic missile reportedly used during the attack on the Kyiv region.