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Posted: 2022-12-30 12:28:00

Residents of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv were urged to head to air raid shelters as sirens wailed across the city, a day after Russia carried out one of the biggest aerial assaults since it started the war in February.

Shortly after 2am local time on Friday, Kyiv's city government issued an alert on its Telegram messaging app channel about the air raid sirens and called on residents to proceed to shelters.

Olekskiy Kuleba, governor of the Kyiv region, said on Telegram that an "attack by drones" was underway.

A Reuters witness 20 kilometres south of Kyiv heard several explosions and the sound of anti-aircraft fire.

Ukraine's military said 16 Iranian-made Shahed drones were launched and all destroyed. Kyiv's Mayor Vitali Klitschko said 7 were aimed at the city and one administration building had been partly destroyed.

Kyiv says Iran is supplying Moscow with drones for its air attacks, but Tehran says it last sent drones to Russia before the war started.

The General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces's Friday morning report said Russia had launched 85 missile strikes, 35 air strikes, and 63 strikes from multiple rocket launch systems in the past 24 hours.

Woman shows living room damaged by shrapnel from a Russian air strike.
A Kyiv resident stands inside a room of her apartment damaged by a Russian drone strike.  (Reuters: Valentyn Ogirenko)

It said Moscow's forces also shelled 20 settlements around the bombed-out town of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine, where some of the fiercest fighting was being waged, and more than 25 settlements in the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions.

Russia's Defence Ministry confirmed on Friday that it had carried out a "massive strike" on Ukraine's energy and military-industrial infrastructure using high-precision weapons, Interfax reported.

It said that the strikes had disrupted the production and repair of military equipment and the movement of reserve troops.

Reuters could not immediately verify the battlefield reports.

Authorities at the site of a residential home and car destroyed by a Russian air strike.
Kyiv was the target of one of the biggest aerial assaults by Russia since the start of the war.(Reuters: Valentyn Ogirenko)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said most regions hit in Thursday's massive air attack suffered power outages.

The areas where loss of power was "especially difficult" included the capital Kyiv, Odesa and Kherson in the south and surrounding regions, and around Lviv near the western border with Poland, Mr Zelenskyy said.

"But this is nothing compared with what could have happened if it were not for our heroic anti-aircraft gunners and air defence," Mr Zelenskyy said.

Waves of Russian air strikes in recent months targeting energy infrastructure have left millions of people without power and heating in often freezing temperatures.

NATO chief calls for more weapons for Ukraine

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg called on NATO member states to supply more weapons to Ukraine, according to an interview published on Friday.

"I call on allies to do more. It is in all our security interests to make sure Ukraine prevails and [Russian President Vladimir] Putin does not win," Mr Stoltenberg told German news agency DPA.

Mr Stoltenberg told DPA that military support for Ukraine was the fastest way to peace.

"We know that most wars end at the negotiating table — probably this war too — but we know that what Ukraine can achieve in these negotiations depends inextricably on the military situation," he said.

Man in a suit gives a speech from a podium.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has called on NATO allies to do more in aiding Ukraine.(AP: Virginia Mayo)

The United States last week announced nearly $2 billion ($2.9 billion) in additional military aid, including the Patriot Air Defence System, which offers protection against aircraft, cruise and ballistic missiles.

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