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Russian Air Attack on Ukraine Kills Three and Sparks Sweeping Outages
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By Reuters
Published 2 hours ago on
December 23, 2025

A medic assists a resident as she leaves her apartment building that was hit by a Russian drone, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine December 23, 2025. (Reuters/Thomas Peter)

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Russian missile and drone attacks killed at least three Ukrainians including a child on Tuesday, triggering widespread emergency power cuts and prompting neighboring Poland to scramble jets.

The attacks, days after another round of U.S.-led talks to end the nearly four-year-old war, hit energy facilities in western regions the hardest, Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said.

The national gas company Naftogaz said Russian strikes hit production facilities belonging to its extraction subsidiary Ukrnafta, causing “serious damage” and prompting the shutdown of some facilities.

It gave no details on where the strikes occurred, but said crews were repairing the damage. No casualties were reported.

In northern Chernihiv region on the Russian border, the local power distribution company reported damage to its facilities, cutting power to parts of the city of Chernihiv.

Poland, a NATO member bordering western Ukraine, said Polish and allied aircraft were deployed to protect Polish airspace after Russian strikes targeted areas near the border.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Russia had targeted at least 13 regions as Ukrainians prepared to celebrate Christmas with their families in an attack that showed Russian President Vladimir Putin was not serious about peace talks.

“Putin still cannot accept that he must stop killing,” Zelenskiy wrote on X. “And that means that the world is not putting enough pressure on Russia. Now is the time to respond.”

Young Child Died

A four-year-old child was killed in the central Zhytomyr region, another person was killed in Khmelnytskyi in western Ukraine and a third person outside the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, where local officials said at least five were also wounded.

Russia’s defense ministry said it had attacked Ukrainian energy and military facilities and captured two villages along the front line in Ukraine. There was no immediate comment from Kyiv, which often disputes Russian reports of territorial gains.

Moscow has stepped up strikes on Ukrainian energy and logistics to boost pressure on Kyiv as it seeks to alter the terms of a U.S.-backed peace deal. Ukraine has targeted Russian energy exports.

A Ukrainian overnight drone attack sparked a fire at an industrial facility in Russia’s southern Stavropol region, the region’s governor, Vladimir Vladimirov, said. Authorities also reported a fire at the fuel oil supply pipeline at the port of Taman in Krasnodar region, saying it had been put out.

The Ukrainian air force said Russia had launched 635 drones and 38 missiles, most of which had been downed.

Ukraine’s energy ministry said all regions were experiencing emergency power outages, adding that nearly all consumers in the western Rivne, Ternopil and Khmelnytskyi regions were without power early on Tuesday.

In addition to northern Chernihiv region, critical and energy infrastructure was damaged in western Lviv and southern Odesa regions, local authorities said. Private energy firm DTEK said one of its thermal power plants had suffered damage.

Weekend peace talks in Miami brought together U.S. officials with Ukrainian and European delegations, alongside separate contacts with Russian representatives, as Washington tested the scope for a settlement.

Russia has demanded that Ukraine cede its eastern Donbas region and significantly restrict its military capabilities before it stops fighting, terms which Zelenskiy has rejected.

The Ukrainian military said on Tuesday that its troops had pulled out of the embattled town of Siversk. Kyiv had earlier denied Russian claims that Moscow’s troops had seized the city.

(Reporting by Pavel Polityuk and Dan Peleschuk; Writing by Lidia Kelly and Dan Peleschuk; Editing by Philippa Fletcher, Ron Popeski and Ros Russell)

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