Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk on Monday called the war in Ukraine a battle between "good and evil," and vowed more support for Ukraine on his first visit to the war-torn country since returning to power. 

The surprise trip came as the Kremlin blamed Ukraine for a weekend attack on a Baltic gas terminal, the latest in a series of apparent Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure.

Tusk is among a flurry of European leaders to have visited Kyiv in recent weeks to reassure Ukraine of international support as its biggest political and military backers struggle to secure aid.

"I am not ashamed to use these big words: it is here, in Ukraine, that the world front between good and evil runs," Tusk told a press conference alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

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Tusk said Poland stood ready to deepen its financial and military cooperation with Ukraine and promised that Warsaw would do "everything" in its power to help its neighbour.

"The security of the Polish nation and the Polish state is also at stake in this fight," he said.

Zelensky told Tusk that "unity" between Kyiv and Warsaw -- as well as among European countries -- was "a strong shield" against Russian efforts to divide Ukraine's Western allies.

"This unity -- this unity of the whole of Europe -- cannot be lost," he told Tusk, moments after air raid sirens had rung out over the Ukrainian capital.

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Ex-Soviet Ukraine and Moldova opened European Union accession negotiations in June, setting them on a long -- and yet uncertain -- path towards membership that Russia has tried to block.

Zelensky also lashed out at "sceptical" members of the NATO alliance holding out against Ukrainian membership of the bloc, and said his country is "fighting this scepticism".

Drone barrage 

Tusk's visit also aimed to address tensions between the neighbours, including protracted border blockades by Polish hauliers.

Polish truckers blocked the Ukraine border from November until last week, demanding the return of restrictions on Ukrainian competitors entering the EU.

The EU had waived the permits system after Russia invaded in February 2022, but Polish truckers want it reintroduced, saying their earnings have been hit.

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Just hours before Warsaw announced the visit, Kyiv said it had repelled a Russian assault of eight Iranian-designed attack drones.

Kyiv has made gaining control of the airspace a priority for this year and urged the West to supply more air defence systems.

Ukraine's air force said Russian forces launched the drones from the southern Primorsko-Akhtarsk region. It added that they had been downed by defence systems in southern and central regions of Ukraine.

There were no immediate reports of damage from falling debris.

Several aerial assaults on border regions of Russia have targeted oil storage facilities.

Ukrainian security sector sources have claimed responsibility for some of the attacks, but Kyiv and the Ukrainian military have remained tight-lipped on attacks inside Russia.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov however blamed Kyiv for a blaze over the weekend at the port of Ust-Luga near Saint Petersburg.

- Frontline strikes -

"The Kyiv regime continues to show its bestial face. They are striking civil infrastructure, people," Peskov told reporters when asked about the blaze at a natural gas terminal.

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Operator Novatek had said the fire was caused by an "external factor," without elaborating.

Even though the sprawling front lines cutting through eastern and southern Ukraine have barely shifted in the last year, Russian forces have continued to pound towns and villages near the fighting.

AFP journalists on Monday saw the body of one person killed in a strike on the eastern Ukrainian town of Kramatorsk at around 0730 GMT.

The strike rocked an industrial area on the eastern outskirts of the town in the Donetsk region, which the Kremlin says is part of Russia. 

AFP reporters saw debris strewn on the street beneath an administrative building with a destroyed roof and windows blown out by the strike.

The body of a man lay at the wheel of his car -- its front left door open -- on a street next to the damaged building.

Authorities said a 49-year-old man was the victim and that his 31-year-old daughter was wounded.  

"Recently some people said that there were military people there but who knows?" said Sergei, 41, who owned a garage just behind the building that was hit. 

Separately, the governor of the southern region of Kherson said a resident was killed by a Russian drone strike.  

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