[UPDATED: May 29, 3:32 pm , Kyiv time. According to the updated information by Ukraine’s National Police, the death toll following the Russian strike on May 24 has risen to 3.]

Russian forces launched a highly destructive, multi-vector aerial offensive against Ukraine’s capital overnight Saturday-Sunday, targeting civilian residential quarters, shopping venues, and historical infrastructure.

The assault triggered nationwide air raid alerts shortly after 1:00 a.m. local time, following high-profile warnings from President Volodymyr Zelensky and Western intelligence agencies that the Kremlin was preparing a massive retaliatory strike utilizing a combination of cruise missiles, Shahed drones, and nuclear-capable Oreshnik medium-range ballistic platforms.

Widespread destruction in every capital district

The State Emergency Service of Ukraine (DSNS) and the Kyiv City Military Administration confirmed that rescue crews responded to fires, structural collapses, and heavy debris field damage at more than 40 distinct locations spanning virtually every corner of the capital.

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In the central Shevchenkivskyi district, a Russian weapon tore through the upper floors of a nine-story apartment building, killing one resident instantly and leaving three others severely injured amidst an expanding structural fire. Another nearby five-story block suffered total compartmental collapses from the first to the fifth floors.

Additionally, a direct strike hit a prominent local business center, trapping a group of civilian workers inside a subterranean shelter until first responders managed to clear the entry points.

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The capital’s central transportation and communication lines were also significantly degraded. A powerful blast wave heavily damaged the above-ground entrance pavilion of the Lukyanivska metro station, forcing the transit authority to temporarily suspend passenger services for emergency stabilization work.

Concurrently, the historic central headquarters of Ukraine’s national postal service, Ukrposhta, located directly on Maidan Nezalezhnosti, sustained extensive glass and structural damage.

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In the nearby Podil historic area, a strike almost completely destroyed the National Chornobyl Museum, which had only reopened to the public a few days prior following extensive renovations, while also cracking the nearby historic Kontraktova House landmark.

High casualties and high-rise fires

The multi-wave saturation campaign heavily affected high-density residential districts on both sides of the Dnipro River.

In the Pecherskyi district near the government quarter, a missile strike impacted the 13th floor of a newly constructed 20-story residential high-rise. A near-identical hit occurred in the Solomyanskyi district, triggering a large fire on the 23rd floor of a 24-story residential complex that caused partial external wall collapses.

To the east in the Darnytskyi district, a drone strike hit the roofing of a two-story student dormitory, igniting a 250-square-meter blaze. Emergency workers evacuated 10 residents, rescued 12 others from smoking corridors, and rushed five students to local hospitals.

Further drone strikes hit shopping malls and supermarkets in the Desnyanskyi area, an active business center and a 16-story high-rise in Obolon, and a tennis court in the Holosiivskyi district where engineers had to wait for pyrotechnic squads to defuse an unexploded submunition warhead.

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Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko updated the city’s casualty log on Telegram, confirming that the massive attack killed three people and left 77 others wounded, including two children, with 31 victims currently hospitalized, three in critical condition.

Provincial spillover and regional aggression

The surrounding Kyiv Oblas faced parallel multi-layered attacks. Regional Military Administration Chief Mykola Kalashnyk reported that three civilians were wounded across the province. Drone and cruise missile fragments damaged multi-family homes and warehouses across the Fastiv, Bucha, Obukhiv, Brovary, Bila Tserkva, Vyshhorod, and Boryspil districts.

The capital blitz was part of a coordinated weekend offensive targeting other major regional centers. On Saturday evening, Russian tactical aviation launched cruise missiles into the civilian transport infrastructure of the Odesa region, wounding nine people, including three children aged 8 to 12 who remain hospitalized in moderate condition.

Earlier on Saturday, Russian drone operators targeted the town of Balakliia in Kharkiv region, burning down a 1,300-square-meter Evangelical Protestant church.

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