RUSSIAN officials on Thursday
said a Ukrainian drone strike
killed 24 people and wounded at
least 50 more as they celebrated
the New Year in a Russian-occupied village in Ukraine’s Kherson
region, as tensions between the
two nations continue to spike
despite diplomats hailing productive peace talks.
Three drones struck a cafe and
hotel in the resort town of Khorly
on the Black Sea coast, the
region’s Moscow-installed leader,
Vladimir Saldo, said in a statement on Telegram.
He said that
one of the drones carried an
incendiary mixture, sparking a
blaze. Ukrainian officials did not
immediately comment on the
claim of a strike.
The attack was condemned by
a number of Russian officials.
Valentina Matviyenko, the chair
of Russia’s upper house of
Parliament, the Federation
Council, said that the strike
“strengthened” Russia’s resolve
to quickly achieve its goals in its
almost four-year invasion of
Ukraine.
The strike “once again demonstrates the validity of
our initial demands,”
Matviyenko said.
The statement follows claims
from Moscow that Ukraine
launched a long-range drone
attack against one of Russian
President Vladimir Putin’s official residences in north-western Russia on Tuesday. Kyiv has
denounced the claims as a “lie.”
Russia’s Defence Ministry
released a video on Wednesday
of a downed drone it said was
involved in the attack.
The night-time clip showed
a man in camouflage, a helmet
and a Kevlar vest standing near
a damaged drone lying in snow.
The man, his face covered, talks
about the drone.
Neither the
man nor the Defence Ministry
provided any location or date.
The video and claims could
not be independently verified.
Kyiv has called the allegations of an attack on Putin’s
residence a ruse to derail ongoing peace negotiations, which
have ramped up in recent
weeks on both sides of the
Atlantic. In his New Year’s
address, Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that
a peace deal was “90 per cent
ready” but warned that the
remaining 10 per cent, believed
to include key sticking points
such as territory, would “determine the fate of peace, the fate
of Ukraine and Europe, how
people will live.”
Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff said
Wednesday that he, Secretary
of State Marco Rubio and
Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner had a “productive call” with the national security advisers of Britain,
France, Germany and Ukraine
to discuss advancing the next
steps in the European peace
process.”
“We focused on how to move
the discussions forward in a
practical way on behalf of
(Trump’s) peace process,
including strengthening security guarantees and developing
effective deconfliction mechanisms to help end the war and
ensure it does not restart,”
Witkoff said in a post on X.
Lead Ukrainian negotiator
Rustem Umerov also reaffirmed that European and
Ukrainian officials plan to meet
on Saturday, while Zelenskyy
is due to hold talks next week
with European leaders.
Elsewhere in Ukraine, Russia
attacked the Odesa region
overnight, targeting civilian
infrastructure in several waves
of drone attacks, according to
regional head Oleh Kiper.
In a post on Telegram, Kiper
said a two-story residential
building was damaged and that
a drone hit an apartment on
the 17th floor of a high-rise
building without detonating.
There were no casualties
reported. In its daily report,
Ukraine’s air force said air
defence forces had downed or
suppressed 176 of 205 drones
targeting the country
overnight. It said hits by 24
strike drones were recorded at
15 locations, and the attack was
still ongoing.