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Kyiv apartment building hit by Russian drone and missile attack, October 10, 2025. (c) 2025 Planet Earth Foundation

Mercy for Kyiv is fleeting.

As we were about to end our tenth day in Kyiv, soon after midnight passed to begin our eleventh, the air raid sirens and subsequent “Increased air threat!” alerts blared, and both the app on our phones and the hotel intercom instructed to go to shelters.

We didn’t. Not right away.

We’d reached the point–after a week and a half of a journey starting on Defender Day, of seeing and hearing everything endured daily throughout Ukraine–where caution was not in support of our mission.

We were bystanders at the lever between light and dark in the global future, and in our view bystanders had no right to be there except to share the risk, bear witness and help keep the eyes of humanity from being averted.

Within seconds, we heard explosions.

We ran to the door at the balcony of a common living area and opened it, with camera already recording video.

As the door was opening, an explosion blinded us for a second and pushed us back slightly like an unexpected strong gust of wind. It lit up the buildings across from us as if it were day. The explosion seemed close, but it was unclear exactly where it had come from.

Then dark returned instantly after the light from the explosion subsided.

The power went out, for much or all of Kyiv. We kept taping and saw several more explosions over the horizon, while hearing others.

We decided that we’d witnessed enough, and headed for the shelter.

Hundreds of Russian drones and missiles hit Kyiv for hours.

After we returned to our rooms, alerts and the sounds of strikes would come and go all night and morning until dawn.

Among other targets, a power station was hit. The largest explosion, probably the one we saw and heard, created a hole in the center of a large civilian apartment building. A large fire ensued immediately. First responders got to it and put it out as soon as it could be.

Numerous occupants were wounded. Miraculously no one died–not there (other sites in Ukraine were hit, at least one child died and many were wounded, but between sheltering, self-sheltering techinques and luck, it was a relatively low casualty night—and killing and terrorizing civilians is the intent of the Russian strikes).

Volunteers were there to help the people in the building, remove and clean up the wreckage, and put wood slabs in the windows (a common site in Kyiv and throughout Ukraine as a result of Russian drone and missile strikes), as soon as the fire was out. Volunteers do this 24 hours a day, and have done so every day, since the full scale Russian invasion began on February 24, 2022.

This apartment building was the main site shown in media reports throughout the world (see CNN, BBC and The New York Times below) of the strikes in Kyiv this morning. We went there and were guided by a volunteer leader through the damage inside the building. We saw no other press coverage of this.

Blood on a door, the smell of burnt wood, metal and concrete almost unbearable to breathe, the apartments destroyed, and the belongings of inhabitants burned up or part-burned, the pictures and symbols of their lives and lifetimes strewn about heartbreakingly.

The following photos and video screen shots from us tell the story.

The full story of our journey and experiences in Ukraine will come soon.

Russian drone and missile attack on civilian apartment building, Kyiv, October 10, 2025:

All images (c) 2025 Planet Earth Foundation, all rights reserved.

. . .

“Ukraine says ‘massive’ Russian attack targeted energy infrastructure”, CNN

By Victoria Butenko, Rhea Mogul and Kosta Gak

Firefighters battle flames at a thermal power plant following a series of explosions in Kyiv, Ukraine, on October 10, 2025. Kostiantyn Liberov/Libkos/Getty ImagesKyiv — 

Russia carried out a “massive attack” on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, top Ukrainian officials said early Friday, killing at least one person and leaving parts of the capital Kyiv without power.

The Kremlin appears again to be using a tactic deployed in previous years, depriving Ukrainians of power and heat ahead of the bitter winter months. Russia started attacking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure in late September, according to official reports and CNN’s assessment.

The attacks have been almost daily since then, with targets including energy generating facilities, including gas production and distribution.

Russia’s Ministry of Defense said in a Telegram statement Friday that it had launched a “massive” strike targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, in what it said was a response to “the terrorist attacks by the Kyiv regime on civilian targets on Russian territory.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called Friday’s strike “a cynical and calculated attack, with more than 450 drones and over 30 missiles targeting everything that sustains normal life, everything the Russians want to deprive us of.”

“It is precisely the civilian and energy infrastructure that is the main target of Russia’s strikes ahead of the heating season,” he added.

People pass buildings damaged during a Russian drone and missile attack in the town of Brovary, Kyiv region, on Friday.

People pass buildings damaged during a Russian drone and missile attack in the town of Brovary, Kyiv region, on Friday. Alina Smutko/Reuters

It is Russia’s “goal to leave us in darkness, without water and heat,” said the Kyiv region’s governor, Mykola Kalashnik, adding that about 28,000 families in the Brovary and Boryspil districts were without power.

Power outages also affected more than 16,500 households and 800 businesses in the Poltava region, its governor Volodymyr Kogut said.

A 7-year-old boy was killed in a strike on the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia, and dozens more injured, according to foreign minister Andriy Sybiha.

Local authorities say at least 33 people have been injured overall across the Cherkasy, Kyiv, Dnipro and Zaporizhzhia regions.

“In Kyiv, Kharkiv, Poltava, Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, and other regions, many people remain without power following Russian strikes on civilian energy objects,” Sybiha said.

Workers were taking “all necessary measures to minimize the negative consequences,” Ukraine’s energy minister Svitlana Grynchuk said in a statement Friday.

The aftermath of a Russian strike is seen on an apartment block in Kyiv's Pecherskyi district on Friday.

The aftermath of a Russian strike is seen on an apartment block in Kyiv’s Pecherskyi district on Friday. Kirill Chubotin/Ukrinform/Cover Images/AP

At least 12 people were injured in Kyiv during Friday’s attack, which had cut some power supplies, said the city’s Mayor Vitali Klitschko.

He said that the left bank of the capital was without power, with the city also reporting water supply issues.

Mykyta Varenya, a 26-year-old coffee shop owner from Kyiv, told CNN he had resorted to using a generator after the latest strikes. “The lights were out, there was no water, so I’m just getting by with a generator,” he said.

“Last year, it had a big impact (on my business). We had problems with the generator at first, gasoline is expensive, and roughly speaking, you end up breaking even, or even losing money with these outages.”

Coffee shop owner Mykyta Varenya, 26, fills his generator during a blackout in Kyiv on Friday.

Coffee shop owner Mykyta Varenya, 26, fills his generator during a blackout in Kyiv on Friday. Kosta Gak/CNN

Pensioner Olena, 68, who only gave her first name, was one of the citizens who had queued up at a local shop to buy water after running water in her property was cut on Friday morning.

“There was no water or electricity in the morning,” she said. “Today’s outage was unexpected. But I went and got some (water). I had a little, so I got a little more. We’ll survive somehow.”

Video from Ukraine’s emergency service shows firefighters in Kyiv working to douse a massive blaze at a building site, and escorting residents to safety.

Ukraine’s largest private energy producer, DTEK Group, said Russia targeted its stations, injuring an energy worker and severely damaging equipment.

This is the third strike on DTEK’s facilities in one week, it said in a statement.

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said Friday that repair crews were working in all regions to bring back power after the air raid alerts had finished. The water supply should be fully restored in Kyiv and Kirovohrad region by the end of the day, she added.

This photograph shows a view of Kyiv during a blackout following Russian drone and missile strikes on the Ukrainian capital on October 10, 2025.

This photograph shows a view of Kyiv during a blackout following Russian drone and missile strikes on the Ukrainian capital on October 10, 2025. Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images

Svyrydenko said the attack had been one of the largest to specifically target energy infrastructure, and that a significant portion of the missiles fired had been ballistic missiles. “Unfortunately, there is significant damage to the energy infrastructure,” she said.

Four people were injured in the Dnipropetrovsk region, its governor Sehiy Lysak said, adding that 60 drones were intercepted over the region.

Last Christmas, half a million households were left without heating in the Kharkiv region in temperatures of 3 degrees Celsius (37 degrees Fahrenheit).

This is a developing story and will be updated.

. . .

Major Russian strikes cut power in Kyiv and across Ukraine“, BBC News

Harry Sekulich and Jaroslav Lukiv

Ukraine's emergency service DSNS in Kyiv region Ukrainian emergencies personnel tackle a fire in a house in the Kyiv region after overnight Russian strikes
Ukrainian emergencies personnel tackle a fire in a house in the Kyiv region after overnight Russian strikes

Overnight Russian missile and drone strikes have caused power cuts in large parts of Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, and eight other regions.

Kyiv’s authorities said power was later restored to more than 540,000 consumers in the city – but many households are still without electricity.

Twelve people were injured in the city, said Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko. In the southern Zaporizhzhia region, a seven-year-old boy was killed and seven others injured. Ten people were also injured in the central Cherkasy region.

Russia’s defence ministry said its “massive” strike with high-precision weapons – including hypersonic missiles – targeted energy facilities used by Ukraine’s “military-industrial complex”.

Russia – which launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 – has escalated attacks on Ukrainian energy facilities as well as transport infrastructure as winter approaches.

Reacting to the latest Russian strikes, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reiterated calls for allies to act decisively to “defend people from this terror”.

EPA/Shutterstock A view of a damaged residential building after a Russian strike in Kyiv, Ukraine. Photo: 10 October 2025
A number of flats in this residential building in Kyiv were destroyed in overnight Russian strikes

“What’s needed is not empty words but decisive action – from the United States, Europe and the G7 – in delivering air defence systems and enforcing sanctions,” he wrote.

Zelensky said that more than 450 drones and over 30 missiles targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, describing such attacks as “cynical and calculated” and against “everything that sustains normal life” as temperatures become colder.

More than 5,800 residential buildings in Kyiv were without electricity on Friday morning, local officials said. The city’s eastern districts were the worst hit.

Images of firefighters putting out blazes at a 10-storey building have been released by Ukraine’s state emergency services.

Residents in more than 7,000 buildings were left for hours without water – but the supplies were restored in the evening, the authorities said.

Public transport – including the capital’s widely used underground system – was also badly affected, with some stations forced to close after the Russian strikes.

So-called “invincibility” tents – where people can get hot water and charge their gadgets – have been set up on the streets of Kyiv and other cities. 

Ukraine’s Energy Minister Svitlana Hrynchuk said Russia was “inflicting a massive strike” and repair crews were working to restore power.

“Exactly three years ago – to the day – on 10 October, our power system experienced one of the first massive attacks. Today, Russia continues to use cold and darkness as a tool of terror,” she said.

Ukrainian officials said they were forced to roll out emergency power outages in Kyiv and the capital region, as well as in the Sumy, Kharkiv, Poltava, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Kirovohrad and Zaporizhzhia regions.

On Thursday, Zelensky told reporters that Russia was intentionally trying to demolish the country’s energy grid, with attacks already disrupting gas facilities.

He said energy workers and authorities were bracing for further attacks.

Bloomberg via Getty Images Vehicle lights illuminate a motorway in Kyiv during a partial blackout caused by Russian strikes. Photo: 10 October 2025Vehicle lights illuminate a motorway in Kyiv during a partial blackout caused by Russian strikes / Bloomberg via Getty Images

. . .

“As Winter Nears, Russian Strikes on Ukraine’s Energy Grid Cause Blackouts”, The New York Times

Every fall since the war started in 2022, Russia has targeted electricity and heating infrastructure in an effort to weaken Ukrainians’ will to continue fighting.

Cars drive on a multilane street past darkened buildings.

Central Kyiv on Friday after a huge Russian missile and drone strike cut power to swathes of the city. It was the second large attack on Ukraine’s grid this week. Credit…Genya Savilov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

By Andrew E. Kramer

Reporting from Kyiv, Ukraine

Oct. 10, 2025

Russia fired missiles and drones at power plants and electrical infrastructure throughout Ukraine on Friday, causing blackouts in Kyiv, the capital, and several other cities and continuing a yearslong effort to collapse Ukraine’s energy grid.

Every fall since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Russian strikes have targeted electricity and central heating infrastructure before the onset of winter weather, as part of an effort to break Ukrainians’ will to continue their fight.

Ukraine has responded by beefing up air defenses, fortifying transformer stations with concrete barriers, diversifying energy sources with new wind and solar fields, and adding resilience to the grid with large backup batteries. Russia has adapted by honing its strategies to evade air defenses, sending combinations of drones and missiles in waves during attacks that last hours.

The barrage on Friday was the second large volley aimed at the electrical grid in a week.

Russia launched 450 drones and more than 30 missiles in the attack, which injured more than 20 people around Ukraine and killed a child in Zaporizhzhia, in the country’s south, President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a post on Telegram. The strike targeted infrastructure “that supports normal life, which Russians want to deprive us of,” he wrote.

Explosions and the rattle of air defense machine guns kept residents of Kyiv and other cities awake overnight. The energy minister, Svitlana Hrinchuk, wrote in a social media post that it was a “massive attack” on energy infrastructure.

Many of the districts in Kyiv on the eastern bank of the Dnipro River were without power on Friday morning, according to the city’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko. Waterworks were affected, with taps running dry in some neighborhoods.

Blackouts were also reported in Sumy, in the country’s north, and Dnipro, in central Ukraine, the local authorities said.

A drone or falling debris set on fire a 17-story high-rise in Kyiv, according to Mr. Klitschko, injuring nine people. Debris from intercepted Russian drones fell in the courtyards of apartment buildings in the Podil neighborhood of the capital.

This fall, Russia has also concentrated its fire on natural gas fields, pipes and pumping stations. Until January, Ukraine had transported Russian natural gas in pipelines across its country to customers in Europe, despite the war. It did so to avoid antagonizing Russia’s energy clients in Central Europe, the same countries Ukraine relied on for logistics in transporting weapons into the war zone.

Russia had refrained from striking gas infrastructure while this arrangement was in effect. But with no commercial interest left in preserving Ukraine’s gas pipelines, Russian forces have opened fire this fall. Ukraine’s state gas company reported the largest strike of the war on natural gas infrastructure last week.

In Washington, where President Trump was celebrating the cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas, he said he now expected his administration to resolve the war in Ukraine. This week, Russian officials have declared recent U.S.-initiated peace talks to have hit a dead end, and Ukrainian officials have said that negotiations will not succeed without additional pressure on Russia.

Mr. Trump spoke at a meeting Thursday with the Finnish president, Alexander Stubb. Mr. Stubb said a settlement in Ukraine would be “the next big one.” Russia, Mr. Stubb said, was already weakened militarily and economically by the war.

Mr. Trump responded that he expected to broker an agreement. “We’re going to work it out,” he said.

Andrew E. Kramer is the Kyiv bureau chief for The Times, who has been covering the war in Ukraine since 2014.