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Putin slams Ukraine as attack drones hit Moscow high-rises

A specialist inspects the damaged facade of a multi-storey apartment building after a reported drone attack in Moscow. — AFP
A specialist inspects the damaged facade of a multi-storey apartment building after a reported drone attack in Moscow. — AFP
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MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday accused Kyiv of seeking to "frighten" Russians after drones hit Moscow high-rises in the first such attack since the beginning of the Kremlin's assault on Ukraine.


As drones struck in and around Moscow, Russian drones targeted Kyiv for a third straight day while Ukraine gears up for a major offensive against Russian forces.


Officials said no one was seriously injured in Moscow and there was only "minor" damage to residential buildings but some ordinary people said they never thought the Russian capital could be hit in this way.


"I somehow thought that all of this was somewhere far away, that this would not affect us, and suddenly this has become very close," pensioner Tatyana Kalinina said in southwest Moscow near one of the damaged residential buildings.


The Russian defence ministry said that eight drones were used in the attack, adding that five of them were downed and three disabled.


Putin said that Moscow's air defence had worked in a satisfactory manner, noting that the attacks were Kyiv's "response" to a Russian strike on Ukraine's army intelligence headquarters.


He said Ukraine was trying to "frighten" Russians.


"We have spoken about hitting command centres (in Ukraine)," the Russian president added.


"In response, the Kyiv regime has chosen a different path, the path of trying to frighten Russia, frighten the citizens of Russia and of strikes on residential buildings."


Of the three drones that hit residential buildings, two crashed into high-rises located in Moscow's affluent southwest, while a third damaged a residential building in a suburb.


The other drones fell outside Moscow. Some of the debris was found around 15 kilometres from Putin's Novo-Ogaryovo residence.


One video shared on social media showed an explosion followed by a column of smoke rising into the sky.


This month two drones were intercepted over the Kremlin, but Tuesday's attacks were the first time that unmanned aerial vehicles hit residential areas of Moscow, hundreds of kilometres from the front lines in Ukraine.


The residents of buildings damaged in the strikes were briefly evacuated.


On Profsoyuznaya Street, a residential building with a blown-out window was cordoned off by police but the atmosphere was calm, with children playing outside and locals walking their dogs.


Ukraine said it had downed 29 out of 31 drones, mainly over Kyiv and the Kyiv region in the latest Russian barrage -- the third on the Ukrainian capital in 24 hours. — AFP


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