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Russia hits Ukraine's Danube port in attack condemned by Romania

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KYIV: Russian drones targeted Ukraine's southern Odesa region in the early hours of Sunday, with Moscow hitting a Danube port on the border with NATO member Romania in an attack condemned by Bucharest.


Moscow has hit Ukrainian port infrastructure on the Black Sea and on the Danube for weeks, since exiting a key deal that allowed the safe passage of ships carrying grain.


The Odesa region attacks came as Kyiv has claimed some successes in its counter-offensive on the southern front this week.


Kyiv said that some of the drones hit the Danube area, saying that at least two people were wounded in attacks on "civilian industrial" infrastructure.


The Russian army said it had targeted "fuel storage" facilities in the Ukrainian port of Reni, which lies on the Danube river that separates Ukraine from Romania.


Moscow has targeted the Danube ports of Reni and Ismail -- both near Romania and across the war-torn country from fighting hotspots -- several times over the last few weeks.


Reni -- which also lies close to Moldova -- is a sea and river port and important transport hub.


Bucharest's defence ministry said the attacks were "unjustified and in deep contradiction with the rules of international humanitarian law".


It also stressed that the Moscow drone attacks did not "generate any direct military threat to the national territory or territorial waters of Romania."


Neighbouring Moldova called the attack "brutal."


"Russia must be held accountable for every piece of infrastructure destroyed," Chisinau's pro-EU President Maia Sandu said on social media.


The Odesa region attacks came as Kyiv this week reported some successes on the southern front of its counteroffensive.


Kyiv said it had recaptured the village of Robotyne, calling it a strategic victory that would pave the way for its forces to push deeper into Russian positions towards Moscow-annexed Crimea.


General Oleksandr Tarnavskiy, leading the southern counteroffensive, told The Guardian newspaper this weekend that Kyiv's army has made an important breakthrough by breaching Russian lines near Zaporizhzhia.


"We are now between the first and second defensive lines," Tarnavskiy -- who led Ukrainian troops to liberate the southern city of Kherson -- told the UK paper.


Heavily mined territory had slowed Ukrainian troops, saying that sappers had cleaned a route by foot and at night.


The paper quoted him as saying that Kyiv's forces are now back on vehicles and that Russia has redeployed troops to the area. — AFP


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