‘Insidious tactics’ — Mass Russian missile and drone strike kills at least 4, injures over 70 in Kyiv, its surrounding region, Zaporizhzhia

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Editor’s Note: This is a developing story and is being updated.

At least four people, including a 12-year-old girl, were killed and over 70 injured in the latest overnight mass Russian missile and drone attack, Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko reported on Sept. 28.

The attack lasted for over 12 hours, and Russia launched almost 500 drones and over 40 missiles, according to President Volodymyr Zelensky. Kyiv and Zaporizhzhia have reported the heaviest damage from the attack thus far.

Nearly 20 locations across Kyiv’s six different districts were damaged from the attack, including a five-story building that suffered from “partial destruction,” according to Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko.

At least four people have been killed in Kyiv, including a 12-year-old girl. At least 13 people were also reported injured. In the surrounding Kyiv Oblast, the regional military administration reported that 28 people were wounded, including three children. Four victims, among them a child, were hospitalized, and their conditions are “moderately severe,” according to the local authorities.

A nurse and a patient died due to the attack at the Institute of Cardiology, according to Klymenko.

The southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia was also targeted by the Sept. 28 attack. Zaporizhzhia Oblast Governor Ivan Fedorov reported that at least 27 people have been injured, among them three children.

The three children have been hospitalized and two of them are in serious condition, according to Fedorov – one from mine exposion injuries and the second from carbon monoxide poisoning.

Throughout the night, swarms of Shahed-style drones also threatened a number of Ukrainian regions. Explosions were reported in Kyiv, Kyiv Oblast, Zaporizhzhia, Khmelnytskyi Oblast, and Sumy.

Five Russian Tu-95 bombers took off from Olenya airfield in Murmansk Oblast at approximately 1:45 a.m. local time, monitoring channels reported. At around 2:25 a.m., the Kyiv City Military Administration warned that Russia had launched MiG-31K bombers, prompting an aerial alert across the country.  

Ukraine’s Air Force then issued a warning at 3:52 a.m., saying Russia had likely launched Tu-95s from the Engels air base.

A five-story building in the capital was partially destroyed and residential infrastructure has been damaged in multiple districts, Kyiv City Military Administration Head Tymur Tkachenko said. The attack also damaged non-residential buildings and parked cars.

In Kyiv Oblast, fires broke out in several homes and buildings in districts outside the capital during the “mass enemy strike,” regional authorities said.

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Rescue workers at one of the attack sites in the latest overnight attack on Kyiv on Sept. 28 where a 12 year-old girl was killed. (Photo: Alex Cadier)

In Zaporizhzhia — the regional capital of partially Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast in southeastern Ukraine — the attack targeted the city’s civilian infrastructure, regional Governor Ivan Fedorov reported. One missile struck a multistory building directly.

Nine houses and 14 high-rise buildings were damaged in total, Fedorov said. The attack also damaged non-residential buildings, including a school and the production facilities of an unspecified enterprise.

“Insidious tactics, an inhuman thirst for human suffering,” Regina Kharchenko, acting head of the Zaporizhzhia City Council, said the morning after the attack.

“Yesterday’s life still smolders in the windows — someone’s photographs, children’s toys, books. People have suffered, and the city is counting its wounds again.”

Explosions were also reported in Ukraine’s Khmelnytskyi Oblast. Governor Serhii Tiurin confirmed that air defenses had been active over the region during the attack, but said preliminary reports indicated no casualties.

Poland scrambled fighter jets in response to the mass attack, as it has done previously when Russian strikes threatened western Ukraine. During a mass attack on Sept. 10, Poland shot down multiple Russian drones that crossed the border and breached Polish airspace.

Flight monitors reported that Poland on Sept. 28 closed the airspace over Lublin and Rseszow due to “unplanned military activity related to ensuring state security.”

Unidentified drones reportedly spotted in Denmark, Lithuania, Finland

The incidents come as Russian drones and military aircraft have increasingly entered NATO airspace, prompting heightened alert and readiness across the alliance.

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Russia has intensified the scale of its aerial attacks on Ukraine throughout the spring and summer of 2025. Heading into the colder months, officials have warned Ukrainians to brace for a new wave of Russian mass attacks targeting the country’s energy infrastructure.

Earlier in September, Russia launched over 810 Shahed-type drones and 13 missiles in a record-breaking attack that struck the Cabinet of Ministers building in central Kyiv. Two nights later, Russia attacked again, striking Ukraine and violating Polish airspace.

The incident marked the first time a NATO member has destroyed Russian drones during the full-scale war against Ukraine. It was followed by a string of Russian airspace violations and suspicious drone incursions in NATO territory.

Amid these escalating provocations, world leaders convened in New York for the high-level U.N. General Assembly, where President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump.

In an abrupt tonal shift, Trump declared after the meeting that Ukraine “is in a position to fight and win all of Ukraine back in its original form” — with European support.

Trump later lobbed criticism at Russian President Vladimir Putin for the ongoing attacks on Ukraine.

“I’m very dissatisfied with what Russia is doing and what President Putin is doing,” Trump told reporters on Sept. 25. “I haven’t liked it at all. He’s killing people for no reason whatsoever.”

Trump has still not imposed any new U.S. sanctions against Russia despite the mounting civilian death toll.

As Russia tests NATO, calls to ‘close Ukraine’s skies’ have returned — here’s what that means

Calls to “close the skies” over Ukraine — the rallying cry of pro-Ukraine demonstrations in early 2022 — are resurfacing after a wave of Russian airspace violations against NATO members. These incursions have put European countries on edge and raised questions about the alliance’s ability to counter Russian drones and aircraft. Within days, NATO launched the Eastern Sentry mission, and talk of closing the skies over Ukraine returned to the agenda. “NATO is a defensive bloc, so any steps it tak

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