KYIV, Ukraine (AP) 鈥 A in eastern Ukraine early Saturday while many were sleeping, killing four people 鈥 three in Dnipro and one in Kharkiv 鈥 and wounding 12 others, Ukrainian authorities reported.
The attack in Dnipro, Ukraine鈥檚 fourth-largest city, was part of a large Russian missile and drone barrage across the country that targeted power infrastructure. It also killed a worker at an energy company in Kharkiv, farther north, a local official said.
A fire broke out and several apartments were destroyed in the nine-story building in Dnipro, the emergency services said. Rescuers recovered the bodies of three people, while two children were among the wounded.
Russia fired a total of 458 drones and 45 missiles, including 32 ballistic missiles. Ukrainian forces shot down and neutralized 406 drones and nine missiles, the air force said, adding that 25 locations were struck.
Authorities switched off power in several regions because of the attacks, Ukrainian Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk said in a post on Facebook.
In eastern Ukraine, fighting for has reached a key stage, with both Kyiv and Moscow vying to persuade U.S. President Donald Trump that they can win on the battlefield.
Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Saturday that work has begun on President Vladimir Putin鈥檚 order to prepare plans for , according to state news agency Tass.
Putin鈥檚 order on Wednesday followed , which appeared to suggest that Washington would restart its own atomic tests for the first time in three decades.
Energy sites attacked
Russia has been pummeling Ukraine with near-daily drone and missile strikes, killing and wounding civilians. The Kremlin says its only targets are linked to Kyiv鈥檚 war effort. Russia’s Defense Ministry asserted Saturday that the nighttime strikes hit military and energy sites supplying Ukrainian forces.
Moscow and Kyiv have traded almost daily assaults on each other鈥檚 energy targets as to stop the had no impact on the battlefield.
on Russian refineries aim to deprive Moscow of the it needs to pursue the war. Russia wants to and deny civilians access to heat, light and running water in what Kyiv officials say is an attempt to 鈥渨eaponize winter.鈥
Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said in an X post that the strikes damaged 鈥渟everal major energy facilities鈥 around Kharkiv and Kyiv, as well as in the central Poltava region.
Thermal power plants operated by Ukraine鈥檚 state energy company Centrenergo were again knocked offline by the nighttime strikes, the company said in a statement Saturday. Centrenergo’s three plants in Kyiv, Kharkiv and Donetsk regions were damaged by Russian attacks last year and subsequently restored.
Russian forces, meanwhile, repelled a 鈥渕assive鈥 nighttime strike on energy facilities in the southern Volgograd region, Gov. Andrei Bocharov said Saturday, two days after Ukraine said that it there with long-range drones. Bocharov added that the strike knocked out power in parts of the region’s northwest, but caused no casualties. There was no immediate comment from Kyiv.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said on Saturday that its forces shot down 82 Ukrainian drones during the night, including eight over the Volgograd region. Two people were wounded in the neighboring Saratov region after a Ukrainian drone strike blew out windows in an apartment building, according to regional Gov. Roman Busarin.
Russian oil
Following weeks of long-range strikes on Russia’s energy infrastructure that Ukraine says both funds and directly fuels the Kremlin’s war, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy vowed on Friday to 鈥渇ind a way to ensure there is no Russian oil in Europe.鈥
Zelenskyy spoke to reporters shortly after Hungary secured a yearlong exemption from recent U.S. sanctions targeting major Russian oil producers.
鈥淲e will not allow it. We will not let the Russians sell oil there. It鈥檚 a matter of time,” he said at a news briefing after meeting with senior Ukrainian military leaders, without elaborating how Kyiv might seek to stanch the oil flows.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orb谩n, a Trump ally who has long urged the European Union to repair ties with Moscow, argues that landlocked Hungary has no viable alternatives to Russian crude, and that replacing those supplies would trigger an economic collapse. Critics .
The Trump administration unveiled Rosneft and Lukoil last month, a move that could expose their foreign buyers 鈥 including customers in Central Europe, India and China 鈥 to secondary sanctions.
While most of the EU’s 27 member states sharply reduced or halted imports of Russian fossil fuels after Moscow鈥檚 full-scale on Feb. 24, 2022, Hungary and Slovakia have maintained their pipeline deliveries. Hungary has even increased the share of Russian oil in its energy mix.
Fighting for Pokrovsk
The city of Pokrovsk sits along the eastern front line, part of what has been dubbed the , a line of heavily fortified cities crucial to Ukraine鈥檚 defense of the region. It could also be a key point in influencing Washington’s stance and sway the course of peace negotiations, analysts say.
Russia troops advanced near Pokrovsk and the nearby town of Myrnohrad, according to the Russian Defense Ministry on Saturday, saying both were encircled. It also said Russian forces surrounded Ukrainian defenders in Kupiansk, a key railway hub in the northeastern Kharkiv region. Kyiv didn’t immediately respond to Moscow’s statements, which couldn’t be independently verified.
Nuclear plant reconnected to grid
Elsewhere, the International Atomic Energy Agency said that Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which is in an area under Russian control, has been connected to the power grid with a second transmission line.
The plant was operating on diesel backup generators for a month after Sept. 23 when its last remaining external power line was severed in attacks that Russia and Ukraine each blamed on the other. On Oct. 23, the connection to the grid was restored using a single transmission line.
The plant is , but it needs reliable power to cool its six shutdown reactors and spent fuel to avoid any catastrophic nuclear incidents. Since the start of Russia鈥檚 , the facility has lost external power and had to rely on emergency diesel generators on 10 occasions as a result of the fighting.
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Joanna Kozlowska reported from London.
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This story corrects the name of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
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