Kyiv struck by Russian shelling, curfew announced
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[March 15, 2022] By
Omer Berberoglu
KYIV (Reuters) -Russian shelling struck
Kyiv on Tuesday killing at least two people, authorities said, as
invading forces tightened their grip on the Ukrainian capital and the
mayor announced a 35-hour curfew starting at 8 p.m. (1800 GMT).
Two large blasts echoed across the centre of the city just before dawn
on Tuesday. Late on Monday, tracer bullets flashed across the night sky
as Ukrainian forces apparently targeted an enemy drone.
"Today is a difficult and dangerous moment," mayor Vitali Klitschko
said.
"The capital is the heart of Ukraine, and it will be defended. Kyiv,
which is currently the symbol and forward operating base of Europe’s
freedom and security, will not be given up by us."
Reuters witnesses saw a high-rise apartment block in flames after being
struck by artillery. Firefighters tried to douse the blaze and rescue
workers helped evacuate residents trapped inside using mobile ladders. A
body lay on the ground in a bag.
Kyiv has been spared the worst of the fighting since Russia invaded
Ukraine on Feb. 24, but the Russian military is slowly closing in on the
city and the shelling has intensified.
"What is happening right now in Kharkiv, in Mariupol and other cities -
it was understandable that sooner or later it would happen in Kyiv,"
said local resident Igor Krupa.
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A woman reacts after she was rescued from a residential apartment
building that was hit by shelling as Russia's invasion of Ukraine
continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine, March 15, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Sitting on the ground outside the
badly damaged building, he described how he had cocooned himself
with furniture and metal weights before going to sleep.
"This actually saved me because all the windows went out and all the
debris went into the apartment, and I remained unwounded. Just a
couple of scratches."
In another part of the city, residents cleared debris from their
homes after shelling blew out windows, ruined balconies and left
wreckage strewn across the ground.
Thousands of people have been killed in the conflict and millions
more displaced.
Russia, which denies targeting civilians, calls its actions a
"special military operation" to "denazify" the country, a claim that
Ukraine and its allies reject as a pretext for an unjustified and
illegal attack.
(Writing by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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