
Ukrainian drone attack sparks fire at oil depot in Sochi, southwest Russia
The attack came a day after Ukraine's military said it struck the Ryazan oil refinery in central Russia, causing a fire. Ukraine has regularly hit Russian oil and gas infrastructure in response to attacks on its own territory since Russia began its war in February 2022.
'Sochi suffered a drone attack by the Kyiv regime last night,' the governor of Russia's Krasnodar region, Veniamin Kondratiev, said on the Telegram messaging application on Sunday.
Drone wreckage hit an 'oil tank, which caused a fire', Kondratiev said.
Sochi Mayor Andrei Proshunin said there were no victims and 'the situation is totally under control', adding that firefighters were extinguishing the blaze.
Air traffic was briefly suspended at Sochi's airport but has resumed, Russia's air transport regulator Rosaviatsia said.
Air strikes on Sochi, about 400km (250 miles) southeast of the Ukrainian border, are relatively rare compared with other Russian cities. However, Ukrainian drone attacks killed two people in the region late last month, according to local authorities.
Ukrainian officials have not commented on the fire.
Kyiv has warned it will intensify its air strikes against Russia in response to an increase in Russian attacks on its territory in recent weeks, which have killed dozens of civilians.
On Sunday, Ukraine's air force said on Telegram that Russia had launched 76 attack drones and seven missiles targeting Ukraine overnight, striking eight locations throughout Ukraine. Ukraine's air defence units destroyed 60 of the drones and one missile, it said.
In the front-line regions of Zaporizhia and Kherson, at least three people were killed and more than 12 injured in Russian attacks over the 24 hours into Sunday morning, regional governors said.
A Russian missile strike on the city of Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine also injured at least seven people and destroyed or damaged dozens of homes and civilian infrastructure, the regional governor said.
In the early days of the war, the Mykolaiv region stood on the front lines, facing frequent artillery strikes and aerial attacks. Even after Russian forces were pushed back in late 2022, drones and missiles have remained a constant danger there.
Russia also launched a short-lived missile attack on Kyiv overnight, but there have been no reports of injuries or damage.
In July, United States President Donald Trump said he would implement 'severe tariffs' on Russia unless a peace deal is reached by early September. Last week, Trump said he would give Putin 10 to 12 days, meaning Trump wants peace efforts to make progress by Thursday to Saturday.
So far, the Kremlin has rejected the idea of a lasting ceasefire in Ukraine.
Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he wanted peace but his demands for ending Moscow's military offensive were 'unchanged'.
Those demands include Ukraine abandoning some of its own territory and ending its ambitions to join NATO.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Jazeera
an hour ago
- Al Jazeera
Ukraine says foreign ‘mercenaries' from various countries aiding Russia
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed that his country's troops in the northeast are battling foreign 'mercenaries' recruited by Russia from various countries, vowing to 'respond'. The Ukrainian president visited front-line troops in the Kharkiv region on Monday, hearing reports from his 'warriors' that fighters from China, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, and African countries were on board with Russia. Russia is already known to have been assisted by thousands of North Korean troops in the defence of its Kursk region, and Ukraine had already accused Moscow of recruiting Chinese fighters – a charge denied by Beijing. At the time of reporting, there was no comment from the additional countries accused by Zelenskyy of joining Russia's war effort. Reporting from Kyiv, Al Jazeera's Charles Stratford said there was no way of verifying Zelenskyy's claims. Conversely, he added, 'lots of foreign fighters' had also volunteered to fight for Ukraine and were still on the front lines. Zelenskyy had met front-line fighters with Ukraine's 17th Separate Motorised Infantry Battalion of the 57th Brigade near the front-line town of Vovchansk. He said in a post in X that he had held discussions with commanders on 'the frontline situation, the defence of Vovchansk, and the dynamics of the battles', and was also looking at 'drone supply and deployment, recruitment, and direct funding for the brigades'. As Ukraine battled to repel Russian forces in the Kharkiv region, its troops were also engaged in 'ongoing heavy fighting' around the town of Pokrovsk in the Donetsk region, said Stratford. As fighting has continued, Russian and Ukrainian officials have held several meetings in recent months in Istanbul, Turkiye. The latest meeting secured an agreement to exchange 1,200 prisoners, Zelenskyy announced on Sunday. That day, United States President Donald Trump said his special envoy Steve Witkoff would fly to Russia to continue talks on the war in Ukraine. On Monday, Russian state news agency TASS cited sources saying the visit would take place on Wednesday. Trump has threatened to impose 'very severe tariffs' on Russia if it fails to reach a ceasefire deal with Ukraine soon, recently shortening his initial deadline of 50 days to within 10-12 days.


Al Jazeera
5 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Suspects in 2024 Moscow concert hall attack that killed 149 face trial
The trial has begun for 19 defendants accused of involvement in the 2024 shooting attack in a Moscow concert hall that killed 149 people, and wounded over 600, in one of the deadliest attacks in the capital since the era of the Russian-Chechen wars in the 1990s and 2000s. The suspects appearing in court on Monday, under heavy security, kept their heads bowed as they sat in the defendants' cage. An ISIL (ISIS) affiliate claimed responsibility for the March 22, 2024 massacre at the Crocus City Hall concert venue in which four gunmen shot people who were waiting for a show by a rock band and then set the building on fire. ISIL's Afghan branch – also known as ISKP (ISIS-K) – claimed responsibility for the attack. President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials have claimed, without providing any evidence, that Ukraine was involved in the attack, an allegation Kyiv has vehemently denied. The Investigative Committee, Russia's top criminal investigation agency, concluded in June that the attack had been 'planned and carried out in the interests of the current leadership of Ukraine in order to destabilise the political situation in our country'. It also said the four suspected gunmen tried to flee to Ukraine afterward. The four, all identified as citizens of Tajikistan, were arrested hours after the attack and later appeared in a Moscow court with signs of having been beaten. The committee said earlier this year that six other suspects were charged in absentia and placed on Russia's wanted list for allegedly recruiting and organising the training of the four. Other defendants in the trial were accused of helping them. In 2002, some 40 rebels from Chechnya stormed the Dubrovka Theatre in Moscow and took around 800 people hostage while demanding an end to Putin's war in the separatist southern republic. Putin refused to negotiate with the fighters, and the standoff ended with mass death days later when Russian special services pumped a powerful gas into the building to stun the hostage-takers before storming it. Most of the 129 hostages who died were killed by the gas.


Al Jazeera
16 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Trump says US envoy Witkoff to travel to Russia ‘next week'
United States President Donald Trump said his special envoy Steve Witkoff will visit Russia next week to continue talks on the war in Ukraine. Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Trump said Witkoff would visit, 'I think next week, Wednesday or Thursday.' Responding to questions from reporters on what Russia could do to avoid looming sanctions, the US president replied: 'Yeah, get a deal where people stop getting killed.' Trump has threatened to impose 'very severe tariffs' on Russia if it fails to reach a ceasefire deal with Ukraine soon. Trump also said that two nuclear submarines he deployed following an online row with former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev were now 'in the region.' Trump has not said whether he meant nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed submarines. He also did not elaborate on the exact deployment locations, which are kept secret by the US military. Trump's latest comments come after he recently described Russia's actions in its war on Ukraine as 'disgusting', after a Russian attack on an apartment block in Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, killed 31 people on Thursday. The attack capped off a month of a record 6,297 Russian long-range drone attacks on Ukraine, a 14-fold increase from July 2024. Ukraine is looking forward to receiving a US-made Patriot surface-to-air missile system, which Trump has promised will be delivered, albeit with funding from Ukraine's European allies, not the Trump administration. Ukraine has also continued to launch its own attacks on Russia, with its most recent attacks on Sunday killing three people across the country and causing a major fire at an oil refinery. A Ukrainian drone attack on Monday morning sparked a fire at a railway station in Russia's Volgograd region, the regional administration said on Telegram. As fighting has continued, Russian and Ukrainian officials have held several meetings in recent months in Istanbul, Turkiye. The latest meeting secured an agreement to exchange 1,200 prisoners, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced on Sunday. Russia has yet to comment. Witkoff, a real estate magnate and Trump golf partner, has already met with Russian President Vladimir Putin multiple times in Moscow in his role as a White House special envoy. As a special envoy to the Middle East, he is also Trump's representative in negotiations between Israel and Hamas, which saw him visit Tel Aviv, Israel, on Saturday, where he met with the families of captives held in Gaza.