logo
Two women injured and infrastructure damaged in Russian attack on Dnipro

Two women injured and infrastructure damaged in Russian attack on Dnipro

Yahoo07-06-2025
The Russians launched a missile and drone attack on Dnipropetrovsk Oblast on the night of 6-7 June, injuring women aged 45 and 88.
Source: Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Military Administration
Details: Infrastructure, premises belonging to a business, an educational institution and several dozen garages were damaged in the city of Dnipro. A car caught fire, three others were damaged and windows were shattered in high-rise buildings.
The city of Pavlohrad came under the Russian attack too. Premises belonging to a business and high-rise buildings were wrecked there. Cars caught fire, with nine of them destroyed.
The Russians resumed strikes on the Nikopol district in the morning, targeting the city of Nikopol and the Marganets hromada with FPV drones and heavy artillery. [A hromada is an administrative unit designating a village, several villages, or a town, and their adjacent territories – ed.]
A nine-storey building was damaged in Nikopol.
Six Russian missiles and 27 drones were downed over the oblast.
Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Putin kept claims Hillary Clinton had physical, ‘psycho-emotional' problems under wraps because he thought she would win 2016 election: Gabbard
Putin kept claims Hillary Clinton had physical, ‘psycho-emotional' problems under wraps because he thought she would win 2016 election: Gabbard

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Putin kept claims Hillary Clinton had physical, ‘psycho-emotional' problems under wraps because he thought she would win 2016 election: Gabbard

WASHINGTON — Russian intelligence obtained damaging information about former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's health amid her 2016 presidential campaign — including evidence that she had 'psycho-emotional problems' that were being treated with severe sedatives — but Vladimir Putin chose not to release it before that year's election because he thought the Democrat would win. The astounding revelations were contained in a 2020 House Intelligence Committee report which reviewed purported Russian influence on the presidential contest and was declassified and made public Wednesday by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Russia's intelligence service 'possessed DNC communications that Clinton was suffering from 'intensified psycho-emotional problems, including uncontrolled fits of anger, aggression. and cheerfulness,'' the report stated. Advertisement A 2020 House Intelligence Committee report detailing Russia's knowledge of damaging information about Hillary Clinton's health amid the 2016 Presidential election was released Wednesday. Getty Images 'Clinton was placed on a daily regimen of 'heavy tranquilizers' and while afraid of losing, she remained 'obsessed with a thirst for power.'' Moscow's foreign intelligence service, the SVR, also 'possessed a campaign email discussing a plan approved by Secretary Clinton to link Putin and Russian hackers to candidate Trump in order to 'distract the [American] public' from the Clinton email server scandal.' Advertisement Putin chose not to release this information as he believed Hillary was sure to win the 2016 election. The revelations, which were taken from emails hacked from Clinton campaign and Democratic National Committee accounts, even found that the Russians concealed details about Clinton shaking down religious organizations for campaign donations by pledging more favorable treatment by a future Democratic State Department. The Post reached out to the Clinton Foundation for comment.

New round of Russia-Ukraine talks start in Turkey, days after Trump gave Moscow deadline to make peace
New round of Russia-Ukraine talks start in Turkey, days after Trump gave Moscow deadline to make peace

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

New round of Russia-Ukraine talks start in Turkey, days after Trump gave Moscow deadline to make peace

Russian and Ukrainian delegates have begun their third set of direct talks in Istanbul, days after US President Donald Trump gave Moscow a 50-day deadline to make peace or face 'very severe tariffs.' Russian President Vladimir Putin has not publicly acknowledged Trump's ultimatum, and Moscow has continued to pummel Ukrainian cities with drones and missiles while its ground troops grind forward in the east. The two previous rounds of talks in Istanbul, in May and June, helped facilitate the exchange of thousands of prisoners of war and the remains of dead soldiers, but made little progress toward a potential ceasefire agreement. Before Wednesday's latest round of talks, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov sought to downplay expectations, stressing that the two sides' negotiating positions remain 'diametrically opposed.' 'No one expects an easy path. It will be a very difficult discussion,' Peskov said Wednesday. A day earlier, he told reporters not to expect 'any miraculous breakthroughs.' Peskov confirmed that Moscow's delegation is unchanged from the previous rounds of talks and will be headed by Vladimir Medinsky, a former culture minister and now a senior Putin aide. Rustem Umerov, Ukraine's former defense minister, is leading Kyiv's delegation after heading the previous two. Last month, Russian casualties hit a grim milestone, with the UK's Ministry of Defence estimating that Putin's war has likely cost Russia more than 1 million casualties since the start of its full-scale invasion in February 2022. That number tracked with an assessment the same month from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank in Washington, DC, which put the number of casualties at 950,000 and predicted that 'Russia will likely hit the 1 million casualty mark in the summer of 2025.' Despite those losses, the Russian president has shown little sign of compromising on his maximalist war aim of dismantling Ukraine's sovereignty. In a long essay published months before the full-scale invasion, Putin falsely argued that Russia and Ukraine are one country; his comments suggesting to many that the war has been waged to make that a reality. In addition to Trump's fresh threat of new sanctions on Russia and other countries that purchase Russian oil if peace isn't reached in 50 days, the US also secured a deal to funnel new weapons to Kyiv through European allies. The moves were in stark contrast with previous approaches the US leader has taken with the conflict. Trump's reversal came after the European Union unveiled a new package of sanctions proposing to lower the price cap on Russian oil exports and introducing a full transaction ban on Russian banks and financial institutions in third countries that help Russia dodge existing sanctions. It is unclear whether Trump's latest decisions will sway Moscow's approach, but his about-face could provide a much-needed boost to Ukraine's military coffers, and signals his growing frustration with Putin. 'My conversations with him are very pleasant, and then the missiles go off at night,' Trump explained last week. Before the talks, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reiterated his call for a direct meeting with Putin, saying only a meeting of the two leaders can end the war.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store