Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 15th April 2025, 10:01 PM
Local authorities in Kursk, a regional capital situated approximately 90 kilometres from the Ukrainian border, reported that the strike occurred early Tuesday morning, resulting in significant damage to civilian infrastructure.
| Casualties & Impact | Details |
|---|---|
| Fatalities | 1 (85-year-old woman) |
| Injured | 9 (6 hospitalised with burns and trauma) |
| Infrastructure Damage | Apartment blocks damaged; debris widespread |
| Drone Attacks (overnight) | 115 drones launched; 109 intercepted |
Kursk Governor Alexander Khinshtein described the strike as a “crime of unprecedented cruelty” in a statement on Telegram, confirming the death of an 85-year-old woman.
The incident follows a Russian ballistic missile strike on the Ukrainian city of Sumy just two days earlier, which killed at least 35 people. These attacks are part of a growing pattern of reciprocal cross-border assaults, even as international calls for de-escalation persist.
| Recent Key Strikes | Location | Casualties |
|---|---|---|
| Russian missile on Sumy | Sumy, Ukraine | ≥35 killed |
| Ukrainian drone on Kursk | Kursk, Russia | 1 killed, 9 injured |
US President Donald Trump recently issued a renewed call for a ceasefire, urging an end to the ongoing conflict that has now entered its fourth year. However, both sides appear to be intensifying efforts on the battlefield.
Russia’s Ministry of Defence claimed that Ukraine had launched 115 drones overnight, the majority of which were intercepted over Kursk. Russian investigators alleged that the drones were equipped with metal shrapnel designed to inflict maximum civilian casualties and infrastructure damage.
Meanwhile, Kyiv has not officially confirmed responsibility, but Ukrainian disinformation countering centre head Andriy Kovalenko stated on Telegram:
“Unknown drones hit a Russian ammunition depot in Kursk.”
This claim suggests that the intended target may have been military in nature, rather than civilian.
Kursk, though geographically close to the front lines, has largely remained under Russian control, with Ukraine currently only maintaining presence in approximately 50 square kilometres of the region, according to data from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
However, the conflict appears to be shifting:
Russian forces have increased operations in the northern Ukrainian regions of Sumy and Kharkiv in recent months.
Border villages have exchanged control multiple times, with warnings from Ukraine’s military of a renewed Russian offensive looming.
While military infrastructure remains a priority target on both sides, civilians continue to suffer. Repeated shelling, drone strikes, and missile attacks on urban and residential areas have led to:
Widespread displacement
Growing casualties
Damaged healthcare systems and infrastructure
Photographs circulated by Kursk authorities on social media revealed damaged apartment blocks, shattered windows, and rubble-strewn streets, underscoring the persistent vulnerability of civilians caught in the crossfire.
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