Four people died last night following Russian attacks on the Synelnykove district, reported Head of the Regional State Administration Alexander Ganja.
Ganja stated that strikes were carried out on three populated areas, killing a man and injuring his wife in one area, while a couple and their 45-year-old son were killed in another area.
Another attack through the night caused damage to approximately 10 private homes and cars in one of the city’s districts, reported Gangja, noting that a fire broke out.
After investigations at the site, a baby and a 4-year-old girl were both injured following the attack on Dnipro, noting that the baby was in a moderate condition in hospital, as the number of casualties from the night attack rose to four.
According to the Regional Prosecutor’s Office, an energy infrastructure facility, residential buildings and nearby cars had been damaged, while locals to the site told reporters that they were lacking electricity and gas supplies.
Missile tracking specialist AMK Mapping stated this morning that the missiles used by Russia targeted the Prydniprovskya Power Plant in Dnipro.
During the morning cleanup, resident Sergei explained that he was a neighbour of the injured family, noting that the children and their mother had all been hospitalised, following the collapse of the ceiling above the cradle where the baby was sleeping.
According to the Hospital’s General Director where the month-old baby is a patient, a full set of examinations were conducted, including an ultrasound of the head and internal organs, an X-ray, and a CT Scan.
“The child was examined by neurosurgeons,” stated the Director: “The child will stay in hospital a few more days – monitoring is needed to track the indicators – she is currently in the resuscitation unit and is conscious.”

“Whoever tells me there is no god I’ll scratch his eyes out first – A child either cried or something, and the mother came over, picked her up, took three steps back, and the ceiling collapsed right on the cradle – And now tell me there’s no God” Sergei told reporters.

Residents Lidia and Tatyana live near the impact site, noting that the blast wave threw them both out of bed: “I don’t know what these ‘shahids’ are – we thought it was a rocket – there was shooting, flames, I thought the whole street would burn down,” Lidia told Suspilne journalists.
Neighbour Viktor said he used to work as a firefighter, so it was an automatic process to rush and help: “I heard an explosion, the fire started, I called 101,” Victor said, adding that: “I went to rescue people, in whatever clothes I had on.”
Viktor continued: “We did what we could to extinguish the fire, we collected water in a well with a pump, now we’ve come to help clear out some stuff and fix things.”

Rescuers from the State Emergency Service were still at the scene extinguishing the fire that had started due to the Russian strike on the Dnieper, reported correspondents from Suspilne who attended the scene.
Due to the attacks, heat supply had been cut off for 10,000 subscribers, reported the Deputy Prime Minister for the Restoration of Ukraine Oleksiy Kuleba, noting that an alternate heat supply source had been launched, and modular boiler houses are being set up for social sector facilities.

At another impact site, approximately four houses and two cars were damaged, with the attack mainly damaging ceilings, breaking windows, and mangling fences, and a fire broke out in one of the buildings.





