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Kharkiv residents terrorised by nine-minute-long drone barrage

Kharkiv residents terrorised by nine-minute-long drone barrage

Posted on 12 June 2025 By jobuzo

The distinct lawnmower-like sound of Russia’s attack drones woke residents across Ukraine’s second-largest city at 12:30am.

Over the next nine minutes, there would be no pause.

The intense overnight assault killed at least six people and wounded 60 others, including children, Ukrainian authorities said.

Kharkiv residents terrorised by nine-minute-long drone barrage

The attack hit residential buildings across Kharkiv. (Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP)

Olena Khoruzheva raced to the hallway with her two children as soon as they heard the drones approaching.

They tried to get as far away as possible from the windows.

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Her youngest son lay on the floor with his hands over his head.

“I was on top of him,” the 41-year-old pharmacist told AFP.

“We heard it approaching, silence, and then we were thrown against the wall.”

A residential building completely in flames after a drone attack.

The assault sparked fires in 15 units of a five-storey apartment block. (Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP)

That was just the beginning.

Eleven sites were hit within minutes, including three residential buildings, according to Kharkiv’s regional governor.

“There were more explosions, then we heard people shouting, ‘Help! Help!’ Ms Khoruzheva said.

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Her 65-year-old neighbour was one of those killed in the attack.

An elderly woman carried on a makeshift stretcher but men after being evacuated from a building.

Police officers and volunteers carry a person evacuated from an apartment building.  (Reuters: Vitalii Hnidyi)

Authorities say at least 17 Shahed-type drones were launched at the city, which lies just 30 kilometres from the Russian border.

The Osnovianskyi and Slobidskyi districts took direct hits.

As the 3.5-metre-long and 2.5-metre-wide drones came hurtling towards buildings, residents did not know whether to stay put or run out to the streets.

The barrage seemed never-ending.

An emergency worker assists a woman standing in the street at night with her cat in a plastic bag after a drone strike.

An emergency worker assists a woman who evacuated her home during the strikes.  (State Emergency Services of Ukraine via Reuters)

“We were very scared because there were many, many of them [Shahed drones],” resident Olha Kravets said.

“We thought that this could happen, but we did not expect our house to be hit.

“As soon as it struck, we panicked, we didn’t know what to do, where to go, because it was still flying.”

A car on fire at night in front of a burning apartment building.

Cars, homes and infrastructure were damaged in the strikes.  (AP: Andrii Marienko)

In one five-storey building, fires broke out in 15 apartments, Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov said.

Private homes, playgrounds, public transport, and key infrastructure were also struck.

Several cars were damaged by debris.

A paramedic provides first aid to an injured man sitting on a park bench with a bandaged head and blood on his legs.

A paramedic provides first aid to a man injured at the site of a damaged apartment building. (Reuters: Vitalii Hnidyi)

Kharkiv Regional Governor Oleh Syniehubov warned that it appeared Russia was using a new high-altitude dive-bombing tactic.

He said the drones had significantly increased their altitude, flying high above targets then sharply dropping before impact.

“Russian forces have changed tactic — they’re now launching drones at 4,000 to 5,000 metres,” he wrote on Telegram.

The tactic made it increasingly difficult for Ukrainian air defences to respond.

A firefighter works inside an apartment building damaged by a Russian drone strike.

A firefighter works inside a Kharkiv apartment building damaged by a Russian drone strike.   (Reuters: Vitalii Hnidyi)

Vitalii Holovin’s apartment was destroyed.

His home was engulfed in smoke, leaving him with no choice but to flee, leaving behind all his belongings.

“I didn’t have a chance to take any documents or money,” he said.

“There was a fire. I felt the smoke, I got out … It was impossible to stay in smoke and look for something.”

His neighbour saved a dog from another apartment.

“The dog got burnt,” she said.

“We carried it from the fourth floor.”

A woman stands in the street at night, holding a wet and burnt dog, wrapped in a red jumper.

A resident holds a dog evacuated from an apartment building.

The devastating nine-minute drone strike left carnage in the streets.

Emergency crews, municipal workers and volunteers worked through the night to extinguish fires and rescue residents from burning homes.

Regions were left without gas, water and electricity.

Dozens of the injured were hospitalised, including a two-year-old girl and a 15-year-old boy, Mr Syniehubov said.

There are fears for the many people still trapped under rubble.

Rescuers help free a man from under the rubble in an aftermath of an attack.

Rescuers help free a man trapped under rubble in the aftermath of the attack. (State Emergency Service Of Ukraine via Reuters)

Kharkiv withstood Russia’s full-scale advance in the early days of the war. However, it has since been a regular target of drone, missile and guided aerial bomb assaults.

“Every new day now brings new cowardly strikes from Russia, and almost every strike is demonstrative,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Telegram.

“Russia deserves increased pressure.”

There was no immediate comment from Russia on the overnight attacks.

The Kharkiv attack followed Russia this week carrying out its two biggest air assaults of the war so far.

It launched almost 500 drones on Monday and 315 drones and seven missiles overnight on Tuesday.

Ukraine’s air force said Russia had fired 85 drones across Ukraine overnight, 40 of which were shot down.

The attacks are part of intensified bombardments that Moscow says are retaliatory measures for Kyiv’s recent attacks in Russia.

ABC/wires

Kharkiv residents terrorised by nine-minute-long drone barrage


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