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Officials say that five people have been killed in Ukraine by Russian attacks

Officials said that two Russians were killed in late Friday night attacks in Zaporizhzhia, a city in Ukraine's southeast. Three more people died in the north and east of the country.

Ivan Fedorov of the Zaporizhzhia Regional Governor wrote on Telegram that the city was struck over 10 times. Two people were killed and nine injured.

A woman and a baby aged nine months were among the injured.

Online pictures showed rescuers sifting their way through rubble, apartment blocks, and homes with severely damaged windows and facades. A fire raged among piles of rubble.

Prosecutors in Sumy, near the northern border of Ukraine with Russia, said that Russian forces had dropped six guided bombs over Krasnopillia village, killing at least two people and wounding at least another two.

Prosecutors said that in eastern Donetsk, which is the focal point for Russia's westward march, three bombs were dropped on Kostiantynivka near the frontlines, killing a person.

Acting regional governor Yuri Slyusar reported that a Ukrainian drone had struck an apartment on the 17th-floor in Rostov-on Don, Russia. Two people were injured. He wrote on Telegram that air defences had destroyed several drones.

Alexander Gusev, the regional governor of Voronezh in southern Russia, said that more than 10 Ukrainian drones had been destroyed. There were no reported injuries or damage.

It was impossible to independently verify the reports of either side.

The Kremlin announced this week that Russian president Vladimir Putin and his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump had agreed to a 30-day truce on energy targets during a phone call.

This agreement fell short of the wider agreement sought by the U.S. and accepted by Ukraine for a blanket ceasefire lasting 30 days. Next week, talks on a possible ceasefire will be held in Saudi Arabia, and separately with officials from Russia and Ukraine. Reporting by Ron Popeski, Oleksandr Kozoukhar and Shri Navaratnam; Editing Bill Berkrot & Shri Navaratnam

(source: Reuters)