Ukraine drone strikes spark fires at Russian depots, sea port - Action News
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Ukraine drone strikes spark fires at Russian depots, sea port

A Ukrainian drone attack on Thursday sparked a fire at a military facility in southern Russia as Kyiv pushes its offensive in the Kursk region, where it has taken territory and prisoners, and struck key infrastructure including bridges, airfields and oil depots.

Drone attacks started blazes in recent days in Marinovka, Proletarsk in western Russia

An aerial satellite photo is shown of a large expanse of land, with dirt and grass and buildings in miniature.
This satellite photo on Wednesday from Planet Labs PBC shows a fire at an oil depot earlier hit by a Ukrainian drone attack, near Proletarsk, Russia. (Planet Labs PBC/The Associated Press)

A Ukrainian drone attack on Thursday sparked a fire at a military facility in southern Russia as Kyiv pushes its offensive in the Kursk region, where it has taken territory and prisoners, and struck key infrastructure including bridges, airfields and oil depots.

Andrei Bocharov, governor of the Volgograd region, said Thursday that a "defence ministry facility" was on fire after being attacked by drones in the area of Marinovka, in a sign that Ukraine is not letting up on its attacks. He did not specify what was damaged.

Meanwhile, another fire burned Thursday in Russia's Rostov region, where firefighters struggled for the fifth day to put out a fire at an oil depot in the town of Proletarsk caused by a Ukrainian drone attack on Aug. 18.

Satellite photos from Planet Labs PBC analyzed Thursday by The Associated Press showed the fire at the oil depot still intensely burning as of Wednesday. Storage tanks at the facility appeared engulfed in flames. Visible flames could be seen in the images, with a thick black smoke cloud drifting west over the city of Proletarsk.

In another example of Ukraine's intensifying attacks on Russia, emergency authorities in Russia's Krasnodar region said a Ukrainian strike hit a cargo ferry loaded with fuel tanks at the port of Kavkaz, sparking a blaze. The port is on the Kerch Strait linking the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. Russian Telegram channels posted videos purportedly showing a huge fire caused by the strike.

WATCH |Fire breaks out at Russian port after purported Ukrainian attack:

Fire breaks out at Russian port after purported Ukrainian attack

30 days ago
Duration 0:11
A ferry loaded with fuel tanks sustained significant damage in the Russian port of Kavkaz in southern Krasnodar region on Thursday after a Ukrainian attack, local authorities said. Ukraine did not immediately comment on the incident.

Ukraine attacked Russia overnight with 28 drones, Russia's defence ministrysaid. Thirteen were shot down over the Volgograd region, seven over the Rostov region, four over the Belgorod region, two over the Voronezh region, and one each over the Bryansk and Kursk regions, the ministry said.

Russian Telegram channels said drones attempted to attack a military airbase near Marinovka in the village of Oktyabrsky. Videos shared on Russian social media showed an explosion in the night sky, reportedly near the base. Marinovka is about 300 kilometres east of the Ukrainian border and about the same distance west from the border with Kazakhstan.

The attacks came as Kyiv continues a ground offensive in Russia's Kursk region that has rattled the Kremlin. The daring operation is the largest attack on Russia since the Second World War and could involve as many as 10,000 Ukrainian troops backed by armour and artillery, military analysts say.

Russia claims Donetsk village

Data from NASA fire satellites, which monitor Earth for forest blazes, showed fires breaking out around the Marinovka-area airbase's apron, where fighter jets were previously seen parked.

Kursk acting governor Alexei Smirnov said that authorities began putting up concrete shelters at bus stops and other locations around the city Thursday to protect from shelling.

A woman in a baseball hat cradles a child who appears to be sleeping, on a bus crowded with people.
Local residents enter an evacuation bus as they flee Russian troop advances in Pokrovsk, Ukraine, on Thursday. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

He said similar work will be done in Zheleznogorsk and Kurchatov, where the Kursk nuclear power plant is located.

UkrainianPresident Voldymyr Zelenskyy toured the northeastern region of Sumy on Thursday in his first visit to the border area since his forces entered Russian territory.

LISTEN l Tim Mak of Kyiv-based Counteroffensive on where war may lead from here:

Former U.S. Ambassador to Russia John Sullivan analyzes Ukraines incursion into Russian territory

1 month ago
Duration 9:46
Get the latest on CBCNews.ca, the CBC News App, and CBC News Network for breaking news and analysis.

But the gains there come as Ukraine continues to lose ground in its eastern Donetsk region. The Russian defenceministry announced Thursday that its military has claimed control of the village of Mezhove.

The Ukraine military's General Staff said the fighting on the eastern front remained intense and that Russian troops had
launched 53 assaults and offensive actions on the front to the east of the transport hub of Pokrovsk in the last 24 hours.

WATCH l Nuclear threats ever-present with Putin's setbacks, former U.S. ambassador says:
Two and half years after Russia first invaded, Ukraine has launched what might be its boldest counterattack yet: a push into the Kursk region. It's the first military incursion across Russian borders since the Second World War, drawing Russian troops away from key battle zones in eastern Ukraine.Tim Mak, a Kyiv-based journalist who publishes the newsletter The Counteroffensive, explains why Ukraine is betting big on such a risky strategy, and whether it could change the course of this protracted war.For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit:https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts [https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts]

With files from Reuters