Summary

  • President Zelensky has urged US President Biden and leaders of the other G7 industrialised countries for further support for Ukraine

  • The group met a day after Russia launched a wave of attacks on cities across the country in what is seen as an escalation of the war

  • There were further attacks today - in the western city of Lviv, energy facilities were hit, causing widespread power blackouts

  • The southern city of Zaporizhzhia was shelled again, and there were strikes on the central-eastern region of Dnipropetrovsk

  • People across Ukraine have been advised to stay in shelters, and not to ignore air raid sirens

  • Meanwhile, the UK's spy chief has said there are no current signs Russia is considering using nuclear weapons

  1. Missile strikes popular pedestrian bridge in Kyivpublished at 10:05 BST 10 October 2022

    A screen grab taken from a surveillance camera shows an explosion rocked a bridge in the Shevchenkivskyi district of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv on October 10, 2022.Image source, Getty Images

    A Russian missile has struck a newly built pedestrian and cycling bridge in Kyiv, known as the Klitschko bridge, which opened in 2019.

    The bridge is a popular tourist attraction along the bank of the Dnieper river, with sections of the flooring made of glass panelling and a busy motorway running underneath.

    It is 212m in length and 32m high, with the span connecting St Volodymyr Hill to the Arch of Freedom monument. Visitors to Kyiv know it as being normally alive with street performers and musicians.

    Footage from a surveillance camera on the bridge shows the moment it was struck - we don't yet know if there were any casualties from this specific attack.

    This is what the bridge looked like before it was hit - the picture is from Saturday:

    People run on the glass bridge in Kyiv as the sun rises on 8 October 2022 in central Kyiv, UkraineImage source, Getty Images
  2. Attacks may have been expected - but this is a shockpublished at 09:56 BST 10 October 2022

    Paul Adams
    Reporting from Kyiv

    Emergency service personnel attend to the site of a blast on October 10, 2022 in Kyiv, UkraineImage source, Getty Images

    The past three hours have seen wave after wave of explosions, not just here in Kyiv but all across this vast country, from Lviv in the west to Kharkiv in the east, from here in the capital to Odesa in the south.

    For those of us who were here when Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February, there’s an element of deja vu. We’ve been told to spend as much time as we can in the basement, as further attacks, using missiles and drones, are expected.

    But this is also different. The explosions here in Kyiv are much closer to the centre. Not distant thumps from the suburbs, but loud reverberations close to streets and locations we’ve come to know well in the past eight months.

    It’s hard to tell what’s being targeted, but a statement from Ukraine’s ministry of culture said museums and the Philharmonic building had been hit.

    One video circulating on social media showed a huge crater in a children’s playground. Another showed a missile slamming into Mayor Klitschko’s glass bridge, a popular tourist spot and viewpoint above the Dnipro River.

    Symbolic targets? It’s hard, this early, to discern the logic. Meanwhile, President Zelensky says energy facilities are being hit all over the country.

    Two days ago, social media was flooded with videos and memes as Ukrainians wildly celebrated the attack on the bridge linking Russia with the Crimean peninsula.

    Today, the videos are all of shell-shocked residents, fiery debris and urgent warnings. It feels inevitable, but that doesn’t lessen the shock.

    A wounded man walks past as emergency service personnel attend to the site of a blast on October 10, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine.Image source, Getty Images
  3. Strikes target energy infrastructure - Zelenskypublished at 09:37 BST 10 October 2022

    Screenshot of a selfie video by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in KyivImage source, Volodymyr Zelensky/Telegram
    Image caption,

    The Ukrainian leader posted a video of himself out and about in Kyiv after this morning's strikes

    Russian strikes have targeted energy infrastructure throughout the country, President Volodymyr Zelensky says.

    Energy facilities in Kyiv, Lviv, Dnipro, Vinnytsia, Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv, and other regions have been hit, he says in a Telegram post.

    "They want panic and chaos, they want to destroy our energy system. They are hopeless," he says.

    The second target is people, he adds.

    "Such a time and such targets were specially chosen to cause as much damage as possible," he says, while calling for people to stay in bomb shelters.

    However, the Ukrainian leader makes a point of filming himself out on the street in Kyiv - something we also saw him do in the early days of the war.

  4. In pictures: Children's playground in Kyiv hit, as missiles strike Ukrainepublished at 09:30 BST 10 October 2022

    Playground destroyed and a missile impact craterImage source, Getty Images

    A playground in Kyiv is one of several civilian targets that have been hit by Russian strikes this morning.

    There have been reports of multiple deaths and civilian casualties in strikes on the capital and other cities around Ukraine.

    Many civilians are being treated for wounds caused by explosions, as the damage sustained by seemingly non-military targets is becoming clear.

    Woman being treated for head woundsImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Reports of dozens of civilian injuries and deaths are coming in from around Ukraine

    High rise building damaged by a missile strikeImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    A high rise building in Kyiv's Shevchenkivskyi district was struck, as missiles targeted the city

  5. Wave of attacks across Ukrainepublished at 09:19 BST 10 October 2022

    As we've been reporting, Russian strikes have been reported in a number of major Ukrainian cities this morning.

    • At least 75 missiles have been fired during the wave of attacks, says Ukraine's military chief
    • At least eight civilians have been killed and 24 injured following a rare missile attack on the capital Kyiv, according to an aide to the interior minister. The city's mayor says "critical infrastructure" was also hit
    • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has also highlighted strikes in Dnipro - and further blasts in Zaporizhzhia - saying Russia was "trying to wipe us off the face of the Earth"
    • The mayor of Kharkiv says missiles have hit an energy infrastructure site, causing power and water outages there
    • Missiles have also hit Ternopil and Lviv in the west, officials in both provinces say. The mayor of Lviv - a western city which has escaped the worst of the war - says parts of the city are without power
    • Explosions have also been reported in the regions of Sumy, Zhytomyr, Khmelnytskyi and Kirovohrad

    The BBC has not been able to independently confirm each and every strike, although its reporters witnessed blasts in Kyiv this morning.

    Russia is yet to comment on the strikes.

  6. At least 75 missiles fired in ongoing attack - Ukrainian militarypublished at 09:11 BST 10 October 2022
    Breaking

    Ukraine's military chief says 75 missiles have so far been fired in this morning's wave of attacks.

    General Valerii Zaluzhnyi tweets that 41 of these were neutralised by air defences. The BBC can't verify this information, but our reporters on the ground have witnessed and heard several strikes in Kyiv this morning, with reports of many further explosions coming in from other cities around the country.

  7. Parts of Lviv without electricity, says mayorpublished at 09:01 BST 10 October 2022

    Parts of the city of Lviv in western Ukraine are without electricity following strikes on key infrastructure, the city's mayor has said.

    Posting on Twitter, external, Andriy Sadovyi said explosions had occurred at "a critical infrastructure facility" and that the operation of the city's thermal power plants had been "temporarily suspended".

    "Hot water is not provided at the moment," he said. "Standby power generators at several pumping stations were started to restore water supply to the city. Part of the city without electricity."

    He also said a third of the city's traffic lights were not working and that, once alerts had been lifted, traffic controllers would be in place at the busiest intersections.

    Lviv infographic
  8. Kharkiv strikes cause water and electricity outagespublished at 08:53 BST 10 October 2022

    Russian missile strikes in Kharkiv have hit an energy infrastructure site, causing outages to the electricity and water supply in some areas of the city, Kharkiv mayor, Ihor Terekhov, has said.

    Three flights of missiles were seen over Kharkiv and "specialists and utility workers are doing everything they can to restore normal life in Kharkiv", Terekhov wrote on Telegram.

    The head of the Kharkiv region, Oleg Sinegubov, also confirmed the strikes, posting on Telegram: "The enemy is striking Kharkiv. There are explosions in the city."

    Map showing Russian control in UkraineImage source, .
  9. WATCH: BBC correspondent takes shelter after blastspublished at 08:43 BST 10 October 2022

    The BBC's Hugo Bachega has provided an update after taking shelter following blasts in Kyiv.

    He was earlier filmed ducking as a rare explosion was heard in the Ukrainian capital.

    Our correspondent says the blast happened near his hotel.

  10. Absolutely constant warningspublished at 08:39 BST 10 October 2022

    Paul Adams
    Reporting from Kyiv

    For the last couple of hours, there has been constant strike warnings and the sound of explosions around the city.

    A little while ago we were warned that more missiles and drones were expected over Kyiv.

    Some of the explosions – the early ones – were in the centre of the capital.

    That is extremely unusual. It's basically the first time the centre of Kyiv has been hit since the war began.

  11. Strikes kill eight civilians in Kyiv, says Ukraine aidepublished at 08:32 BST 10 October 2022
    Breaking

    Eight civilians have been killed and 24 wounded as a result of missile strikes on Kyiv this morning, an aide to the Ukrainian interior minister has said.

    Six cars caught fire after the attack and over 15 vehicles were damaged, Rostyslav Smyrnov said in a Facebook post.

    He added that 30 emergency service workers and six response units attended the scene in Kyiv's Shevchenkivskyy district.

  12. Critical infrastructure hit in Kyiv - Klitschkopublished at 08:25 BST 10 October 2022

    Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko says missiles have hit "critical infrastructure" in the city.

    "The capital is under attack from Russian terrorists!" Klitschko adds in a Telegram post.

  13. 'They are trying to wipe us off the face of the Earth' - Zelenskypublished at 08:19 BST 10 October 2022

    Zelensky

    Strikes across Ukraine this morning show that Russia is "trying to destroy us and wipe us off the face of the Earth," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says.

    In a Telegram post, Zelensky highlights blasts in Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia and Dnipro, saying "the air alarm does not subside throughout Ukraine."

    "Unfortunately, there are dead and wounded," he adds, before urging his compatriots to stay in shelters.

    Russia has not yet commented on this morning's strikes.

  14. Attacks on Kyiv ongoing, regional head sayspublished at 08:10 BST 10 October 2022

    The Russian air attacks on Kyiv are not over and people must remain under cover, the head of the capital's regional military administration has said.

    In a message to residents on Telegram, external, Oleksiy Kuleba reassures them air defence systems are working, but emphasises "that the air alert is still ongoing".

    He also called on people not to photograph or film landing sites of missiles or damaged infrastructure in the capital.

    "People's lives depend on it," he adds.

    Kyiv infographic
  15. Lviv in western Ukraine attacked toopublished at 08:06 BST 10 October 2022

    It's becoming clearer this morning that Russia appears to have attacked cities around Ukraine, as well as its capital Kyiv.

    So far we've had reports of attacks on Dnipro in the centre of the country, Zaporizhzhia in the south and now Lviv, in the west of Ukraine.

    The regional governor of Lviv has confirmed on Telegram, external that the city near the border with Poland was hit this morning.

    Andriy Sadovy warned residents of the city to stay in bomb shelters and that schooling would be done online an hour after the air raid alarms had ended.

    He also said outages of mobile phone signals were temporary and would be restored as soon as possible.

    Infographic about city Lviv in the west
  16. Strikes evidence of the Kremlin's 'terrorist inadequacy' - Podolyakpublished at 07:58 BST 10 October 2022

    As we've been reporting Russia has also attacked the centres of other Ukrainian cities this morning.

    Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky, says "deliberate attacks" on the centre of Kyiv, as well as strikes on Zaporizhzhia in the south and Dnipro in central Ukraine are more proof of the "Kremlin's terrorist inadequacy".

    Quote Message

    Russia is not capable of fighting on battlefield, but capable of murdering civilians. Instead of talking we need air defence, MLRS, longer-range projectiles."

  17. Russian forces under pressure - UKpublished at 07:47 BST 10 October 2022

    This morning's strikes reported across Ukraine come amid "pressure on Russian forces" in north-eastern and southern regions, according to the latest update from the UK's Ministry of Defence (MoD).

    Moscow has been giving "high priority" to its operations near the eastern town of Bakhmut, the UK adds - saying the Kremlin's troops have advanced 2km (1.2 miles) towards the town on two axes over the past week. It's alleged that recruits from Russian prisons may be involved.

    This "grinding" campaign "highlights the imperative to deliver operational success", the MoD adds.

  18. 'Our courage will never be destroyed by terrorist's missiles'published at 07:45 BST 10 October 2022

    Oleksii ReznikovImage source, EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

    Ukraine's defence minister has said his country's "courage will never be destroyed by terrorist's missiles, even when they hit the heart of our capital".

    Writing on Twitter, external, Oleksii Reznikov said Russian attacks would also not "shake the determination of our allies".

    Quote Message

    The only thing they demolish irreversibly is the future of [Russia] - a future of a globally despised rogue terrorist state."

  19. Kyiv blasts follow overnight strikes in southpublished at 07:38 BST 10 October 2022

    This morning's rare blasts in the capital Kyiv follow further strikes overnight in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia and in the Dnipropetrovsk region.

    "A multi-storey residential building was destroyed again. There are victims," posted Zaporizhzhia regional governor Oleksandr Starukh on the Telegram messaging app at around 03:00 local time (01:00 BST).

    Emergency services attended the scene, he added. Zaporizhzhia has been hit repeatedly in recent weeks, with dozens of people killed.

    Meanwhile, it was a "night of massive attacks" in Dnipropetrovsk, according to an update from the region's own governor Valentyn Reznichenko, who accuses Russia of shelling multiple regions.

    Moscow has not yet commented on the blasts reported across Ukraine this morning.

    Map showing areas of Russian controlImage source, .
  20. More blasts in Kyivpublished at 07:34 BST 10 October 2022

    Paul Adams
    Reporting from Kyiv

    More explosions have been heard just now in Kyiv.

    Reports of explosions have been coming in from all across the country.

    Media restrictions mean that we are not yet able to reveal the sites of the first impacts in Kyiv, but video of one of them, about a mile from our hotel, shows burning cars and debris, but no obviously substantial damage to surrounding buildings.

    This appears to be the most widespread set of Russian attacks since the early weeks of the war.