Russian missile strikes kill 17 in Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region

Joel Gunter
BBC News in Kyiv
STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE HANDOUT/EPA/Shutterstock Emergency services in Dnipro carry a wounded person out of a building damaged in a Russian missile attack, 24 June 2025STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE HANDOUT/EPA/Shutterstock
The attacks targeted the region's main city Dnipro and the nearby town of Samar

At least 17 people were killed in Russian air strikes on southeastern Ukraine on Tuesday, damaging schools, hospitals and a passenger train, according to Ukranian officials.

The strikes, in the Dnipropetrovsk region, wounded more than 100 others, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said. Three more people, including a toddler, were reported killed in separate strikes on the northeastern city of Sumy.

The rare daytime attack came as Zelensky arrived at the Nato summit in the Netherlands for meetings with European leaders.

Zelensky is also expected to meet US President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the summit to discuss defence arrangements and further sanctions on Russia.

Writing about the Dnipropetrovsk strikes on social media, Zelensky accused Russian forces of a "complete disregard for life".

"This is not a fight where it's hard to choose a side," he wrote. "Standing with Ukraine means defending life. I am grateful to everyone who is helping."

Emergency services in the region published images of rescuers helping civilians covered in blood after the attack.

Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration handout/EPA/Shutterstock Blood and glass lie on the floor of a passenger train damaged in a Russian attack near the city of Dnipro, 24 June 2025Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration handout/EPA/Shutterstock
A train en route from Odesa to Zaporizhzhia was also damaged in the Russian attack

Although no-one was killed on the train, dramatic footage filmed by a passenger showed her being rocked and bloodied by the moment of impact.

The local military administration said it was damaged by the blast from a ballistic missile that landed nearby.

Dnipropetrovsk has come under threat from Russian battlefield advances in recent weeks, with small units crossing the border into the industrial region and Russia claiming to have gained a foothold there.

Ukrainian military officials say they have been successful in pushing Russian forces back from the border area.

In the Sumy region, the head of the military administration, Oleh Hryhorov, said a five-year-old boy was pulled from the rubble of a destroyed house.

"The strike took the lives of people from different families. They all lived on the same street. They went to sleep in their homes but the Russian drones interrupted their sleep - forever," Hryhorov said.

Two people were also killed in the town of Samar, close to Dnipro, state emergencies service said.

The timing of Tuesday's strikes – as President Zelensky arrived in the Hague for the Nato summit – has led to accusations from Kyiv that Russia is deliberately sabotaging peace talks between the two warring countries and seeking to prolong the war.

Last week, on the eve of anticipated talks between Zelensky and Trump at the G7 summit in Canada, Russia launched another barrage of strikes which pounded Kyiv for nine hours and killed more than 30 people across the country.

Direct talks between Russia and Ukraine held last month in Istanbul produced only an agreement on the exchange of prisoners of war and the bodies of the dead, and no further negotiations have been scheduled.