Emergency crews have completed search and rescue operations at a residential building in Kyiv’s Solomianskyi district, where a Russian missile strike on 17 June caused extensive destruction.
The strike was part of a large-scale, coordinated Russian attack on Ukraine that night. One missile directly hit the nine-story residential building, destroying an entire section.
Rescue efforts end after 39 hours
Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko confirmed that the operation lasted over 39
Emergency crews have completed search and rescue operations at a residential building in Kyiv’s Solomianskyi district, where a Russian missile strike on 17 June caused extensive destruction.
The strike was part of a large-scale, coordinated Russian attack on Ukraine that night. One missile directly hit the nine-story residential building, destroying an entire section.
Rescue efforts end after 39 hours
Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko confirmed that the operation lasted over 39 hours. At 7:20 PM on 18 June, first responders officially concluded search efforts at the site.
“Sadly, 23 lives were lost at this site alone,” Klymenko said. “Across the capital, 28 people died and over 140 were injured as a result of the strike.”
Although search operations have ended, crews continue to dismantle damaged structures and clear debris.
39 hours of digging through ruins.
Kyiv rescue crews have ended operations after one of Russia’s largest strikes. A missile hit a 9-story building on Tuesday.
23 bodies recovered at the site 28 killed across the city 140+ injured
The rescue effort was one of the most intensive in recent months and involved:
Over 400 personnel from the State Emergency Service (SES)
More than 200 units of specialized equipment
Drones, search dogs, and heavy engineering machinery
Two people were rescued from beneath the rubble. Around 50 others were evacuated from apartments and stairwells during the response.
Apartment building in Kyiv with its entire section destroyed by a Russian missile on 17 June 2025. Photo: X/Zelenskyy
Stairwell collapse in nearby damaged building
Later the same day, Kyiv officials reported an internal collapse in a nearby five-story residential building also damaged in the strike. A stairwell between the upper floors gave way, but no injuries were reported. Five residents were safely evacuated.
City in mourning as recovery continues
Kyiv declared 18 June a day of mourning to honor the victims of the attack. More than 2,000 emergency workers have been deployed across the capital to assist with ongoing recovery operations.
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The number of fatalities from Russia’s 17 June massive attack on Kyiv has climbed to 26 people, with rescue teams continuing to recover bodies from the debris of a destroyed residential building.
The strikes coincided with a G7 summit in Canada, where US President Donald Trump rejected new sanctions on Russia, drawing condemnation from Ukrainian officials who labeled the attack as terrorism and a deliberate affront to the international community.
Search and rescue operations have been ong
The number of fatalities from Russia’s 17 June massive attack on Kyiv has climbed to 26 people, with rescue teams continuing to recover bodies from the debris of a destroyed residential building.
The strikes coincided with a G7 summit in Canada, where US President Donald Trump rejected new sanctions on Russia, drawing condemnation from Ukrainian officials who labeled the attack as terrorism and a deliberate affront to the international community.
Search and rescue operations have been ongoing since the early morning hours on 18 June at a nine-story apartment complex in Kyiv’s Solomianskyi district struck by a Russian ballistic missile, according to Ukraine’s State Emergency Service.
Rescue crews worked through the night to extract victims from the rubble. The casualty count increased throughout the day as emergency workers made additional recoveries, with the latest update on death toll being 19 people killed in one single building. Five more civilians died on other sites affected by the Russian attack.
[update] As of 1 p.m. on 18 June, the State Emergency Service reported that the number of killed people retrieved from the destroyed building in Solomianskyi district has risen to 21, moving the total death toll up to 26 people.
Russian ballistic missile hit a residential building in Kyiv, broke through concrete floors into the basement level, burying residents under the rubble. Photo: State Emergency Service
Among the victims was a 31-year-old man whose parents had waited all day at the strike site hoping for his rescue. He did not survive.
Rescuers retrieved the body of 31-year-old Dmytro from the rubble, whose parents had been hoping all day to see him alive.
A Russian ballistic missile destroyed an entire entrance of the nine-story building in Solomianskyi district in Kyiv on 17 June.
Dmytro Isaenko was a first-year master’s student at Drahomanov University’s Faculty of Physical Education, Sports and Health, who was studying physical culture and sport with a focus on human health and physical recreation.
Dmytro Isaenko who was killed after a Russian missile struck his apartment building in Kyiv, burying him under the rubble, while his parents were hoping all day, waiting at the impact site, to find him alive as rescuers were clearing the debris. Photo: @dmytro_isaenko/Instagram
“This is the young man whose fate the whole country was following. The one whose parents stood by the ruins of the destroyed house and waited for their son, prayed and did not leave,” the university wrote on its Facebook page. “We all prayed with them. Their photos flew around the world, became a symbol of pain and hope. But no miracle happened.”
According to his social media posts, he enjoyed hiking in the mountains and had tried his hand at stand-up comedy.
Dmytro Isaenko who was killed after a Russian missile struck his apartment building in Kyiv, burying him under the rubble, while his parents were hoping all day, waiting at the impact site, to find him alive as rescuers were clearing the debris.
The missile strike caused extensive damage to the residential structure, with the projectile penetrating deep enough to break through concrete floors into the basement level. The building housed multiple families across its nine floors.
Beyond the fatalities, the State Emergency Service documented 134 people injured across the capital. Rescue operations remain active in Kyiv as teams continue searching for potential survivors and victims in the damaged structures.
Ukrainian rescuers are clearing the rubble and recovering bodies of civilians killed in Russian missile attack on the apartment building in Kyiv on 17 June. Photo: State Emergency Service
In response to the devastation, Kyiv authorities declared a day of mourning on 18 June, with flags lowered, entertainment events canceled, and the city honoring the victims.
US Embassy in Kyiv announced its participation in the city’s day of mourning for the 26 people killed in Kyiv, including one American citizen. The Embassy also characterized the 17 June Russian strike as contradicting President Trump’s calls to end the war and stop the killing.
US Embassy in Kyiv characterized the 17 June Russian strike on Kyiv as contradicting President Trump's calls to end the war and stop the killing.
The embassy announced its participation in the city's day of mourning for the 24 people killed, including one American citizen. https://t.co/ibSM0VLXSs
The attack on Kyiv was part of a broader Russian assault on Ukraine that also targeted Odesa, Zaporizhzhia, Chernihiv, Zhytomyr, Kirovohrad, and Mykolaiv oblasts. On the night of 16-17 June, Russian forces launched a total of 440 drones and 32 missiles, including cruise and ballistic types.
In Odesa, the assault killed a 60-year-old woman and injured 17 people, including a pregnant woman and a 17-year-old girl, while also damaging civilian infrastructure including residential buildings, a preschool facility, and garages.
Ukrainian rescuers are clearing the rubble and recovering bodies of civilians killed in Russian missile attack on the apartment building in Kyiv on 17 June. Photo: State Emergency Service
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A Russian terror attack on 17 June was the largest of the full-scale war, says military expert Ivan Kyrychevskyi. Russia deliberately targeted residential buildings with missiles with cluster munitions to kill as many civilians as possible, Espreso reports.
The strike came just days after Russian President Vladimir Putin personally called US President Donald Trump to congratulate him on his birthday, and also following Trump’s statements that the war would not have started if Russia ha
A Russian terror attack on 17 June was the largest of the full-scale war, says military expert Ivan Kyrychevskyi. Russia deliberately targeted residential buildings with missiles with cluster munitions to kill as many civilians as possible, Espreso reports.
The strike came just days after Russian President Vladimir Putin personally called US President Donald Trump to congratulate him on his birthday, and also following Trump’s statements that the war would not have started if Russia hadn’t been excluded from the G8. Ukraine says Putin ordered the attack to portray the leaders of the G7 as weak. He is demonstrating contempt for international peace efforts, above all, those led by the US.
“Before 17 June, the maximum was 200–300 aerial weapons launched at once. This time, the Russians used nearly 500, most of them kamikaze drones,” Kyrychevskyi explains.
The UN has also noted that this attack on Kyiv may be the deadliest in nearly a year. The main impact hit densely populated neighborhoods, not military targets.
“X-101 missiles with cluster warheads can’t break through fortifications, but they kill people. That’s why they were used deliberately against civilians,” Kyrychevskyi says.
No one believes anymore that the strikes on Ukrainian hospitals and children’s centers are a “mistake.” After the attack on Kyiv’s Ohmatdyt children’s hospital in 2024, Western governments have stopped buying into the narrative of “accidental strikes,” adds the expert.
Russia began its full-scale terror campaign against the Ukrainian civilian population in 2022, burning 90% of Mariupol and Bakhmut and committing atrocities during the attacks on Bucha in Kyiv Oblast.
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We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society.
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