Ukraine’s Cabinet of Ministers will allocate funds from the state reserve fund to help Vyshneve, a town near Kyiv where a secondary detonation caused severe damage following a Russian strike overnight Sunday into Monday.The situation was discussed between President Volodymyr Zelensky and Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko, who confirmed the government’s decision to step in after determining that the community’s own resources would not be enough to address the destruction. JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official.“It was a brutal attack,” Zelensky said, adding that “Russia’s tactics remain unchanged: to inflict as much pain and damage as possible on Ukrainians and Ukraine.”Severe damage in VyshneveZelensky said Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko has been reporting on rescue operations, debris clearance, and firefighting efforts roughly every half hour since the morning, and that he expects the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) and national intelligence agencies to conduct a thorough investigation into the circumstances of the incident in Vyshneve.According to Viktoriia Ruban, a Kyiv region emergency services spokesperson, more than 600 residents were evacuated from the danger zone earlier on Monday.Zelensky details scale of the assaultThe Russian overnight barrage on Kyiv and the surrounding region killed 22 people and injured nearly 90 others, Zelensky confirmed, adding that Kyiv and the wider region were the primary targets, with the strikes largely hitting ordinary residential buildings.
Ukraine Allocates Emergency Aid for Victims as Russian Strikes Kill 22 in Overnight Barrage
Zelensky says secondary detonation worsened damage in Vyshneve as cabinet approves reserve fund support.












