Kyiv declares 3 July Day of Mourning after Russian attack
Kyiv has declared 3 July a Day of Mourning for those who were killed in Russia's attack on the capital on the night of 1-2 July. This attack killed at least 13 people.

Kyiv has declared 3 July a Day of Mourning for those who were killed in Russia's attack on the capital on the night of 1-2 July. This attack killed at least 13 people.

Over the past day, Russian forces used drones to attack enterprises, residential buildings, and a gas station in Ukraine’s Chernihiv region.
Russia launched a massive overnight strike on Kyiv using ballistic and cruise missiles along with drones. All districts of the Ukrainian capital sustained damage. By the morning of July 2, at least 13 people had been killed and more than 80 wounded.

Ukraine’s Defense Forces struck one of Russia’s largest oil refineries in Kstovo, reportedly damaging a key processing unit and sparking a fire. The military also hit a Russian UAV warehouse in Zaporizhzhia, a logistics bridge in Luhansk, and a command post in Kharkiv regions.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had launched more than 70 missiles and nearly 500 drones in a massive overnight attack on Ukraine, with Kyiv as the primary target.