Russian attacks in Ukraine continue, as NATO summit is held

While, in the Turkish capital, Ankara has been joined by leaders of powerful states under the NATO summit, Russia has continued attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine.
In the latest attacks, Moscow has had fuel stations, destroying postal centres and sending rockets to apartment blocks in the middle of the night, CNN reports, the Periscope broadcast.
Over 150 gas stations have been burned in two months, according to Andriy Pivovarsky, CEO of WHO, one of the biggest fuel chains in Ukraine, which said oil depots and other fuel infrastructure facilities are attacked almost every week.
In Chernihiv, Russian attacks on gas stations have become almost a daily phenomenon, according to local authorities, which said there have been 25 such attacks in June and July alone.
According to officials, on Monday in Zaporizhja, a woman and an 11-year-old boy were injured when a station was hit.
And on Sunday, in Izyum, a 19-year-old was killed and four women were injured, authorities said, when Russian forces allegedly hit a gas station with a Tornado-S missile system.
Russia has repeatedly targeted the Nova Post, Ukraine's largest private post office and courier company.
On Tuesday, the postal service terminal at Krivy Rich, in central Ukraine, was attacked, and in June, a missile destroyed its main ranking terminal in Kiev.
About 200 fears attack border territories and towns every day, according to Sergiy Beskrestnov, adviser to Ukraine's defence minister, with Russian forces spending more and more on the jet engine Shaheds, which are harder to catch than other models.
Meanwhile, attacks on Kiev and surrounding areas continue to affect civil life. At least 27 people were killed in attacks in the Kiev region on Monday, authorities said today.
It was the second largest attack in just one week; last Thursday, 30 people were killed in the third most deadly attack in the Ukrainian capital since the beginning of the war.











