Twelve miners have been killed by a Russian drone strike in eastern Ukraine, the country’s largest private energy firm has said.
DTEK said a bus carrying workers after a shift in the eastern Dnipropetrovsk region had been targeted in Sunday’s attack.
At least 15 people were injured, state emergency services said.
Earlier, at least two others were killed and nine were injured in separate Russian attacks overnight and on Sunday, including six people who were hurt when a drone hit a maternity hospital in Zaporizhzhia.
The strikes come while Russia had agreed not to target population centres and energy infrastructure for the duration of a cold snap.
Strikes have continued in regions of Ukraine near the front line, but cities like the capital, Kyiv, have largely been untouched over the past few days.
Moscow did not mention the cold weather when confirming the move, instead saying it was to facilitate peace negotiations due to be held in Abu Dhabi this week.
Zaporizhzhia regional head Ivan Fedorov called the hit on the maternity hospital, which occurred as two women were giving birth, further “proof of a war directed against life” in a post on Telegram.
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BBC Verify confirmed the site was Maternity Hospital No. 3 on Bocharova Street in the east of the city.
Footage shared across social media carried the watermarks of national and local administrations and showed offices, rooms with beds for patients, and a children’s room with the windows broken and covered in debris.
Some footage showed degrees of fire damage, while two videos showed a fire still burning on the first storey.
Another showed firefighters breaking down interior doors and ferrying patients away.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha said the hospital attack showed Russian President Vladimir Putin was pursuing a “war against civilians contrary to peace efforts”.
Fedorov later reported three people had been injured by a separate strike in a residential area.
After the strike on the DTEK bus in the town of Ternivka, the company said 15 miners had been killed. It later revised the death toll down to at least 12.



