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Russia strikes Odesa port with ballistic missiles, kills 2, injures 7

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Russia strikes Odesa port with ballistic missiles, kills 2, injures 7
Aftermath of a Russian ballistic missile attack on Ukraine's southern port city of Odesa on May 23, 2025. (Oleksiy Kuleba / Facebook) 

Editor's note: This is a developing story and is being updated.  

Russia fired two ballistic missiles at Ukraine's southern port city of Odesa on May 23, killing two people and injuring seven others, Odesa Oblast Governor Oleh Kiper said.

Four of the wounded are in serious condition, he added.

The strike hit civilian infrastructure inside the port, damaging the engine room, shattering windows of nearby buildings, and destroying multiple pieces of equipment, according to Oleksiy Kuleba, minister for the development of communities, territories and infrastructure.

"It was a normal working day in a normal Ukrainian port," Kuleba wrote on Facebook.

"There was not a single military facility, only civilian infrastructure. Russia has once again attacked a peaceful, strategically important facility that is vital for the world's food security."

The attack comes amid ongoing Russian strikes across Ukraine, despite Kyiv's acceptance in March of a U.S.-proposed 30-day unconditional ceasefire — a proposal Moscow has refused.

Odesa, a key Black Sea port near the borders of Moldova and Romania, is critical for global trade and the export of Ukrainian grain.

Since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion, Ukrainian ports have come under repeated fire, with Moscow targeting infrastructure essential to Ukraine's maritime operations.

According to Kuleba, nearly 400 pieces of port infrastructure and more than 30 ships have been damaged or destroyed by Russian attacks since February 2022. A total of 106 civilians have been injured in strikes against port facilities, he said.

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Tim Zadorozhnyy

Reporter

Tim Zadorozhnyy is a reporter at The Kyiv Independent, covering foreign policy, U.S.-Ukraine relations, and political developments across Europe and Russia. Based in Warsaw, he is pursuing studies in International Relations and European Studies. Tim began his career at a local television channel in Odesa, working there for two years from the start of Russia's full-scale war against Ukraine. After relocating to Warsaw, he spent a year and a half at the Belarusian opposition media outlet NEXTA, initially as a news anchor and later as managing editor.

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