Russian drones hit Kyiv during the morning — something it normally doesn’t do

Mar 16, 2026 - 12:10

russia hit kyiv during morning — something normally doesn't do while zaporizhzhia homes burned overnight sumy lost its trains · post firefighter battles blaze destroyed residential building following russian drone

Russia launched 211 drones against Ukraine overnight and into the morning of 16 March, with Ukraine's Air Force reporting the main attack directions as Odesa, Zaporizhzhia, and Kyiv oblasts. Local authorities separately confirmed strikes on Kharkiv and Mykolaiv. The Air Force noted that Shahed, Gerbera, and Italmas drones — over 100 of them Shaheds — were fired from six directions: Oryol, Kursk, Bryansk, Millerovo, and Prymorsko-Akhtarsk in Russia, and Hvardiyske in occupied Crimea. By 11:00, 194 drones had been downed or suppressed, but 16 struck 10 locations. Ukraine's Air Force flagged the morning wave targeting Kyiv as "atypical," an unusual pattern in Russia's strike timing that underscores a broader escalation of Russia's drone campaign against Ukrainian cities and infrastructure.

Russia has launched drone strikes on Ukraine every night for years, producing over 400 Shaheds per day and aiming to scale to 1,000 daily in 2026 — a campaign designed to exhaust Ukrainian air defenses and keep civilian infrastructure in constant crisis. In recent months, Russia has focused most of such attacks on targeting Ukraine's power grid, later shifting more to railway and gas infrastructure.  

Morning Kyiv attack — a new pattern

Ukraine's Air Force reported that several groups of drones moved toward Kyiv from the northeast during the morning hours of 16 March, with monitoring channels putting the figure at around 20 Shaheds — flagged explicitly as "atypical" of Russia's standard overnight attack pattern. Mayor Vitalii Klichko confirmed that drone debris fell in the city center and in Solomianskyi and Sviatoshynskyi districts, with no injuries, igniting grass on open ground at one location. Air defenses remained active into the late morning.

Zaporizhzhia: woman killed, homes destroyed, three wounded

The Zaporizhzhia city council confirmed 16 buildings in the Voznesensky district were damaged late on 15 March — a one-family home significantly, and 15 others with minor damage, including two apartment blocks and 13 detached houses. Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration head Ivan Fedorov confirmed that the Russian attack injured three residents: an 18-year-old man, a 48-year-old woman, and an 81-year-old woman, all of whom received medical care. The regional leader said 7,500 families remained without electricity; however, he didn't elaborate on which facility or infrastructure was damaged.

The Oblast Prosecutor's Office opened a criminal investigation for war crimes under Part 1 of Article 438 of Ukraine's Criminal Code.

Later, Fedorov updated that the drone strike killed a woman.

Kharkiv: two strikes, transport infrastructure hit

Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov reported two drone strikes on the city in the morning of 16 March. The first hit Shevchenkivskyi district with a Shahed drone, the Kharkiv regional administration clarified that a 34-year-old man was treated for an acute stress reaction. The second struck the boundary of Kyiv and Shevchenkivskyi districts, damaging transport infrastructure, no casualties from that strike were reported.

Mykolaiv: school and apartment buildings struck

Mykolaiv Mayor Oleksandr Senkevych reported that a drone strike overnight damaged a school and adjacent apartment buildings. No casualties were reported.

Sumy rail network disrupted for days

Ukraine's national rail operator, Ukrzaliznytsia, announced the cancellation of five commuter routes in Sumy Oblast on 16 March and one route on 17 March, following targeted Russian strikes on railway infrastructure in the region. The 14 March attack hit a passenger train's rear locomotive on the Smorodyne–Vorozhba route, a separate 12 March attack had damaged rolling stock and track sections — two strikes in Sumy Oblast's railway network within four days.

The Emergency Service also reported fires caused by Russian drone strikes in Chernihiv Oblast.