What happened
On the afternoon of January 2, Kharkiv came under fire in the central part of the city. According to the city mayor Ihor Terekhov, the occupiers struck a multi-story residential building in the Kyivskyi District.
"On the afternoon of Friday, January 2, the Russians struck Kharkiv"
— Ihor Terekhov, city mayor
Number of injured and emergency response
Information about the injured was updated in real time. Initially, the head of the Kharkiv Regional State Administration Oleh Sinegubov reported one wounded person; later, Mayor Terekhov said that as of 14:51 12 people were wounded. Emergency services are arriving on the scene — rescuers, medical teams and police.
"There is one injured person reported"
— Oleh Sinegubov, head of the Kharkiv Regional State Administration
Why this matters
An attack on a densely populated area is not just about the destruction of a single building. It is a direct risk to the civilian population, a disruption of infrastructure and an additional burden on rescue services. Discrepancies in initial figures are explained by the chaotic situation after the strike: evacuation and first aid are carried out first, followed by counting the injured and recording the damage.
Consequences and what comes next
City and regional authorities are coordinating the response; information about the injured and the scale of the destruction is being clarified. Residents of nearby areas should follow the instructions of emergency services and report any injured persons or suspicious circumstances.
Context: Attacks on residential neighborhoods increase psychological pressure on residents and complicate the logistics of emergency services. It is also a signal to partners and the local community of the need to support those affected and to restore infrastructure.
Information is being clarified. News will be updated as official data become available.