Over 50 people have been injured after Russia targeted the Ukrainian capital Kyiv with ballistic missiles overnight, city officials said Wednesday.
A hospital, school, kindergarten, morgue and residential buildings were damaged in the attack, Kyiv's Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Telegram, with the latest update stating that 53 people were injured. Twenty of them, including two children, were hospitalized as a result of the strikes.
The strike on the capital comes a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was in Washington Tuesday to meet President Joe Biden and U.S. lawmakers in a bid to secure a large tranche of additional emergency funding, amid discontent among some Republicans over continuing aid.
Biden and Ukraine's other allies have warned that a cessation in aid could lead to a victory for Moscow but time is running out for a deal in the Senate this week. Zelenskyy said of the meeting in Washington that positive signs from lawmakers did not equal a positive result.
"I said exactly what I wanted to say. I feel support from President Biden's administration, I also felt it from senators today – we talked about it. And we talked with the speaker. All these signals were there. They were more than positive. But we know that there are words, and there is a concrete result. We will wait for a better result," he said.