Ukraine strikes Baltic Sea port, Volga river industrial sites


A Russian Geran 2 kamikaze drone flies, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, April 16, 2026. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko

MOSCOW, April 18 (Reuters) - ⁠Ukrainian drones struck a pair of Volga ⁠riverside industrial cities, as well as a ‌Baltic Sea port close to St Petersburg that exports petroleum products, Russian local governors said overnight.

In Leningrad region, which surrounds ​St Petersburg and borders Finland, ⁠governor Alexander Drozdenko said ⁠that a fire had been extinguished at the Vysotsk ⁠port, ‌which houses a terminal operated by Lukoil handling the export of fuel oil, ⁠naphtha, diesel fuel and vacuum gas oil.

The ​Samara region ‌governor Vyacheslav Fedorishchev confirmed attacks on industrial ⁠targets in ​the cities of Syzran and Novokuibyshevsk, around 1,800 km (1,118 miles) to the southeast of Vysotsk.

He did not ⁠name the facilities, but both cities ​host oil refineries that have been repeatedly struck in the course of the war in Ukraine.

Separately, authorities ⁠in the southern Krasnodar region said on Saturday that a fire at an oil depot in Tikhoretsk, and another at an oil terminal at ​the Black Sea port of ⁠Tuapse, which had burned since Thursday, have been ​extinguished.

Both fires, authorities have said, ‌were caused by Ukrainian drone ​strikes.

(Reporting by Reuters, Writing by Felix Light; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Louise Heavens)

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