Eight people remain in hospital after Kyiv shooting, mayor says


Abandoned toys on the playground at the site of yesterday's shooting incident, in Kyiv, Ukraine, April 19, 2026. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

KYIV, April 19 (Reuters) - Eight ⁠people including a child remain hospitalised in Kyiv after being wounded in a ⁠shooting that killed six people, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Sunday.

A Russian-born man ‌opened fire on passers-by with an automatic rifle on Saturday before barricading himself in a supermarket with hostages, where he was shot dead by police.

Police stormed the supermarket after unsuccessfully trying to negotiate with the suspect for 40 ​minutes.

Klitschko said the wounded child, whose parents were killed in ⁠the shooting, was in moderate condition, ⁠while one of the adults was critical. "They are all receiving all necessary medical care," the mayor ⁠said ‌on Telegram.

BULLET HOLES STILL VISIBLE

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Saturday that the shooting, which happened in the capital's leafy Holosiivskyi district, injured 14 people.

The supermarket has been cordoned ⁠off and remains closed. Bullet holes are visible in windows ​of the supermarket, and ‌bloodstains can be seen nearby.

Flowers were left near a residential building a couple of ⁠hundred metres from ​the supermarket, where the shooter shot his first victims.

"I saw how people grabbed children from the playground and ran away. They screamed: 'run away, hide'," Daryna, a 31-year-old local resident, told Reuters. "People didn't understand what was ⁠going on. They said that there was a man ​there, a man was shooting with a machine gun."

Shootings of this nature are extremely rare in Ukraine and the country's security service said the incident was being investigated as a terrorist act. Police ⁠have not yet identified a motive for the crime.

RIGHT TO SELF-DEFENSE

The shooting of civilians not far from central Kyiv has raised questions both about the public's right to self-defense and about how the gunman was able to obtain a firearms permit, Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said.

"The attacker's ​mental state was clearly unstable. How he obtained the medical certificates ⁠required to renew his gun permit must be thoroughly investigated," Klymenko said.

He said the ministry intends ​to prepare the final version of a bill on ‌civilian firearms as he was certain that "people should have ​the right to armed self-defense."

At present, Ukrainians can own only hunting weapons.

(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Writing by Pavel Polityuk; Editing by Christina Fincher and David Holmes)

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