Ukrainian drones strike oil terminal in St Petersburg as Putin's 'Davos' gets under way


Heavy smoke billows in St Petersburg, Russia June 3, 2026, after drones hit infrastructure in several districts of St. Petersburg, according to the governor Alexander Beglov, in this screengrab obtained from social media video. SOCIAL MEDIA/via REUTERS

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, June ⁠3 (Reuters) - Ukraine struck an oil export terminal in ⁠St Petersburg hours before President Vladimir Putin's annual ‌economic forum got under way in an attempt to embarrass the Kremlin chief and show how vulnerable Russia's big cities are.

The attack on ​St Petersburg, Putin's home city, and ⁠the location of his ⁠own 'Davos' - a showcase economic forum designed to attract foreign investment ⁠and ‌show Russia at its best, comes as both sides dial up strikes on each other ⁠in the more than four-year-old war with no ​imminent end ‌in sight.

A plume of smoke was visible from the ⁠historic city ​centre where an oil export terminal had been hit and Reuters correspondents reported hearing loud explosions on Wednesday morning.

Ukrainian President ⁠Volodymyr Zelenskiy confirmed his drones had ​struck the fuel terminal and said they had also targeted a military facility near what is Russia's second city.

Alexander Beglov, ⁠the governor of St Petersburg, said that unspecified "infrastructure objects" had been hit in three different districts of the city. Alexander Drozdenko, governor of the wider Leningrad region, said ​air defences had shot down 59 ⁠drones overnight.

The city's Pulkovo airport had to temporarily restrict flights, ​Russia's aviation watchdog said, and ‌more than 30 flights were delayed ​or cancelled, local news outlets said.

(Reporting by ReutersWriting by Maxim Rodionov/Andrew Osborn Editing by Andrew Osborn)

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