Moscow Airport closed for second day after Ukraine’s drone strike

The Ukrainian drone was shut down in the Russian capital for several hours on Tuesday after the Ukrainian drone targeted Moscow on the second consecutive night, to react extensively from Russia’s air defense systems, as reported by Reuters.
Through a social media post, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobinin said that at least 19 drones were destroyed by the defense unit approaching “from different directions”. There was no major destruction or injury.
Bazaar, mash and shot, major telegram news channels associated with Russian security services reported that a drone had killed an apartment building in the south of Moscow. Windows was broken, although no casualties were done.
Apart from Moscow, airports were also closed in many regional cities. Russian Aviation Watchdog Rosaria reported that flight operations were stopped at all four airports in Moscow for several hours to ensure security.
The Governor of the Ukraine-bordering Voronies region began on Tuesday that at least 18 drones were destroyed, causing negligible damage to non-residential buildings and children’s playgrounds.
The Russian Air Defense Unit also hit ten drones on the southern Pena region. A regional governor reported on Telegram that there was no loss or injury.
The attack on Moscow and other Russian areas on Tuesday is yet to go to the entire extent of the attack and there was no immediate comment from Kiev.
Since the onset of the war launched by Russia three years ago, Kiev has launched several drone attacks on Moscow, the eldest of which killed three people.
To mark the 80th anniversary of the Soviet Union and its allies victory over Nazi Germany in World War II, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a three-day ceasefire on 8–10 May. UKranian President Vlodymyr Zelenskyy dismissed this remedy as “meaningless”.
Zelancesi offered an unconditional ceasefire without a 30 -day ceasefire in accordance with the US proposal launched in March.