Russian forces hit a museum in the centre of the eastern Ukrainian city of Kupiansk during an attack on Tuesday, killing one person, wounding 10 and burying others under rubble, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said.
"So far we know of a dead museum worker and 10 injured. There are more people under the rubble. The recovery from the shelling continues. All necessary agencies are involved," Zelenskiy wrote on Telegram messenger.
The president's chief of staff and the regional governor said the damage was caused by a Russian S-300 missile.
Russia denies deliberately targeting civilians in its full-scale invasion that has killed thousands of people, uprooted millions and destroyed cities.
Zelenskiy posted a video of a devastated building that had spewed out rubble and debris into the street. Its windows were smashed and a section of the wall and roof was destroyed.
Kupiansk, which had a pre-war population of 26,000, lies in Kharkiv region. It is an important rail hub that was occupied by Russian forces for months after they invaded Ukraine in February 2022.
Ukrainian forces chased them out of Kupiansk in a lightning counteroffensive in September that also recaptured the cities of Izium and Balakliia.


Kuwait International Airport suffers 'significant damage' after drone attacks
Yemen's Houthis confirm launching attack on Israel
UN establishes task force to address Hormuz navigation challenges
Worker injured in drone attack on Oman's Salalah port, crane damaged
Bahrain contains fire at 'facility' after Iran attack
Rubio says Iran war to last 'weeks not months'; no ground troops needed
Indonesia imposes restrictions on social media for those under 16
NASA's Artemis astronauts enter final preparations for Moon mission
