Ukraine says seven people killed in "powerful" Russian missile attack on western city of Lviv
At least seven people were killed in Russian airstrikes on the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on Monday, according to the regional governor. Maksym Kozytsky said four Russian strikes had targeted military infrastructure but that a car tire factory had also been hit. Lviv, which is near Ukraine's border with Poland, has been considered a place of relative safety for those fleeing fierce fighting in other parts of the country.
"What happened today is very disturbing and alarming because this is a very powerful missile strike [on] civilian infrastructure," Yuri Sak, an adviser to Ukraine's defense minister, told CBS News partner network BBC News. "What happened today proves one more time that, while the major build-up of Russian forces continues in the east of Ukraine, the whole of the country continues to be at risk."
Russian state media claimed Russia had struck 315 targets in Ukraine overnight. Ukrainian officials in the southern region of Dnipropetrovsk also reported multiple missile attacks on Monday, saying some projectiles hit areas close to a railway station. Strikes intensified near the capital city of Kyiv as well.
Meanwhile, new pictures emerged that appeared to show Russia's Moskva warship, with smoke billowing from the rear, starting to sink after allegedly being struck by Ukrainian missiles.
Mariupol fighting rages on
After weeks of unrelenting onslaught, Ukraine's Prime Minister said his forces were continuing to make a stand in the coastal city of Mariupol, despite renewed threats from Russia that any remaining Ukrainian soldiers would be "eliminated." In a sprawling steel plant and the series of tunnels beneath it, a pocket of Ukrainian troops were holding out, defying the ultimatum from Russia to surrender or die.
On Sunday, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told CBS News' Face the Nation that Russia was razing the city at any cost.
"The situation in Mariupol is both dire militarily and heartbreaking. The city doesn't exist anymore," Kuleba said.
Russia's ministry of defense on Monday claimed Ukraine had so far lost 23,367 troops in the war. NATO estimates that up to 45,000 Russian troops have been killed, captured, or injured since the invasion began.
Holy Week
Amid the suffering and fear, worshippers in Ukraine gathered over the weekend for the start of Holy Week. Easter is celebrated next Sunday.
In Vinnytsia, southwest of the capital, Protodeacon Vladyslav prayed for the lives of the injured and the souls of the dead.
"When people undergo all this grief and atrocities, and they still hope, still believe, still say that they feel the hand of God that guides them, this belief becomes their reality," Vladyslav said.
But the war has turned the church into a battlefield too, after Russian Orthodox leaders gave their blessing to the war and President Putin. Vladyslav said that makes the Russian Orthodox Church "an accomplice."
"It's a position no church should ever take. Russia started this war not defending their territory but attacking the territory of our country," he said.
Editor's note: A previous version of this story mistakenly reported that a child had been killed in the missile strikes on Lviv. The child was injured in the strikes.