
Moscow, Russia: Russian air defenses intercepted nearly 60 Ukrainian drones approaching Moscow in the early hours of Monday, prompting the temporary suspension of flights at all four major airports serving the Russian capital before operations were later restored, Russian authorities said.
Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Telegram that almost 60 drones heading toward the capital were shot down overnight. He did not provide further details on the scale of the attack or potential damage but said emergency services had been dispatched to locations where drone debris fell.
Russia’s aviation watchdog, Rosaviatsia, temporarily halted operations at Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo, Vnukovo and Zhukovsky airports as a safety precaution during the attack. The agency later announced that flight operations had resumed after authorities determined conditions were safe. Officials did not immediately disclose how long the restrictions remained in effect or whether flights were delayed or cancelled.
At roughly the same time, Russia carried out drone attacks on Ukraine, including strikes on Zaporizhzhia and Odessa. The Zaporizhzhia Regional Prosecutor’s Office reported on Telegram,“Throughout the night and morning of June 22, 2026, the Russians struck civilian infrastructure in Zaporizhzhia using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). As a result of the enemy shelling, two women, aged 39 and 53, were killed. Another seven people were injured, including an 11-year-old boy.”
The attack targeted civilian infrastructure in the southeastern Ukrainian city, with emergency services responding to the scene as authorities assessed the full extent of the damage. Ukrainian officials said the strike formed part of a broader wave of overnight Russian attacks reported across several regions of the country.
The latest drone assault comes only days after Ukraine carried out a renewed strike on Moscow’s only oil refinery, one of the region’s most important fuel-production facilities. The refinery, operated by Gazprom Neft in Moscow’s Kapotnya district, was struck for a second time within a week during a major Ukrainian drone offensive on June 18. Industry sources told Reuters that the attack damaged a key processing unit and temporarily halted refinery operations.
The Moscow refinery is the capital region’s largest fuel supplier and produced 11.6 million metric tons of oil products in 2024, including gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel. The facility has become a recurring target as Ukraine intensifies long-range strikes against Russian energy infrastructure.
The June 22 attack reflects an escalating drone campaign by Ukraine aimed at military, energy and logistics infrastructure deep inside Russian territory. Ukrainian officials have previously described such operations as a response to Russia’s continuing attacks on Ukrainian cities and infrastructure.
The attack occurred amid heightened security concerns around Moscow following one of the largest drone assaults on the Russian capital since the war began. During the June 18 offensive, Russia said it shot down hundreds of drones across the country, including around 180 near Moscow. That attack damaged the city’s oil refinery, disrupted airport operations and injured at least 16 people in the Moscow region, according to regional Governor Andrei Vorobyov.
In response to the growing threat of drone incursions, Rosaviatsia recently announced new restrictions on light aircraft and drone operations in Moscow and several neighboring regions. The measures, which took effect on June 20, establish a minimum operating altitude of 5,200 meters, effectively grounding most private aircraft and drones in affected areas while leaving commercial airline operations unaffected.



















