On the night of January 28, during another Russian drone attack on Ukraine, the occupiers struck a museum that housed a collection of vintage cars previously owned by former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, reports Newsweek. The strike targeted a facility in Vyshhorod, near Kyiv.
Photographs reveal the charred remains of the vehicles.
The head of the Kyiv Regional Military Administration, Mykola Kalashnyk, stated that debris from the Russian drone caused a fire that engulfed over 600 square meters, destroying nine vintage cars and damaging another 29.
Kalashnyk did not specify the exact location of the museum, but the photos he provided suggest it is the vintage car museum located on the grounds of Yanukovych's former residence, according to media reports.
The images shared online show damaged cars from the 1950s and 1960s, including models like "Moskvitch," Soviet "ZAZ Zaporozhets," "GAZ-14 Chaika," and the first mass-produced luxury car in the USSR — "GAZ-12 ZIM."
Other news on the consequences of Russian drone attacks
Earlier, UNIAN reported that as a result of the Russian attack on Kyiv, a renowned Ukrainian neurobiologist died. "Igor Zima was killed along with his entire family: his wife and their cat. Just at home. In bed," wrote a family friend.
Additionally, on the first day of 2025, Russian drones managed to reach the center of Kyiv. "At least in Chernihiv and Kyiv regions, there were at least three waves of these 'Geraniums.' They exhausted the air defense and mobile fire groups that protect the approaches to Kyiv, which is why they managed to penetrate so far and so deeply into the air defense system," noted an expert.