Moscow car blast kills Russian general hours after US talks

Investigators work at the scene where Lt. Gen. Fanil Sarvarov, head of the Operational Training Directorate of the Russian Armed Forces General Staff, was killed by an explosive device placed under his car in Moscow, Monday, Dec. 22, 2025. (AP Photo)
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Updated 22 December 2025
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Moscow car blast kills Russian general hours after US talks

  • Russian news outlets reported that a car exploded in a parking lot on Moscow's Yaseneva Street

MOSCOW: A Russian general was killed Monday morning after an explosive device detonated underneath his car in southern Moscow, investigators said.
Lt. Gen. Fanil Sarvarov, head of the Operational Training Directorate of the Russian Armed Forces' General Staff, died from his injuries, Svetlana Petrenko, official spokesperson for Russia’s Investigative Committee, said.
“Investigators are pursuing numerous lines of enquiry regarding the murder. One of these is that the crime was orchestrated by Ukrainian intelligence services,” Petrenko said.
Russian news outlets reported that a car exploded in a parking lot on Moscow's Yaseneva Street with the driver inside at approximately 7 a.m.
Ukraine’s security service claimed responsibility for a similar attack against a high-ranking Russian soldier in December 2024. Lt. Gen. Igor Kirillov, the chief of the military’s nuclear, biological and chemical protection forces, was killed by a bomb hidden on an electric scooter outside his apartment building a day after Kyiv leveled criminal charges against him. His assistant, Ilya Polikarpov, was also killed.


Russian drone attack forces power cuts in Ukraine’s Kryvyi Rih, military says

Updated 14 January 2026
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Russian drone attack forces power cuts in Ukraine’s Kryvyi Rih, military says

  • Kyiv says the campaign has forced rolling outages and emergency cuts to cities across the country, as repair crews work under ​fire and Ukraine relies on air defenses and electricity imports to stabilize ⁠the grid

KYIV: Russian drones struck infrastructure in the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih on Wednesday, forcing emergency power blackouts ​for more than 45,000 customers and disrupting heat supplies, military administration head Oleksandr Vilkul said.
“Please fill up on water and charge your devices, if you have the chance. It’s going to be difficult,” Vilkul said on the Telegram ‌messaging app.
Water ‌utility pumping stations ‌switched ⁠to ​generators ‌and water remained in the system, but there could be pressure problems.
The full scale of the attack was not immediately known. There was no comment from Russia about the strike.
Russia has repeatedly struck Ukraine’s ⁠power plants, substations and transmission lines with missiles and ‌drones, seeking to knock out ‍electricity and heating ‍and hinder industry during the nearly ‍four-year war.
Kyiv says the campaign has forced rolling outages and emergency cuts to cities across the country, as repair crews work under ​fire and Ukraine relies on air defenses and electricity imports to stabilize ⁠the grid.
Kryvyi Rih, a steel-and-mining hub in the Dnipropetrovsk region and President Volodymyr Zelensky’s hometown, has been hit repeatedly, with strikes killing civilians and damaging homes and industry.
The city sits close enough to southern front lines to be within strike range, while its factories, logistics links and workforce make it economically important and ‌a key rear-area center supporting Ukraine’s war effort.