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Bila Tserkva
Nation / PlaceUA

Bila Tserkva

A Ukrainian city of approximately 200,000 in Kyiv Oblast, 80 km south of the capital.

Last refreshed: 1 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Why did Russia fire an Oreshnik at a city 80 km from Kyiv?

Timeline for Bila Tserkva

#1824 May
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Common Questions
Where is Bila Tserkva and why did Russia strike it?
Bila Tserkva is a city of about 207,000 in Kyiv Oblast, 80 km south of the capital. Russia struck it with an Oreshnik Ballistic missile on 24 May 2026, killing at least two people.Source: Kyiv Independent
How many people were killed in the Bila Tserkva missile strike?
At least two people were killed and more than 77 injured when an Oreshnik missile struck the city on 24 May 2026.Source: Kyiv Independent
What damage did the Oreshnik missile cause in Bila Tserkva?
A supermarket, service station, warehouses, residential buildings, and a dormitory were damaged across multiple city districts.Source: Ukrainska Pravda
Is Bila Tserkva close to the front line?
No. The city is roughly 80 km south of Kyiv in the Ukrainian interior, FAR from the eastern front. Its targeting reflects Russia's deliberate strikes on rear civilian areas.

Background

Bila Tserkva entered the war's sharpest news cycle on 24 May 2026, when Russia targeted the city with an Oreshnik intermediate-range Ballistic missile as part of the largest single barrage of the full-scale war. The attack, part of a 690-weapon salvo, killed at least two residents and injured more than 77, causing widespread damage to residential buildings, a supermarket, a service station, and warehouses.

Bila Tserkva is the largest city in Kyiv Oblast, situated on the Ros River approximately 80 km south of Kyiv. With a pre-war population of around 207,000, it is a significant industrial and transport hub in central Ukraine, lying well inside the country's pre-2022 interior. That a city this FAR from the front was struck with a strategic Ballistic missile underscored Russia's broadening targeting of Ukrainian rear areas.

The strike was notable for its psychological and strategic framing. Russia simultaneously targeted Kyiv's cultural district, suggesting the barrage was designed to maximise civilian and heritage damage rather than to strike military infrastructure. Ukraine's Western partners cited the attack in renewed calls for additional air-defence systems.

Source Material