- At least four explosions were reported in quick succession in Kiev at around 2am local time
- Earlier, Russian air strike hit near Kyiv's southern main railways station at around 7pm local time, reports said
- It comes as thousands continue to flee Ukraine's capital, a week since Putin launched his deadly invasion
- Ukraine's interior ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said the strike - near Ukraine's Ministry of Defence - may have e cut off central heating supply to parts of the Ukrainian capital amid freezing winter temperatures
- Earlier, bodies of five people killed in a strike on Kyiv's television tower were today piled into a van by police
- Mayor Vitali Klitschko said defences are being built and that 'we will fight' to stop the city being captured
- Came after Russia bombarded a TV tower overnight, killing five people and damaging a Holocaust memorial
- Vladimir Putin's forces have today renewed attacks on other cities including Kherson, Kharkiv and Mariupol
- Click here for MailOnline's liveblog with the latest updates on the Ukraine crisis
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A huge explosion that looked like a small nuke hit Kyiv in the early hours of the morning as a series of blasts rocked the Ukrainian capital, while terrified residents were urged to go to their nearest shelters.
The quiet was broken first by the blaring of air raid sirens at around 2am local time in multiple districts across the city, before its buildings were lit up by a huge blast from a bomb fired by Vladimir Putin's invading forces.
According to local media, Kyiv was not the only city to come under fire. The Kyiv Independent reported that air raid alerts were issued in multiple regions included Kyiv Oblast, Lviv, Zhytomyr, Frankivsk, Chernihiv and Odesa.
Footage from the capital, filmed from windows overlooking the city, showed at least one massive explosion that lit up the night sky, and appeared to cause a shock-wave.
In another video, captured by CBS News reporters moments after signing off a report, two bursts of light could be seen over Kyiv. While the explosions were not filmed directly, the intensity of them was enough to shock the reporter and his film crew, who were some distance away from the blasts.
Earlier in the night, a Russian missile struck near Kyiv's southern main rail station on Wednesday night where thousands of women and children are being evacuated, Ukraine's state-run railway company Ukrzaliznytsya said in a statement.
The station building suffered minor damage and the number of any casualties was not yet known, it said, adding trains were still operating despite the blast and fears of another night of brutal attacks by Vladimir Putin's forces.
Ukraine's interior ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said the blast was caused by wreckage from a downed Russian cruise missile, not a direct rocket strike. Trains continued to run. Herashchenko added the strike may have cut off central heating supply to parts of the Ukrainian capital amid freezing winter temperatures.
A Reuters witness said the explosion made the earth shake.
In recent days, thousands of civilians have been queuing at railway stations to flee the city, which has come under bombardment from invading Russian forces. Many fear the worst is yet to come.
The office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's reported the powerful explosion was also near the country's Defence Ministry. Zelenskyy's office said it was a missile strike and that it wasn't immediately clear how damaging the strike was or precisely where the missile hit.
Unverified reports said two missiles were launched towards the headquarters of Ukraine's Ministry of Defence, with one being shot down. The HQ and the railway station sit across a road from one-another in Kiyv.
The Southern Railway station is one of two stations that make up the main passenger rail complex that thousands have used to flee the war over the past week. The two stations are connected by an overhead corridor that crosses over about a dozen tracks.
'Russian terrorists launched an air strike on the South Railway Station in Kyiv, where thousands of Ukrainian women and children are being evacuated,' the national railway company said.
The stations are about 3 kilometers (2 miles) from Maidan Nezalezhnosti, the square that was the site of huge protests in 2014 and 2004.
CCTV footage in the area posted to social media appeared to show the strike, with the video's timestamp saying one of the blasts came at 20:50 local time (18:50GMT).
As Ukraine prepared to mark a week since Putin launched his invasion in the early hours of Thursday morning, a thick fog fell over Kiev - conditions that are challenging when it comes to air defence.
Meanwhile, the command of Ukraine's Special Operations Forces warned that it would no longer take Russian artillerymen as prisoner of war in response to their 'brutal shelling' of cities. 'Each and every gun crew… will be slaughtered like pigs,' a statement on Wednesday evening said.
The United Nations Refugee Agency reported Thursday morning that over 1 million refugees have fled Ukraine since the beginning of the war, which has so far claimed thousands of lives in its first week. Pictures and videos from Kyiv have shown thousands crowding railways stations in a desperate bid to get a ride out of the city.
Ukraine's State Emergency Service said Wednesday more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. Ukraine has claimed to have killed almost 9,000 Russian soldiers, although Russia has contested the figures being released by officials in the country, as it tried to control the narrative of its illegal war.
Pictured: Footage from Kiyv overnight showed a huge explosion light up the night sky. Reports said at least two huge blasts were heard in the city air raid sirens warned residents to urgently seek shelter
A woman cries outside houses damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, outside the capital Kyiv
A woman says goodbye as a train with evacuees is about to leave Kyiv's railway station on March 2, 2022
People stay inside Dorohozhychi subway station which is used as a bomb shelter, in Kyiv (Kiev), Ukraine
Civilians are seen at the train station attempting to head west from Kyiv, Ukraine on March 2, 2022 amid Russian attacks
Civilians are seen at the train station attempting to head west from Kyiv, Ukraine on March 2, 2022
On Wednesday morning, the bodies of the five victims of a rocket strike on Kyiv's television tower were piled into a van and removed from the site by police - as the capital's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer'.
Klitschko also today defiantly vowed 'we will fight' to defend the city, amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby. Along with his brother and fellow former boxer Wladimir, the mayor called for more support from the west in an interview on Wednesday.
Ukrainian police said Wednesday they arrested a man who brought explosives hidden in a children's toy to one of the Kyiv subway stations where thousands of people have been sheltering. The police also said four other suspected saboteurs were arrested, including two who were carrying weapons.
An opening salvo on Tuesday night struck the Ukrainian capital's largest TV tower and damaged a nearby Holocaust memorial, killing five bystanders in the process. Hours later, US intelligence said the huge Russian convoy appears to have stalled near Kyiv though it could just be regrouping for a more-determined attack.
Klitschko said that fighting is still ongoing in the cities of Bucha and Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, where a large number of destroyed Russian vehicles were pictured on Wednesday. He implored people in the city 'not to lose endurance', saying all critical infrastructure is still running and humanitarian supplies are being handed out.
'I ask everyone, for security reasons, not to go outside unnecessarily. At the alarm - go to the shelters,' he said. 'The enemy is gathering forces closer to the capital... We are preparing and will defend Kyiv!'
Images showed areas of the city damaged in overnight strikes, as attacks resumed on Ukrainian cities elsewhere in the country - with paratroopers dropping into Kharkiv on Wednesday morning as missiles struck a university in the city having apparently missed a nearby police headquarters.
Police officers prepare to remove the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower
Ukrainian police forces remove the bodies of people killed during a Russian rocket attack on Kyiv's main TV tower on Tuesday, ahead of an expected assault on the capital
Kyiv is preparing to come under fresh bombardment today after Moscow warned civilians to flee or else face being killed (pictured, bodies of people killed in last night's strike are covered by police)
Five people were killed yesterday in a Russian missile strike which wiped out several TV stations in Kyiv, thought to be preparation for a larger follow-up attack
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