Nato pledges 'unshakeable' commitment to Ukraine
Updates from BBC correspondents: Katya Adler and Frank Gardner in Madrid, Joe Inwood in Kyiv, Sophie Williams and Nick Beake in Kremenchuk, Jonathan Beale in Donbas, and Steve Rosenberg in Moscow
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The morning after the day before in Kremenchuk...
Sophie Williams
Reporting from Kremenchuk
Here in Kremenchuk, the town is waking up to the sheer devastation after a missile struck a shopping mall.
Some 1,000 people have been working at the site overnight.
As we've reported, at least 18 people have now been confirmed dead and 59 are injured. But work to search the rubble continues.
Rescue mission turns to recovery of bodies
Nick Beake
Reporting from Kremenchuk
Officials in the central Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk say at least 18 people were killed in the missile strike at the shopping centre.
Under the glare of powerful lights, firefighters worked alongside diggers through the night to try to find survivors. That hope has all but gone.
Much of the roof of the large shopping complex has imploded, leaving a charred and twisted shell. Today’s work will inevitably move from a rescue operation to recovery of bodies.
Dozens of survivors are being treated in a nearby hospital. The Ukrainian Air Force command claims this was the work of Kh-22 missiles launched from long-range bomber aircrafts.
Government officials at the site say the attack makes a mockery of President Putin’s claim that Russia is using high precision weapons to hit military targets. Kremenchuk was hit by missiles in April and 10 days ago when a nearby oil refinery was struck. But this attack on afternoon shoppers is incomparable.
Russia has become world's 'largest terrorist group' - Zelensky
Let's hear what Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had to say about the shopping centre blast in his daily address last night.
The wartime leader called on the international community to stop "Russian terror", saying that the missile strikes in Ukraine's Kremenchuk made Vladimir Putin's country "the largest terrorist organisation in the world".
So far, 18 people are thought to have been killed and dozens more injured but Zelensky warned there could be more. "We are [still] establishing the number of people under the rubble," he said.
Turning to the meeting of the G7 leaders that has been taking place, he said there had been "an important result agreed":
Death toll in shopping centre attack rises to 18
The State Emergency Service of Ukraine said overnight that 18 people are now confirmed dead - following Monday's missile strike on a shopping centre in Kremenchuk. The Head of Poltava regional military administration Dmytro Lunin also confirmed this number. It’s not a final figure however as rescue work is continuing at the site.Local authorities say 440 people from emergency services are working on location, including 14 psychologists brought in to support those affected.
Around 1,000 people were believed to be in the shopping centre at the time of the Russian strike.
What's been happening in Ukraine?
Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine.
Here are the latest developments following yesterday's Russian missile strike on a busy shopping centre in eastern Ukraine: