Every marker is a real place. Every number refers to a person.
Between the day of 18 July and the morning of 19 July, Russian missile, drone and artillery strikes killed sixteen people and injured at least 121 across Kyiv, Donetsk, Odesa, Kharkiv, Kherson, Dnipropetrovsk, Sumy and Zaporizhzhia oblasts. One of Russia's largest ballistic-missile attacks on Kyiv killed one person and injured 16 across the capital and region, Russian strikes killed five in Donetsk Oblast, and a missile hit an Odesa recreation area, killing two. Kherson’s official 24-hour tally overlaps the previous edition by ten injuries, counted once in multi-day totals. Figures are official but preliminary.
These are not just numbers, photographs, or cards. They are real people’s lives.This report preserves only facts confirmed by official sources.
Overnight into 19 July, Russia attacked Ukraine with 41 missiles — including some 25 Iskander-M and S-400 ballistic missiles, 10 Tsirkon and three Onyx missiles and three Kh-59/69 guided air-launched missiles — and 125 attack drones, with Kyiv the main target. The Ukrainian Air Force reported that 23 of the missiles and 10 of the drones struck at 20 locations (Ukrainian Air Force, reported via Ukrinform on the morning of 19 July; figures preliminary).
Verified by the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission (OHCHR): in June 2026 alone, at least 293 civilians were killed and 1,990 injured in Ukraine — the deadliest month for civilians since April 2022.
Official confirmation required. A report is included only after confirmation by a Ukrainian regional administration, the State Emergency Service (DSNS), police or another public authority. A link may lead to reputable reporting that directly attributes the facts to that official source. Casualty figures are official and time-stamped.
Curated, not exhaustive. Reporting delays, safety restrictions and limited information from occupied territories mean that some attacks will not appear. A report can also be delayed until an official account is available.
Finished editions, coarse locations. This is not a live map: each edition covers a completed 24-hour window, and a report appears only after Ukrainian authorities have made it public themselves. Exact coordinates appear only if the authorities have disclosed a location; otherwise the map shows the district or city. Casualty figures are preliminary, time-stamped (“as of …”) and corrected as official updates arrive.
Overlapping official windows. An oblast’s 24-hour tally can cover a strike this site already reported on its own the previous morning, hours before that tally was published. Each card keeps the figure its official source stated, so an edition’s daily total is the sum of the official reports it contains and can overlap the edition before it. Multi-day totals on the map subtract the overlap, so every victim is counted once.
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