World

Russian online retail warehouses hit by deadly Ukrainian strikes

BBC World · 2026-07-18

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: Ukrainian drone strikes targeted two warehouses of Russia's largest online retailer, Wildberries, resulting in eight deaths and 62 injuries. • Why it matters: The attacks are part of Ukraine's strategy to disrupt Russian logistics and infrastructure, particularly those supporting military operations, amid ongoing conflict. • What to watch next: Monitor further developments in Ukraine's drone operations and Russia's response, including potential retaliatory strikes and impacts on logistics and energy infrastructure.

Figure caption, Watch: Huge warehouse blaze outside in Moscow region following Ukrainian strikesByTom BennettPublished18 July 2026, 11:22 BSTUpdated 18 minutes agoEight people have been killed and 62 injured after Ukrainian drones struck two warehouses belonging to Russia's biggest online retailer, Wildberries, according to Russian officials. Seven deaths and 25 injuries occurred at a warehouse in the city of Tambov, roughly 295 miles (475km) south-east of Moscow. One death and 37 injuries occurred at another Wildberries warehouse in Elektrostal in the Moscow region. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the attacks had struck "major logistics facilities" which had been used to "supply sanctioned components for drone production and navigation equipment". He added that Ukraine had also struck targets in the Sea of Azov, the Black Sea, and Russian-annexed Crimea.Unverified images from the scene of one of the warehouse strikes showed flames and huge plumes of black smoke rising from a vast logistics building, with dozens of workers running into a car park area. The attacks appear to have started at night, with some videos showing terrified and injured staff attempting the flee as explosions continue. Another clip appears to show the walls of a warehouse disintegrate as they are engulfed by flames. Zelensky said Ukraine's operations were in response to "Russian strikes on our civilian infrastructure and on our cities and communities". Overnight into Wednesday, 14 people were killed in Russian attacks across Ukraine. Wildberries is often described as the Russian equivalent of Amazon. The merged RWB group, which combines Wildberries with advertising company Russ, was valued at about $12.6bn (£9.3bn) by Forbes Russia in 2026.Wildberries ​CEO, ​Tatyana Kim - one of Russia's first female billionaires - ⁠said it had been a "terrible night" for Russia and for the company. Image source, social mediaImage caption, Footage showed flames engulfing a large warehouse as workers evacuate"Seven people working the night shift died on the spot," governor of the Tambov region Evgeniy Pervyshov wrote on Telegram, adding that 28 drones were also shot down on approach.He said 25 people had been injured, including seven in serious condition. Most of these injuries were caused by shrapnel wounds, he said.It was the "largest and most inhumane" attack on Tambov region in terms of the number of drones used and the number of casualties, he said.Meanwhile, governor of the Moscow region Andrei Vorobyov said eight of those injured in the strikes on the Wildberries warehouse in Elektrostal were in "serious condition". He added that total of 48 drones were shot down in the Moscow region overnight, and that a Russian oil depot had also been struck by a falling drone, which he described as the incident with "the most serious consequences". "Firefighters, emergency services, and the Ministry of Emergency Situations continue to work at the scene," he wrote on Telegram. He did not describe the level of damage in detail. Zelensky separately confirmed Ukraine had struck "an oil facility". Ukraine has recently intensified its long-range drone attacks on Russia's critical energy infrastructure, causing widespread fuel shortages. Earlier this month, Kyiv said nearly 43% of Russia's oil refining capacity had been "disabled" as a result.The BBC has not independently verified this figure.Ukraine says Russian oil and gas facilities are legitimate targets as Moscow relies heavily on fossil fuel exports to finance its full-scale invasion, which began in February 2022.Russian President Vladimir Putin made a rare admission last month that fuel shortages had been caused by Ukrainian attacks, and signed into law a bill aimed at boosting supplies to the domestic fuel market in early July. Related topicsWar in UkraineRussiaDronesUkraineMore on the Ukraine WarMany Ukrainian soldiers outraged over removal of defence minister, troops tell BBCPublished17 hours agoOne anti-war critic fined, another held as Russia clamps down on dissentPublished16 hours agoRussian attacks kill 14 as Ukraine hits Black Sea oil tankersPublished2 days ago

Source: BBC World
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