10:56 BST
Sarah Rainsford
Eastern Europe correspondent in Kyiv

Image caption,
Valentina was sleeping when her apartment was struck by a Russian drone
I’ve been talking to residents of the building that was hit by a drone this morning and they’re in shock, of course, but they’re also very angry – at Russia.
One woman, Elena, described hearing a drone overhead then multiple explosions before part of the building went up in flames.
“The blasts all came quickly, one after another. We didn’t have time to get to shelter. We weren’t ready for this. We thought it would pass over us. But not this time,” she says, watching the rescue workers pick through the rubble of her home.
“This was the biggest drone attack so far,” her partner, Artem, points out. “It’s terrorism. Against civilians.”
Valentina and her husband were fast asleep when the drone strike shattered their windows and covered them in glass.
“At least we’re alive,” the pensioner told me, deeply saddened by the death of a young woman neighbour with her tiny baby.
People here say the family had only just moved into the apartment. The woman’s husband is in hospital, badly hurt.
Valentina wants me to film the destruction.
“Show them what the Russians do here, and how they want peace,” she says.
“Trump says Putin is a good guy – but if it weren’t for that “good guy”, there’d be no war here. He wants to destroy Ukraine completely.”