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Eight People Remain in Hospital After Kyiv Shooting, Mayor Says

KYIV, April 19 (Reuters) – Eight people, ⁠including ⁠one child, remain hospitalised in ⁠Kyiv after being wounded in a shooting that killed ​six people, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Sunday.

A Russian-born man opened fire from an ‌automatic rifle on passersby on ‌Saturday before barricading himself in a supermarket with hostages, where he was ⁠shot dead ⁠by police.

Police stormed the supermarket after unsuccessfully trying to negotiate ​with the suspect for 40 minutes.

Klitschko said the wounded child, whose parents were killed in the shooting, was in moderate condition, while one of the adults was in ​critical condition.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Saturday that the shooting, which happened in ⁠the ⁠capital’s leafy Holosiivskyi district, ⁠injured 14 ​people.

“They are all receiving all necessary medical care,” the mayor said on Telegram.

The ​supermarket has been cordoned ⁠off and remains closed. Bullet holes are visible in windows of the supermarket, and blood stains can still be seen on the pavement and asphalt.

Flowers were left near a residential building a couple of hundred metres from the ⁠supermarket, where the shooter shot his first victims.

“I saw how people grabbed children ⁠from the playground and ran away. They screamed: ‘run away, hide.’ People didn’t understand what was going on. They said that there was a man there, a man was shooting with a machine gun,” Daryna, a 31-year-old local resident, told Reuters.

Another local resident, 73-year-old pensioner, told Reuters that the man he saw shooting bystanders on Saturday “looked kind of smart.”

“I don’t want to clear him of blame or anything like ⁠that… but he didn’t look like a killer.”

Shootings of this nature are extremely rare in Ukraine and the country’s security service said the incident was being investigated as a terrorist act.

Police have not yet identified a ​motive for the crime.

(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk, writing by ​Pavel Polityuk, editing by Christina Fincher)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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