Four dead in Russian attacks on Sumy Oblast within hours

Date: 27 February 2026
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Russian forces killed four civilians in Sumy Oblast on Feb. 27 – two men in a drone strike on a car and two elderly women in an airstrike on an agricultural facility – with two other people injured in the attacks, according to the local authorities.

A blue civilian car is engulfed in bright orange flames on a snow-covered road at night following a Russian drone strike in the Vorozhba hromada of the Sumy region, Ukraine, on February 27, 2026.

The Sumy Oblast Prosecutor’s Office reported that Russians attacked a car in the Sumy Oblast, killing two people, on the evening of February 27.

“According to the investigation, on February 27, 2026, at around 6:20 p.m., Russian occupiers attacked a vehicle with a drone in the Vorozhba hromada,” the statement reads. 

The attack killed two men and injured a 53-year-old man.

Prosecutors, together with other law enforcement agencies, are documenting the aftermath of the attack. A pre-trial investigation is underway into the war crimes that led to the deaths.

On February 27, Oleh Hryhorov, head of the Sumy Regional Military Administration, stated that Russia attacked an agricultural facility in the Shostka District, Sumy Oblast. The strike on the Yampil hromada killed two women aged 72 and 67 who worked at the facility. Emergency workers pulled their bodies from under the rubble.

A heavily damaged two-story building in the Yampil community of the Sumy region is shown with a completely collapsed roof and shattered exterior tiled walls. The "СУМСЬКА ОВА" (Sumy OVA) logo is in the top-left corner, documenting the aftermath of a Russian drone strike on an agricultural enterprise on February 27, 2026. Aftermath of Russian attack

Another employee, a 60-year-old woman, sustained serious injuries. Medics hospitalized her and are providing medical care.

“Enemy drones destroyed the building of an agricultural firm. People were at work,” Hryhorov noted.

Ukrainian experts point out that countries including ChinaNorth KoreaHungarySlovakiaIran, and Brazil assist Moscow in killing Ukrainians in its war against Ukraine by funding the Russian budget through trade. 

Earlier, Bohdan Bernatskyy, a member of the Sanctions Policy Working Group of the Crimean Platform Expert Network, revealed at the Third Parliamentary Summit in Latvia that over 1,300 Russian military companies and 2 million industrial workers continue to operate, many without international restrictions.

Previously, Latvian Defense Minister Andris Sprūds stated that Western sanctions against Russia have a long-term impact on the country’s military economy.

Over the last three and a half years, China has become a critically important partner for the Russian Federation. While Beijing officially declares its neutrality, Western intelligence and analytical studies indicate otherwise. For instance, China does not supply weapons directly to Russia, but it provides critically important components, including machinery, microelectronics, specialized chemicals, optics, gunpowder, and ammunition components.

Donald Trump announced several days ago that the United States would lower tariffs on Indian goods in exchange for India halting its imports of Russian oil.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi thanked Trump but did not explicitly confirm the deal or disclose further details. 

According to energy data firm Kpler, purchases have declined in recent months but still averaged approximately 1.2 million barrels per day in January.

Meanwhile, the Center for Strategic and International Studies found that in 2024 China increased sales of ammonium perchlorate — a key ingredient used to produce solid propellant for Iskander missiles. This assistance enabled Russia to triple its ballistic missile production, the report stated. Beijing’s support has bolstered Russia’s defense industrial base, enabling Russian forces to launch salvos of 13 to 18 Iskander-M ballistic missiles in 2026.

Overall imports from China have grown to represent one-third of Russia’s total imports, while Russian oil exports now account for 75% of all oil purchased by Beijing. Analysts specifically highlighted defense-related imports, which provided the Russian military-industrial complex with machine tools, components, and raw materials for weapons manufacturing.

Furthermore, Russia’s defense industry also received computer chips, machine tools, radars, and sensors from China, according to CSIS. These goods are part of a list of 50 items aiding weapons production, effectively compensating for Russia’s limited manufacturing capacity in its defense sector. Other areas of support include the supply of drone hulls, lithium batteries, and fiber-optic cables. CSIS reported that Russian imports from China rose from $190 billion in 2022 to $250 billion in 2024.

In 2024, then-U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated that 70% of heavy industrial equipment and 90% of all microelectronics are sourced from China, which then flows into Russia.

Furthermore, according to recent NATO intelligence data, 80% of all Russian drones consist of Chinese parts.

According to The Telegraph newspaper, Chinese firms supplied sanctioned Russian companies with at least £47 million ($57.4 million USD) worth of parts between 2023 and 2024. Almost a quarter of the value of these supplies went to firms that produce Shahed-type drones. 

Moreover, the Foreign Intelligence Service of Ukraine stated that China is also providing intelligence to Russia. The Kremlin used this data to prepare missile strikes, particularly against objects belonging to foreign investors, though the specific targets were not clarified. China denies these accusations.

Following the imposition of Western sanctions, Beijing has become a key supplier to Russia of cars, clothing, raw materials, and a range of other goods. In 2023, Russia-China trade turnover set a historic record, exceeding $240 billion, which is more than 60% higher than before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, according to Chinese customs data.

Reuters also reported that China is buying oil and gas from Russia. The average daily volume of oil is more than two million barrels per day. During Vladimir Putin’s visit to Beijing, the countries signed a document for the supply of 106 billion cubic meters of gas per year to China.

Reuters also reported that tens of thousands of cars are being exported from China to Russia under gray-market schemes that often circumvent Western and Asian government sanctions and automakers’ commitments to exit the Russian market, according to registration data reviewed by Reuters and interviews with five people involved in the trade.

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