In Sevastopol, the night of March 24 saw significant property damage as a result of a missile strike. Officials reported the toll to be near a hundred affected homes, with damage concentrated across both apartment buildings and private residences. The Sevastopol Department of Public Security, under the leadership of its director, provided the update to TASS, confirming the scale of destruction and outlining the immediate impact on local housing stock.
That night, the incident damaged 96 apartments and private dwellings, thousands of square meters of urban space, and several commercial structures. In addition to residential losses, 30 administrative and commercial buildings sustained damage, and a variety of transport assets were affected. The information highlights the broad reach of the attack across both civilian infrastructure and public services, underscoring the disruption to daily life in the city.
Emergency responders reported at least six passenger boats and 25 cars were damaged in the onslaught. In the aftermath, residents reached out with urgent calls to local emergency services; approximately 400 inquiries were logged regarding shrapnel, debris, and other hazards created by the bombardment.
The city administration later confirmed that transportation infrastructure incurred partial damage during the night attack, affecting routes and schedules that service residents and visitors alike. The officials indicated that several categories of vehicles and public transport assets bore the brunt of the strikes, illustrating the broad impact on mobility within the urban area.
Local authorities provided a breakdown of the vehicle-related damage: the windows of five boat hulls were broken, with two passenger boats and thirteen school buses sustaining harm. A single trolleybus and a social taxi vehicle also experienced damage, reflecting the reach of the incident across multiple modes of public and community transit.
Earlier statements from the city’s governor described the consequences of the assault carried out by armed forces. Those comments outlined the immediate human and structural costs observed in the wake of the strike and set the tone for ongoing assessments and response actions aimed at restoring safety and normalcy to everyday life in Sevastopol.