Over 2,500 new reports were submitted to the Registry of Damaged and Destroyed Property in the past 24 hours
The latest wave of massive airstrikes by the Russian Federation has caused further widespread destruction of Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure and residential buildings. In just the last 24 hours following the latest enemy strikes, citizens have submitted over 2,500 new reports via the mobile app and the “Diya” portal regarding damaged or completely destroyed property.
In particular, over 400 such reports were received from residents of Kyiv, and over 100 from residents of Dnipro.
In total, since the start of the full-scale Russian invasion, the database of the Register of Damaged and Destroyed Property (RDDP) has officially recorded over 340,000 destroyed or damaged structures. The lion’s share of this total—over 298,000 units—consists specifically of citizens’ residential buildings (both private homes and apartment complexes). The remaining registered properties include engineering structures, social institutions (schools, hospitals, kindergartens), industrial enterprises, as well as critical infrastructure and other non-residential real estate. Geographically, the highest rates of damage and affected properties are recorded in the Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Dnipropetrovsk regions.
The relevant ministry emphasizes that at the local government level, it is now critically important not only to document the consequences of the attacks but also to ensure that commissions make decisions as quickly as possible to provide financial assistance to people under the state program “eRecovery.” A separate issue remains in cases where damaged apartments or houses were not privatized in a timely manner or where information regarding ownership rights is missing from the State Register of Property Rights. Local authorities have been instructed to strengthen cooperation with Administrative Service Centers and state registrars to help citizens promptly process the necessary documents for receiving lawful state compensation.
At the same time, the government is implementing comprehensive changes to support residents of non-privatized housing stock that has been damaged by shelling. The Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine has supported the Ministry of Development’s initiative to amend the Law of Ukraine “On the Privatization of the State Housing Fund.” The updated document is intended to significantly simplify the privatization procedure for damaged housing units and to clearly regulate a step-by-step procedure in cases where residential premises are deemed unsafe or completely uninhabitable as a result of hostilities, sabotage, or terrorist acts caused by Russia’s military aggression.
This was reported by the Ministry of Community and Territorial Development.
The Civil Protection Service and rescue workers have fully completed emergency search and rescue operations at the site where a Russian missile struck a residential area in the city of Dnipro during a massive attack on the night of June 2.