On the morning of 24 April, Russian occupation authorities of Luhansk Oblast reported an allegedly Ukrainian attack on the town of Rovenky at 2:45 a.m. "with an attack UAV." Later it became known that a fuel storage tank was allegedly hit at a local oil depot, and caught fire. It was one of several alleged Ukrainian attacks on Russian military facilities in various locations.


Not the first attack on Rovenky fuel hub
It wasn't the first ever attack on the Rovenky oil depot. The last time the Rovenky oil depot was hit was on 26 February 2022, the second day of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine:On 1 July 2022, a missile strike destroyed an industrial facility in the area of the oil depot. The occupation authorities claimed Ukraine used the HIMARS multiple-rocket launcher for the attack, although at the time, Rovenky was still about 100 km behind the lines, which is out of range of US-supplies GMLRS rockets:#Rovenki: oil depot on fire, "200 tons of diesel"https://t.co/xXEyPFbRhj
— English Luhansk (@loogunda) February 26, 2022
#Rovenki, Luhansk oblast (occupied): a missile impact pic.twitter.com/34weoEy4Sa
— English Luhansk (@loogunda) July 1, 2022
More April 24 attacks
The alleged Ukrainian attack on the fuel facility in occupied Rovenky is one of several known attacks in the early hours of 24 April. Ukrainian naval surface drones might have attacked the Russian naval base in Crimea's Sevastopol:Ukrainian surface drones attack Russian fleet in occupied Sevastopol: VIDEO
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Allegedly Ukrainian drone with explosives crashed 40 km near MoscowFinally, another possible Ukrainian attack could have taken place on the morning of 24 April in Ilovaisk, one of the key railway hubs in the occupied part of Donetsk Oblast, as local Telegram channels reported a "powerful hit with smoke":

- Ukrainian drone with explosives crashed 40 km near Moscow
- Ukrainian surface drones attack Russian fleet in occupied Sevastopol: VIDEO
- Wave of strikes sweeps over occupied Donbas as coal mines are shut down (2020)
- The hidden invasion: Russia’s military convoys to Ukraine since 2014 (2018)