Rescuers have pulled another body from the ruins of a restaurant in eastern Ukraine's city of Kramatorsk, taking to 12 the death toll following a Russian missile strike, Ukraine's emergency services have said.
Three children were among the dead, while 60 more people were wounded, the authorities said.
Two 14-year-old twin sisters were among those killed, officials have said.
Sisters Anna and Yulia Aksenchenko would have turned 15 in September, Kramatorsk city council's education department said in a Facebook post under a picture of the two girls smiling for the camera.
Asked about the attack on Kramatorsk, the Kremlin said that Russia attacked only military targets, not civilian ones.
Russia's Defence Ministry later said a temporary Ukrainian army command post had been hit in Kramatorsk.

"I ran here after the explosion because I rented a cafe here.... Everything has been blown out there," said Valentyna, a 64-year-old woman who declined to give her surname.
"None of the glass, windows or doors are left. All I see is destruction, fear and horror. This is the 21st century," she told Reuters.

During the overnight rescue, police and soldiers emerged with a man in military trousers and boots on a stretcher.
He was placed in an ambulance, though it was unclear whether he was still alive. Two men screamed in frenzied tones for a tow rope, then ran back towards the rubble.
A second missile hit a village on the fringes of Kramatorsk, wounding four people.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly video message yesterday that the attacks showed Russia "deserved only one thing as a consequence of what it has done - defeat and a tribunal".
Russia has frequently hit Ukrainian cities since its full-scale invasion in February 2022. It denies intentionally targeting civilians.
Kramatorsk lies west of front lines in Donetsk province and would be a likely objective in any westward advance by Russia.
The city has been a frequent target of Russian attacks.