A Russian attack on Ukraine's southern Zaporizhzhia region killed two people and wounded another, the local governor has said.
"A man and a woman died as a result of enemy shelling," governor Ivan Fedorov said on Telegram, adding that another man had been injured in an overnight Russian assault.
Mr Fedorov said Russia had carried out 391 strikes on ten settlements in the past 24 hours.
Russia claims to have annexed Zaporizhzhia, but it does not fully control the region.
Yesterday, Moscow accused Ukraine of firing self-detonating drones toward the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in an attack that hit a power substation and injured eight people.
Moscow regularly accuses Kyiv of attacking the plant, Europe's largest nuclear power site, which has been under the control of Russian forces for more than two years.
"Ukrainian armed forces attacked the 'Raduga' substation, where at the time staff from the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant were working," Russia's nuclear power corporation, Rosatom, said in a post on Telegram.
It said Ukraine fired three self-detonating drones at the substation yesterday morning.
Eight people were injured and two transformers at the substation were damaged, resulting in a cut of some power supplies to the nearby town of Energodar.
The site is around 4km from the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
Russia took control of the plant in southern Ukraine in the first days after it launched its February 2022 military offensive.
Since then both sides have regularly traded accusations of attacking the facility, accusing each other of risking a potentially devastating nuclear disaster.
The UN's atomic watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has placed inspectors at the site on a permanent basis, and regularly raises concerns about the dangers of a possible direct hit to the plant.
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NATO waters down €40bn support pledge for Ukraine
Meanwhile, NATO countries yesterday signed off on a watered down pledge to keep supplying Ukraine with around €40 billion in weapons next year, diplomats said.
The initiative - to be unveiled at a summit in Washington next week - was pitched by NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg as a way to firm up Western aid for Kyiv in its war with Russia for the coming years.
The plan was to get countries to vow to keep on giving support at the rate they have been giving since Moscow invaded, and to split contributions more equitably.
But diplomats said leading power the United States insisted that the pledge - which is not legally binding - should be reviewed next year.
Washington's argument was that it was not legally possible for the government to commit any future administrations to spending, diplomats said.
Diplomats also said that a proposal to lay out a clear way to split future aid according to the size of each country's gross domestic product was dropped due to opposition led by Turkey.
A diplomat said there was a reference to "fair burden sharing" in the final text and the aim to contribute more proportionally, but no mention of using GDP as a scale.
The pledge is one part of a package for Ukraine that NATO is hammering out for the summit in Washington.
Kyiv is also set to get stronger wording in a final declaration on its push to join, but no concrete invite to become a member.
The alliance will also look to insulate weapons deliveries against any possible return to the US presidency by Donald Trump by taking control of coordination of supplies from Washington.