INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed to wreak "wrath" against Russian forces in 2024, hours before Ukraine saw attacks on the first
day of the new year.Russia and Ukraine have seen an escalation in strikes in recent days, including unprecedented strikes on the Russian
city of Belgorod that killed 24 people on Saturday.The attack came a day after Moscow launched a barrage of missiles and drones at Ukrainian
cities, killing 39 people, one of the largest aerial attacks since the war began.Jan
1 was declared a day of mourning in Ukraine's capital Kyiv, where 19 people had been killed, city officials said.Just hours after midnight
on New Year's Day, the Russian-installed head of the occupied Donetsk region said four people had been killed and 13 wounded by a rocket
attack on its main city.In Ukraine's southern Odesa region, governor Oleg Kiper said one person died in a Russian drone strike, and three
others were injured.And in western Ukraine's Lviv region, air defense systems shot down Russian drones in the early hours, according to
enemy will feel the wrath of domestic production," he said.Ukraine will boast at least "a million" additional drones in its arsenal next
year, Zelensky added, as well as F-16 fighter jets delivered by its Western partners."Our pilots are already mastering F-16 jets, and we
will definitely see them in our skies," he said.Despite billions of dollars worth of Western weapons, Ukraine last year struggled to make a
major breakthrough in its counteroffensive against invading Russian forces.Moscow has meanwhile ramped up pressure along the front lines,
capturing the eastern town of Marinka earlier in December and pushing for control of Kupiansk in the northeast.Kyiv is urging Western allies
to maintain military support.Britain announced it would send hundreds more air defense missiles to Ukraine after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak
declared that his country would "continue to stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes."Zelensky's counterpart President Vladimir Putin did
not mention Ukraine in his traditional New Year's Eve address on Sunday, but praised Russia's soldiers on the front line and called for
unity in the face of "difficult tasks."