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Residents stand near a building hit by a Russian drone strike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on Saturday.Stringer/Reuters

Russia and Ukraine traded attacks that killed at least four people on Saturday, officials said, ahead of expected U.S.-Ukraine talks on ways to end Russia’s invasion of its neighbor.

A man and a woman were killed and six people wounded, including two children, when a Russian drone hit a house in the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, regional head Ivan Fedorov said. Russian strikes also knocked out power across much of the northern Ukrainian region of Chernihiv, according to local officials.

In Russia, two women were killed and another wounded by Ukrainian shelling of the Belgorod border region, Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said.

The attacks came ahead of expected U.S.-Ukraine talks, which Ukrainian state media reported would take place later in the day in Miami. The White House did not confirm any meeting with the Ukrainian delegation.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said late Thursday he had sent a delegation to the U.S. in a bid to move forward suspended U.S.-brokered talks on ending Russia’s invasion. Trilateral talks involving Russia, which have yet to produce any breakthrough on key issues, have been on ice while the Iran war has dominated international attention.

Zelenskyy said the main goal of the meeting will be to ensure that the trilateral talks resume and that Washington continues to allow other NATO countries to purchase American weapons to send to Ukraine.

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Ukrainian servicemen hit a Russian drone at the site of a house hit by an earlier drone strike in Zaporizhzhia on Saturday.Stringer/Reuters

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday that a new round of U.S.-mediated negotiations between Moscow and Kyiv will likely take place soon.

Over the past year, Western European officials have repeatedly accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of dragging his feet in negotiations while he tries to press his bigger army’s battlefield initiative and capture more Ukrainian land. Russian forces hold nearly 20 per cent of Ukraine.

The latest conflict in the Middle East that began Feb. 28 with Israeli and U.S. strikes on Iran has diverted international attention from Ukraine’s plight. At the same time, Russia is getting a financial windfall from a temporary U.S. waiver on oil sanctions, while Ukraine is desperately short of cash and still waiting for a €90-billion (roughly $142-billion) loan promised by the European Union.

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