MORE than 30 Russian sailors are believed to have died after a British-supplied missile sank a key Russian warship in Crimea.
The strike is said to have triggered an explosion of ammunition on the Novocherkassk landing ship which had some 77 people on board.
Of the dozens on board, 33 are now reportedly considered "missing" and 19 wounded.
The vessel was in the port of Feodosia in annexed Crimea when the attack was launched on Boxing Day, according to independent ASTRA media.
Windows in residential blocks nearby were smashed by the brutal force of the explosion, which was reportedly caused by a £2.5million British-supplied Storm Shadow missile and came as a major blow to Vladimir Putin amid his failing war in Ukraine.
Reports suggest the ship's commander Captain Nikolay Stepanenko, 39, survived the attack or was not on the vessel.
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His wife Oksana previously said she "suspected" he was on board, but he was quoted by Agentsvo independent media as saying: "No one was injured, everything is smooth, everything is fine."
Pictures appear to show the ship was completely destroyed and sunk.
One in particular, shared today by Telegram channel Crimean Wind Reserve, showed a charred and crumbling vessel.
The image's description read: "Yesterday evening, the Novocherkassk landing ship continued to be extinguished, both from the shore and from the MB-304 tugboat of the Russian Black Sea Fleet.
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"Pay attention to the pile of iron in the water - this is a former large landing ship."
And a report stated four ambulances took wounded sailors to Sevastopol as there was no space in Feodosian hospitals.
In previous strikes on Russian warships, all of the people who were officially listed as "missing" were later revealed to be dead.
Ukrainian Telegram channel Crimean Wind said today: "Let us translate into normal language - ‘missing people’ are those who burned to the ground or simply evaporated as a result of the explosion.
"Similarly, the Russian government announced ‘missing people’ after the destruction of the Minsk landing craft and the Rostov-on-Don submarine at Sevmorzavod.
"And then [afterwards] the Russian regional media began publishing obituaries with the words ‘the entire crew died, we express our condolences’."
A large quantity of munitions were said to have been on board the ship when the UK-supplied missile struck.
One piece of the ship's hull was found more than half a mile from the explosion site while other debris was scattered around Feodosia.
Some 4,400 pieces of artillery ammunition, 280 missiles for the BM-21 Grad MLRS, and Iranian Shahed drones intended to be used to strike Ukrainian targets were on board the Novocherkassk, according to reports.
The Russian UTS-150 training vessel was also damaged in the strike.
Earlier, Ukraine claimed "the ship's crew" were killed with one official, Anton Gerashchenko, reporting 62 were on board - a different figure to the ASTRA report.
Spokesman for the Ukrainian air force Yuriy Ignat said: "After such an explosion, it is clear that not only the ship itself was destroyed.
"Maybe some other port infrastructure, maybe some support vessels that were nearby and definitely - the ship's crew…"
Unconfirmed Ukrainian claims previously claimed on Telegram that "dozens" of Russians died in the strike.
The Crimean Wind channel said: "As we are informed, there are dozens of dead and wounded on the Novocherkassk landing ship.
"Ambulances are rushing back and forth."
Last month, Ukraine destroyed Putin’s newest Black Sea Fleet warship - missile carrier Askold - in Kerch before it had even been sent to sea.
And another brutal strike destroyed the Sevastopol headquarters of Putin's Black Sea Fleet on September 22.
Nine days earlier, Ukrainian missiles hit the £250million Kilo-class attack submarine Rostov-on-Don and large landing ship Minsk in a repair shipyard in naval port Sevastopol.
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It took Russia a year to admit it had lost the landing ship Saratov in a missile strike in Berdiansk, a port in the Sea of Azov.
The warship Novocherkassk was damaged earlier in the war - and evidently repaired - as was warship Caesar Kunikov.