Ukraine says 39 killed in rocket strike on rail evacuation hub
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[April 08, 2022]
By Natalia Zinets and Sergiy Karazy
LVIV/BORODYANKA, Ukraine (Reuters) - At
least 39 people were killed and 87 wounded on Friday when two rockets
hit a railway station in eastern Ukraine packed with evacuees, Ukrainian
authorities said, as the region braced for a major Russian offensive.
Reuters could not immediately verify the information coming from the
city of Kramatorsk.
Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of the Donetsk region, said thousands of
civilians had been at the station at the time the rockets struck, in
what he described as a deliberate attack. Many of the wounded were in
serious condition, he said.
"They wanted to sow panic and fear, they wanted to take as many
civilians as possible," he said. Kyrylenko published a photograph online
showing several bodies on the ground beside piles of suitcases and other
luggage. Reuters could not immediately verify the photo.
The Russian defence ministry was quoted by RIA news agency as saying the
missiles said to have struck the station were used only by Ukraine's
military and that Russia's armed forces had no targets assigned in
Kramatorsk on Friday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said no Ukrainian troops were at
the station. "Russian forces (fired) on an ordinary train station, on
ordinary people, there were no soldiers there," he told Finland's
parliament in a video address.
Moscow has denied targeting civilians since invading Ukraine on Feb. 24
in what it calls a "special military operation" to demilitarise and "denazify"
its neighbour. Ukraine and Western supporters call that a pretext for an
unprovoked invasion.
Ukrainian officials say Russia is regrouping forces after withdrawing
from the capital Kyiv's outskirts for a new thrust to try to gain full
control of the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk partly held by
Moscow-backed separatists since 2014.
Ukraine's military general staff said on Friday that Russian forces were
focused on capturing the besieged southeastern port of Mariupol,
fighting near the eastern city of Izyum and breakthroughs by Ukrainian
forces near Donetsk.
European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell condemned the
"indiscriminate attack" in Kramatorsk. "This is yet another attempt to
close escape routes for those fleeing this unjustified war and cause,"
he said on Twitter.
While efforts continued to evacuate civilians from the east and south of
Ukraine at risk of a Russian onslaught, residents of areas north of Kyiv
recaptured from Russian forces were still coming to terms with the
horror of a month-long occupation.
After civilian deaths in the town of Bucha were widely condemned by the
West as war crimes, Zelenskiy said the situation in Borodyanka - another
town northwest of Kyiv - was "significantly more dreadful."
He offered no further detail or evidence that Russia was responsible for
civilian deaths in the town.
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Firefighters work at the site of buildings that were destroyed by
shelling, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Borodyanka, in the
Kyiv region, Ukraine, April 7, 2022. REUTERS/Marko Djurica
As rescue teams there searched
through the rubble of a charred apartment block with its middle
section razed to the ground, families looking for relatives watched.
"My mother, my brother, brother’s wife, his mother and
father-in-law, are still there, as well as other people who were
there in the basement," resident Vadym Zagrebelnyi told Reuters.
Russia has denied targeting civilians and says images of bodies in
Bucha were staged to justify more sanctions and derail peace
negotiations.
In Yahidne, a village north of the capital,
residents recounted how more than 300 people were trapped for weeks
by Russian occupiers in a school basement, with names of those who
did not survive the harsh conditions or were killed by soldiers
scrawled on the wall.
Russia's invasion has seen more than 4 million people flee abroad,
killed or injured thousands, turned cities into rubble and led to
sweeping sanctions that Moscow says put its economy in the most
difficult situation in three decades.
On Friday, Britain joined Washington in blacklisting President
Vladimir Putin's daughters, while Borrell and the head of the EU
executive Ursula von der Leyen were due to meet Zelenskiy in Kyiv to
offer financial and moral support.
The bloc on Thursday signed off another round of sanctions including
a coal embargo with a 120-day wind-down period sought by Germany,
and has said it will look at banning oil imports next.
Still, Ukraine continues to plead for more military support from its
allies and a total ban on Russian oil and gas imports.
"Ukraine needs weapons which will give it the means to win on the
battlefield and that will be the strongest possible sanction against
Russia," Zelenskiy said in a late Thursday video address.
Moscow, which has previously acknowledged its military move into
Ukraine has not progressed as quickly as it wanted, on Thursday also
acknowledged its rising death toll.
"We have significant losses of troops," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry
Peskov told Sky News. "It's a huge tragedy for us."
BODIES
Ukraine's prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktova, said that in the
Kyiv region, which includes Borodyanka, Bucha and other towns and
villages such as Irpin, authorities had found 650 bodies, with 40 of
them children.
Ukraine's prosecutors said 169 children had been killed and 306
wounded in the country since the start of the invasion.
Bucha's mayor has said dozens were the victims of extra-judicial
killings carried out by Russian troops. Reuters could not
independently verify those figures.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Lincoln Feast and Tomasz
Janowski; Editing by Robert Birsel and Mark Heinrich)
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