U.S. citizen killed in Ukraine while waiting in bread line, family says
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[March 18, 2022]
By Kanishka Singh and Simon Lewis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A U.S. citizen who
had been caring for his partner in a Ukrainian hospital was killed by
Russian fire as he waited in a bread line after briefly stepping out to
buy food, his family said on Thursday.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken confirmed the death of an American,
identified by his sisters as Jimmy Hill and mourned as "the helper that
people could find in a crisis".
One of his sisters, Katya Hill, told CNN he had stayed in the hospital
in Chernihiv, the site of heavy Russian bombardment during its invasion,
to be alongside his Ukrainian partner as she battled multiple sclerosis.
"As things were deteriorating in the city ... my brother was the one
that was going out to the store to bring back what food he could find,"
she told CNN.
Another of his sisters, Cheryl Hill Gordon, wrote on Facebook that her
brother was waiting in a bread line with several others on Wednesday
when they were gunned down by Russian forces.
Reuters could not independently verify the circumstances of his death.
Chernihiv police said an American had been killed by Russian shelling.
Blinken did not offer any details.
Hill's own Facebook posts gave a glimpse of the situation on the
frontline as he repeatedly wrote about explosions, food shortages and
intense bombing during the Russian assault.
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A residential building damaged by shelling is seen, as Russia's
attack on Ukraine continues, in Chernihiv, Ukraine, in this handout
picture released March 17, 2022. Press service of the State
Emergency Service of Ukraine/Handout via REUTERS
"Intense bombing! still alive.
Limited food. Room very cold," Hill said in his last Facebook post
on Tuesday. In another post on the same day, he wrote that "bombing
has intensified".
Hill's Facebook profile identified him as a teacher at universities
in Kyiv and Warsaw. He was a native of Minnesota.
At least 53 civilians have been killed in the frontline city of
Chernihiv over the past 24 hours, said Viacheslav Chaus, the
region's governor. The toll could not be independently verified.
Russia denies targeting civilians in what it calls a "special
operation" in Ukraine.
Food and other basic necessities have been scarce amid Russia's
bombardment. Hill's sister, Katya, said her brother had kept a stash
of chocolates with him in the hospital.
That allowed Hill to "hand out chocolates whenever somebody was
depressed, or just needed a little encouragement."
(Writing by Rami Ayyub; editing by Richard Pullin and Stephen
Coates)
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