Russian missiles destroy hotel and apartments, Ukraine says
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[August 08, 2023]
By Vladyslav Smilianets
POKROVSK, Ukraine (Reuters) -Russian missiles struck the eastern
Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk twice on Monday night, destroying a popular
hotel and apartments, killing at least seven people and wounding scores,
officials said on Tuesday.
Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said seven people, including five
civilians, were killed. Overnight, regional officials said that eight
people had died.
"We are resuming clearing the rubble. At night, we were forced to
suspend work due to the high threat of repeated shelling," Klymenko said
on the Telegram messaging app.
Two missiles hit the centre of Pokrovsk within 40 minutes of each other,
witnesses said. Pictures posted by officials showed that the hotel, in
the centre of the city, suffered a direct hit, with several floors
missing.
Residents said the Druzhba (Friendship) Hotel was popular with
journalists, aid workers and the military. It was one of the few still
operating in the eastern Donetsk region, close to the frontline.
In his evening address, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that Russia
used Iskander ballistic missiles to attack “usual residential buildings”
in Pokrovsk.
Witnesses told a Reuters cameraman that responders to the first strike
were killed and injured in the second strike.
Two rescuers were among the dead, they said. The interior ministry said
that 29 police officers and seven rescuers were injured. Two children
and 29 civilians were also among the wounded.
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A view shows residential buildings
damaged by a Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on
Ukraine, in Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, Ukraine August 8, 2023.
REUTERS/Viacheslav Ratynskyi
Kateryna, a 58-year-old resident of Pokrovsk, was at home when she
heard the first blast. She told a relative who called to check on
her that she was all right but then the block was hit in a second
blast.
"That’s it, bang – and that’s all. A flame filled up my eyes. I fell
down on the floor, on the ground. My eyes (hurt) a lot," Kateryna
told Reuters, pointing at multiple scratches around her eyes. She
had bandages on her forehead.
Video footage showed rescuers sifting through rubble, wreckage of a
car and an apartment building with balconies torn away from the
wall.
Another resident, 75-year-old Lidia, said she was on the phone when
the second blast hit. She had just picked up a torn white curtain
covered with broken glass from the first blast.
"Suddenly this flew out and wrapped me up. Then the window fell on
me," she said from her sofa.
"My back has cuts. I just got back from the hospital... My knee and
my thigh have cuts." Pointing at her head, she said: "I had glass
here."
(Reporting by Vladyslav Smilianets in Pokrovsk, writing by Olena
Harmash, editing by Nick Macfie)
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