Factbox-What do we know about the Ukrainian New Year's Eve attack on
Russian troops?
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[January 03, 2023]
MAKIIVKA, Ukraine (Reuters) - A Ukrainian missile strike
on Jan. 1 against a vocational school in the Russian-controlled Donetsk
region of Ukraine housing mobilised Russian troops has become one of the
bloodiest incidents of Russia's nearly year-long war in Ukraine.
What do we know, and what do we not know, about what happened?
WHAT HAPPENED
The strike on Professional Technical School No. 19 in Makiivka, a twin
city to the regional capital of Donetsk which has been controlled by
Russian proxy forces since 2014, occurred at 0001 on New Year's Day,
Daniil Bezsonov, a Russian-installed Donetsk official, said.
Russia's defence ministry said Ukraine struck with six U.S.-made HIMARS
rockets.
The governor of Russia's Samara region said that many of the dead
soldiers were locals.
Unconfirmed footage circulated on social media purportedly shows
residents watching Russian President Vladimir Putin's midnight address
before running for cover as missiles strike the ground nearby.
Reuters photographs from the scene show the ruined remains of the
school.
LOSSES
Reports of casualties vary. Reuters was unable to independently verify
how many people were killed.
Russia's defence ministry said on Monday that 63 soldiers had been
killed in the strike, an assessment echoed by a source close to
Donetsk's Russia-installed separatist leadership, who told Reuters that
dozens had died.
The ministry acknowledged the attack only in the final paragraph of a
528-word daily roundup, more than 36 hours after the attack took place.
Russia has consistently underplayed its casualty figures, including
claiming that only one man died during the sinking of the battleship
Moskva in April.
Ukraine has claimed a far higher casualty figure, saying that around 400
died. A number of Russian military bloggers, who have gained large
followings through mixing pro-Kremlin advocacy with unvarnished
information on the state of the front, have also given casualty figures
closer to the Ukrainian number.
In a post on the Telegram messaging app, Igor Girkin, a former FSB
officer instrumental in starting the initial 2014 war in the Donbas,
said that there were "many hundreds" of killed and injured.
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Workers remove debris of a destroyed
building purported to be a vocational college used as temporary
accommodation for Russian soldiers, 63 of whom were killed in a
Ukrainian missile strike as stated the previous day by Russia's
Defence Ministry, in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict in
Makiivka (Makeyevka), Russian-controlled Ukraine, January 3, 2023.
REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
Girkin said that ammunition and military equipment had been stored
in the buildings, contributing to the strength of the blast. He
blamed Russia's "untrainable" generals for the losses.
Grey Zone, a Telegram channel linked to the Wagner mercenary outfit,
said that around 500 men were billeted in the complex.
In footage circulated on social media and geolocated by Reuters, the
vocational school, a large complex of Soviet-era buildings, appears
virtually razed as emergency service workers sift through rubble.
OUTCRY
Coming at the climax of the new year's celebrations, the most
important holiday of the year in Russia, the attack has resonated
within Russia.
A report by state-owned news agency TASS, citing Donetsk officials,
saying that Ukrainian forces were able to identify the target from
soldiers using their Russian mobile phones has provoked anger among
Russia's military blogger community.
"As expected, the blame for what happened in Makiivka began to be
blamed on the mobilised soldiers themselves. You see, they turned on
their phones and got spotted," wrote Grey Zone, a Telegram channel
linked to the Wagner Group mercenary outfit.
Grey Zone went on to blame commanders for lodging large numbers of
soldiers in a building vulnerable to artillery fire.
In a post on Telegram, Sergei Mironov, leader of a Kremlin-loyal
party in Russia's parliament, said that an investigation was
necessary to determine whether "treachery or criminal negligence"
was behind the strike. He said that officials responsible should be
prosecuted.
(Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Nick Macfie)
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