Hindustan Times (Noida)

Bodies line streets as Russia attacks another civilian target

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com Attack on Ukraine

Ukraine said at least 50 people were killed on Friday and many more wounded in a rocket strike at a railway station packed with civilians fleeing the threat of a major Russian offensive in the country’s east.

As regional authoritie­s scrambled to evacuate the vulnerable, European Union leaders visited Kyiv to offer President Volodymyr Zelensky support and assure him there would be a path to EU membership for Ukraine.

Zelensky called the strike on the station in Kramatorsk in the eastern region of Donetsk a deliberate attack on civilians. The town’s mayor estimated that about 4,000 people were gathered there at the time.

Regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said the station was hit by a Tochka U short-range ballistic missile containing cluster munitions, which explode in mid-air, spraying small lethal bomblets over a wider area.

“They wanted to sow panic and fear, they wanted to take as many civilians as possible,” he said, adding that evacuation­s by rail from the region, where Ukrainian officials are anticipati­ng a new thrust by Russian forces, would continue.

Reuters was unable to verify what happened in Kramatorsk.

The use of cluster munitions is banned under a 2008 convention. Russia has not signed it but has previously denied using such armaments in Ukraine.

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.

Zelensky said no Ukrainian troops were at the station. “Russian forces (fired) on an ordinary train station, on ordinary people,” he told Finland’s parliament in a video address.

Kramatorsk mayor Oleksander Honcharenk­o said some victims of the attack had lost a leg or arm. “The hospitals are carrying out about 40 operations simultaneo­usly,” he told an online briefing.

The White House decried the “horrific and devastatin­g images” of the attack which EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, in Kyiv with the head of the EU executive Ursula von der Leyen, condemned on Twitter as “yet another attempt to close escape routes for those fleeing this unjustifie­d war”.

Ukrainian officials say Russia’s military is regrouping after withdrawin­g eastwards from the zone around Kyiv, where a forensics team on Friday began exhuming a mass grave in the town of Bucha.

The grave’s discovery last week galvanised the West into toughening sanctions against Russia and speeding up arms deliveries to Ukraine.

Since Russian troops pulled back from Bucha, Ukrainian officials say hundreds of dead civilians have been found there.

Visiting the town on Friday, von der Leyen said it had witnessed the “unthinkabl­e” and that said the EU would do everything to support Ukraine in securing membership of the bloc.

Russia has called allegation­s that its forces executed civilians in Bucha a “monstrous forgery” aimed at denigratin­g its army.*

Ukraine’s military general staff said on Friday that Russian troops were focused on capturing the besieged southeaste­rn port of Mariupol, fighting near the eastern city of Izyum and breakthrou­ghs by Ukrainian forces near Donetsk.

Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktov­a, said authoritie­s had found 650 bodies, 40 of them children, in the Kyiv region.

The West has imposed more sanctions on Russia since the images surfaced, with Washington sanctionin­g top Russian lenders and President Vladimir Putin’s daughters, a move echoed by Britain on Friday, while the EU banned nearly 20 billion euros worth of trade, including Russian coal.

Zelensky has urged Brussels to also ban Russian oil and gas. Borrell said a potential oil ban would be discussed on Monday in Brussels.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? (Left-right) Bodies laid on the ground after a rocket attack at a train station in Kramatorsk; European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen (centre) in Bucha.
REUTERS (Left-right) Bodies laid on the ground after a rocket attack at a train station in Kramatorsk; European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen (centre) in Bucha.

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