South Wales Evening Post

Station targeted, killing at least 30

-

RUSSIA may have committed another war crime by targeting fleeing civilians at an eastern Ukraine railway station with precision missiles, the Defence Secretary said.

Ben Wallace vowed to “do everything” to ensure Vladimir Putin fails in Ukraine and confirmed Britain will be sending Mastiff armoured vehicles to aid the fight against the Russian president’s forces.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said at least 30 people were killed in the attack on the crowded Kramatorsk station that was an evacuation point for civilians.

A further 100 people were injured, Mr Zelenskyy said, as he blamed Russia for “an evil without limits”, while the Kremlin denied targeting the station.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she was “appalled”, adding: “The targeting of civilians is a war crime. We will hold Russia and Putin to account.”

Mr Wallace, visiting Romania for talks, said the strike was a repeat of the Russian president and his generals targeting civilians.

Speaking in Constanta, he said: “Not very far away this morning in a place called Kramatorsk, what appear to be Russian missiles

struck civilian people queuing for trains to seek a safer place from the war.

“The striking of civilians and critical infrastruc­ture is a war crime. These were precision missiles aimed at people trying to seek humanitari­an shelter.”

Mr Wallace said the sanctions targeting Russia must not be lifted to allow Mr Putin to go back to “his superyacht­s and normality”.

“Whatever happens in Ukraine we must not let the internatio­nal community forget that. What Putin is doing here today is creating his own cage around himself,” he said.

He said the RAF will increase its contributi­on to protect Nato’s eastern flank in Romania from four to six Typhoon jets, “because

Putin listens to only one thing and that is strength”.

“We’ll do everything to see him defeated in Ukraine. There is more to do, Britain will do more, it will contribute more,” he added.

Mr Wallace said the West cannot provoke Mr Putin any more with jets over Nato land, with the Kremlin having already expended thousands of Russian lives in the invasion.

But he said the Russian president will hear the western response.

“Where is the Russian economy now, where is the rouble now? Where are his friends?” he said.

“If his friends are Belarus, and North Korea, and Venezuela, that’s not a party I want to attend. That’s not much of a friendship group worth having,” he said.

In an interview with Sky News, Mr Wallace confirmed the UK will be sending armoured vehicles to Ukraine in what will be a first, after previously supplying antitank and anti-aircraft missiles.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian football club Shakhtar Donetsk will play a series of charity games on a government-backed Global Tour for Peace that will raise money for the country’s military in the war against Russia.

 ?? ?? Ukrainian servicemen stand next to a fragment of a Tochka-u missile with writing in Russian “For children”, after Russian shelling at the station in Kramatorsk
Ukrainian servicemen stand next to a fragment of a Tochka-u missile with writing in Russian “For children”, after Russian shelling at the station in Kramatorsk
 ?? ?? A blast near the station
A blast near the station

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom