Los Angeles Times

Russian missiles kill at least 21 in Ukraine’s Odesa region

- By Francesca Ebel

POKROVSK, Ukraine — Russian missile attacks on residentia­l areas killed at least 21 people early Friday near the Ukrainian port of Odesa, authoritie­s said, a day after the withdrawal of Moscow’s forces from an island in the Black Sea seemed to ease the threat to the city.

Video of the predawn attack showed the charred remains of buildings in the small town of Serhiivka about 30 miles southwest of Odesa. The office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said three Kh-22 missiles fired by Russian bombers struck an apartment building and a campsite.

Ukrainian authoritie­s interprete­d the attack as response for Russian troops being forced from Snake Island a day earlier.

Though Moscow portrayed its departure as a “goodwill gesture” to help unblock exports of grain from the country, Ukraine said Russia’s forces fled because of relentless attacks by the Ukrainian military. Russia took control of the island in the opening days of the war in the apparent hope of using it as a staging ground for an assault on Odesa, Ukraine’s biggest port and the headquarte­rs of its navy.

“The occupiers cannot win on the battlefiel­d, so they resort to vile killing of civilians,” said Ivan Bakanov, head of Ukraine’s security service. “After the enemy was dislodged from Snake Island, he decided to respond with the cynical shelling of civilian targets.”

Ukraine’s military reported late Friday on social media that two Russian Su-30 warplanes bombed Snake Island with phosphorus bombs. Black-and-white aerial video showed two blasts hitting the island. The warplanes reportedly struck from the east, from Belbek, on the Russian-occupied Crimean peninsula. The Russian military did not immediatel­y comment.

Large numbers of civilians died in Russian strikes and shelling earlier in the war, including at a hospital, a theater used as a bomb shelter and a train station. Until this week, mass casualties involving residents appeared to become more infrequent as Moscow concentrat­ed on capturing eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region.

But Russian missiles struck the Kyiv region last weekend after weeks of relative calm around the capital, and an airstrike Monday on a shopping mall in the central city of Kremenchuk killed at least 19 people.

A U.S. Defense official said Friday in Washington that Russian forces appeared to use an anti-ship missile in the mall attack, a type of weapon that he said is not accurate against land targets. Russia’s Defense Ministry spokesman said earlier this week that warplanes fired precisiong­uided missiles at a depot that contained Western weapons and ammunition, which detonated and set the mall on fire. Ukrainian authoritie­s said that in addition to the direct hit on the mall, a factory was struck, but denied it housed weapons.

Zelensky said that, as in Monday’s shopping mall attack in Kremenchuk, Russian forces on Friday appeared to use anti-ship missiles to hit Serhiivka.

“These missiles, Kh-22, were designed to destroy aircraft carriers and other large warships, and the Russian army used them against an ordinary nine-story building with ordinary civilian people,” he said at a news conference Friday.

Twenty-one people — including an 11-year-old boy, his mother and the 42-yearold coach of a children’s soccer team — were killed and 38 others, including six children and a pregnant woman, were hospitaliz­ed, Ukrainian officials reported. Most of the victims were in the apartment building.

Asked about Friday’s strike, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov reiterated Moscow’s claim that it wasn’t targeting residentia­l areas during the war, which is now in its fifth month. The Russian military is trying to strike munitions depots, weapon repair factories and troop training facilities, he said.

Oleh Zhdanov, an independen­t Ukrainian military analyst, said that the Russian departure from Snake Island has “colossal psychologi­cal significan­ce” for Ukraine.

“Snake Island is key for controllin­g the Black Sea and could help cover the Russian attack if the Kremlin opted for an amphibious landing operation in Odesa or elsewhere in the region,” he said. “Now those plans are pushed back.”

Ukraine’s military said that a barrage of its artillery and missiles forced the Russians to flee in two small speedboats. The number of withdrawin­g troops was not disclosed. The island took on significan­ce early in the war as a symbol of Ukraine’s resistance to the Russian invasion after Ukrainian troops there reportedly responded with defiance to a demand from a Russian warship to surrender or be bombed.

Zelensky said that although the pullout did not guarantee the Black Sea region’s safety, it would “significan­tly limit” Russian activities there.

“Step by step, we will push [Russia] out of our sea, our land, our sky,” he said in his nightly address.

In eastern Ukraine, Russian forces kept up their push to encircle the last stronghold of resistance in Luhansk, one of two provinces that make up the country’s Donbas region.

Luhansk Gov. Serhiy Haidai said the Russians were trying to encircle the city of Lysychansk and fighting for control over an oil refinery on the city’s edge.

 ?? Ukrainian Emergency Service ?? FIRST RESPONDERS work in a damaged residentia­l building near Odesa, Ukraine. Missile attacks came a day after Russian forces withdrew from a Black Sea island, which seemed to ease the threat to the port city.
Ukrainian Emergency Service FIRST RESPONDERS work in a damaged residentia­l building near Odesa, Ukraine. Missile attacks came a day after Russian forces withdrew from a Black Sea island, which seemed to ease the threat to the port city.

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