Leicester Mercury

School bombing raid ‘possible war crime’

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A BOMBING raid on a Ukrainian school where people were sheltering is a possible war crime, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has said.

Dozens are feared dead after the school in Bilohorivk­a in the Luhansk region of eastern Ukraine was bombed and caught fire on Saturday.

The Foreign Secretary said she was “horrified” and added Vladimir Putin’s regime in Moscow would be held to account.

Around 90 people were thought to have been sheltering at the school but just 30 have been rescued.

Ms Truss tweeted: “Horrified by Russia’s latest attack on a school in Luhansk, resulting in the deaths of innocent people sheltering from Russian bombardmen­t.”

She said the deliberate targeting of civilians and infrastruc­ture “amounts to war crimes” and “we will ensure Putin’s regime is held accountabl­e”.

Her comments came as G7 leaders, including Boris Johnson and Joe Biden, prepared for talks with Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky.

The UK’s Ministry of Defence suggested Russian forces were struggling because of the high casualty rate among Moscow’s commanders.

A defence intelligen­ce update said: “Difficulti­es in command and control, as well as faltering Russian performanc­e on the front line, have drawn senior commanders onto the battlefiel­d, likely to take personal leadership of operations.”

This has put them at risk of being targeted, with “disproport­ionately high losses of Russian officers in this conflict”.

“This has resulted in a force that is slow to respond to setbacks and unable to alter its approach on the battlefiel­d,” the update said.

“These issues are likely to endure given the relative lack of operationa­l command experience of the officers promoted in place of those killed.”

The UK has pledged an extra £1.3bn in military support to Ukraine, in a dramatic escalation of assistance for Mr Zelensky’s forces as they fight the Russian invasion.

It is the highest rate of UK military spending on a conflict since the height of the campaigns in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

The £1.3bn, drawn from the UK’s reserves, includes £300m of military kit promised by Mr Johnson earlier this week, such as antibatter­y radar systems to target Russian artillery, GPS jamming equipment and night vision devices.

The Prime Minister will host a meeting of arms companies later this month to discuss increasing production in response to the demand created by the conflict in Ukraine.

Officials said the announceme­nt would help support the British arms industry, which could benefit from the global shift away from reliance on equipment from sanctions-hit Russia.

The Prime Minister said: “Putin’s brutal attack is not only causing untold devastatio­n in Ukraine, it is also threatenin­g peace and security across Europe.

“The UK was the first country to recognise the scale of the threat and send arms to help the Ukrainians defend themselves.

“We will stand by that endeavour, working with our allies to ensure Ukraine can continue to push back the Russian invasion and survive as a free and democratic country.

“In the process, we are bolstering our own security and economy, turbocharg­ing the developmen­t and production of cuttingedg­e defence equipment here in the UK.”

 ?? ?? Foreign Secretary Liz Truss
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss

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