Baltimore Sun

Southern city’s residents reel in wake of Russian rocket hit

- By Cara Anna

ZAPORIZHZH­IA, Ukraine — The boy was at home when the rocket struck across the street and the window shattered. Stunned, he found his father and crawled under his blanket. They clung to each other and asked, “Are you still alive?”

Then the father noticed blood. Glass shards had cut the boy’s right leg to the bone.

The 11-year-old boy was one of at least three people wounded Thursday morning in what emergency officials called the first strike in a residentia­l area of the southern city of Zaporizhzh­ia since Russia’s invasion began. The city has been a crucial waypoint for tens of thousands of people fleeing the besieged southern port of Mariupol and is home to Europe’s largest nuclear plant.

The rocket strike came as parts of southern Ukraine are preparing for a further onslaught by Russian forces who seek to strip the country of its Black Sea and Sea of Azov coasts.

Residents said at least eight homes in the modest neighborho­od were damaged or destroyed.

The rocket had been hit by Ukraine’s anti-aircraft system, emergency services official Pavlo Zhukov said at the scene, adding that a direct hit on the neighborho­od would have been far worse.

The boy’s father, Vadym Vodostoyev, stood in the courtyard and held up his still-shaking hands.

“There’s no military here, no strategic facilities,” he said. “We were no threat to them.”

He thought of his son and came close to tears.“It just takes one second and you’re left with nothing,” he said.

Ukrainians have been living with that fear for two months now.

The rocket bent a metal garage door inward, rippled ceilings and cracked walls. It killed a neighbor’s dog.

Katerina Klimasheva, 68, was standing in her kitchen making coffee. The shock wave from the rocket slammed the door of her cupboard into her. It left glass shards embedded in the chest of one of her sons.

“Fascists,” she said of the Russian leadership in

Moscow. “I’m Russian. We’re Russian. But I’ve lived here all my life. I’ve not seen such people. And then they say attacks like these are false.”

Klimasheva said she assumed the rocket had been meant for the railway nearby or for the local steel plant. Russia has been targeting Ukraine’s infrastruc­ture for weeks, smashing factories, fuel depots, bridges and highways in a destructiv­e fury that will take billions to rebuild.

Another of her sons, Anatoly Kongurtsev, waved a hammer through the broken kitchen window in anger.

“Attacking children? What can I say?” he said. “They’re swine.”

Across the street, steps from the rocket’s crater, 26-year-old constructi­on worker Artem Lazarenko was thankful he had woken up and wandered into a back room of his now-destroyed house. Dried blood crusted in his left ear where his eardrum had burst.

“Nobody knows what’s inside their heads,” he said of the Russians. “Nobody wants to fight, but I will if I have to.”

 ?? FRANCISCO SECO/AP ?? Ukrainian emergency workers and locals remove debris of destroyed houses Thursday after a Russian rocket strike in a residentia­l area in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine.
FRANCISCO SECO/AP Ukrainian emergency workers and locals remove debris of destroyed houses Thursday after a Russian rocket strike in a residentia­l area in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine.

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