Miami Herald

Russian missiles kill at least 14 in northern Ukraine

- BY PAUL GODFREY UPI.com

Russian missile strikes targeting the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv Wednesday killed at least 14 people and injured more than 60 including two children, authoritie­s said.

A 25-year-old off-duty female police officer was among those killed in the attack targeting civilian and social infrastruc­ture in downtown districts of the city, 95 miles northeast of the capital, Kyiv, reported Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko, saying that three people remained missing and warning that the death toll could rise in the unfolding rescue effort.

National Police of Ukraine named her as Inspector Alina Mykolaets who had been in the service since June. She died from a shrapnel wound sustained at home where she was recuperati­ng from an illness, according to the force.

Appealing for people to donate blood, Chernihiv Regional Military Administra­tion head Vyacheslav Chaus said a command center had been set up and rescuers and medics were working all out to deal with the aftermath of what he said were “three enemy missile strikes almost in the center of the city.”

“There are dead civilians, there are many wounded. Rescuers and medics are working now. All necessary assistance is being provided,” he wrote on social media.

The president’s office said the attack razed an eight-story building and damaged four other highrise buildings, a hospital, a higher education institutio­n and dozens of cars.

Offering his condolence­s to the victims’ families, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy used the incident to double down on his plea for “sufficient” military aid and support from the United States and Europe.

“This would not have happened if Ukraine had received a sufficient number of air defense systems and if the world’s determinat­ion to counter Russian terror had been sufficient,” he said in a post on X.

“Terrorists can only destroy lives if they first intimidate those who can stop terror and save lives. Determinat­ion matters. Support matters. The Ukrainian determinat­ion is sufficient. There must be equally sufficient determinat­ion from our partners and, as a result, sufficient support.”

Zelenskyy’s comments came amid signs of movement on a $60 billion foreign aid supplement­al funding package that has been stalled in Congress for four months with House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., saying Monday that representa­tives would vote this week on two separate aid packages for Israel and Ukraine, in response to “precipitat­ing events around the globe.”

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