San Diego Union-Tribune

RUSSIAN ATTACK DEVASTATES SMALL TOWN

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Grieving families awaited news of loved ones into the night. A mobile phone somewhere among the charred personal belongings rang and rang, with no one to answer. The bodies — more than 50 in all — were sheathed in white bags and carted away near a slide and a swing set in a children’s playground.

Thursday’s strike in the tiny village of Hroza, where the population had dwindled from about 500 before the war, killed about 1 in 6 of the town’s remaining 300 residents, Ukrainian officials said.

By Friday morning, the death toll had climbed to 52, with six other people injured, Oleh Synyehubov, the regional military administra­tor, said on the Telegram messaging app. A 6-year-old boy was among the dead, he said.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in his nightly address, appeared to struggle to find the words to denounce the attack, one of the deadliest on civilians in recent months and all the more devastatin­g because it struck people gathered at a memorial service. To call it “beastly,” he said, would be an affront to beasts.

“It was not a blind attack. People had gathered there for a memorial meal, a Christian memorial meal. Who could launch a missile at them? Who?” he asked.

Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said at a news briefing Friday that the Russian military does not strike civilian targets and that attacks are only carried out on military infrastruc­ture.

Search and rescue at the site of the attack, which Zelenskyy said had hit a grocery store and a cafe, concluded shortly before 8 p.m. Thursday, according to Ukraine’s state emergency services.

But emergency workers continued to comb through the scene Friday, dismantlin­g the rubble and inspecting the site, according to Synyehubov, who said they were finding more remains. As they worked, people came to lay flowers and light candles. Three bouquets of red roses were placed next to a small brown teddy bear.

The village is 23 miles from the front line but without any obvious military or industrial targets in the vicinity. The U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights, Volker Türk, said he was on the scene himself and had deployed a field team to the site to “speak to survivors and gather more informatio­n” on the attack, according to a news release.

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