San Francisco Chronicle

Russia hits train station — 52 killed

Missile strike comes as thousands try to flee

- By Patrick J. McDonnell, Henry Chu and Kate Linthicum

KYIV, Ukraine — Dozens of civilians were killed Friday in a Russian missile strike on a train station packed with evacuees, according to Ukrainian officials, who warned that they expect to uncover more evidence of gruesome war crimes in parts of the country previously controlled by Russian troops.

Ukraine said a railway station in the city of Kramatorsk where thousands of people had gathered for evacuation from their war-torn districts was hit by a Russian rocket Friday morning. At least 52 people were killed — including several children

— and about 100 were wounded, officials said.

Photos posted on Telegram by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy showed bodies strewn across the train platform alongside suitcases, stuffed animals and a baby carriage.

In recent days, officials had been urging civilians to flee Kramatorsk and other parts of eastern Ukraine, where Russia has begun regrouping its forces after they failed to conquer the capital, Kyiv. The Kremlin denied responsibi­lity for Friday’s attack, but as its troops now prepare to try to win more territory in an area already partially controlled by Moscow-backed separatist­s, the strike on the train station stirred fears that more brutal tactics lie ahead in a likely war of attrition.

“The inhuman Russians are not changing their methods. Without the strength or courage

“The inhuman Russians are not changing their methods. ... They are cynically destroying the civilian population. This is an evil without limits.”

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukrainian president

to stand up to us on the battlefiel­d, they are cynically destroying the civilian population,” Zelenskyy said in response to the attack. “This is an evil without limits.”

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g told National Public Radio that the “the scale and the scope” of the war’s next phase in the east may be the worst yet, with heavy civilian causalitie­s. He said NATO believes Russia still desires full control of Ukraine, and warned that the conflict could last “months and even years.”

The train station attack sparked a new wave of internatio­nal outrage, with Britain’s Defense Minister Ben Wallace calling it an evident war crime: “These were precision missiles aimed at people trying to seek humanitari­an shelter.”

It also triggered calls for additional economic penalties on Russia, which was targeted with new sanctions this week after evidence emerged of atrocities committed against Ukrainian civilians by Russian troops. Grim images of people shot execution-style with their hands bound have emerged in recent days as occupying forces have withdrawn from areas such as the Kyiv suburb of Bucha. In an overnight video address, Zelenskyy warned that worse discoverie­s were still to come.

In Borodyanka, about 20 miles from Bucha, “it is much more horrible,” Zelenskyy said. Authoritie­s continued digging Friday through the rubble of a number of apartment buildings in the town, where they say as many as 200 residents may be buried.

In a surprising acknowledg­ment of the war’s toll on Russia, a Kremlin spokesman admitted that his country had suffered substantia­l troop losses. The official Russian military death toll is about 1,300, although Western estimates put the figure at several times that.

“Yes, we have significan­t losses of troops, and it’s a huge tragedy for us,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Britain’s Sky News without specifying a number.

He also suggested that the fighting in Ukraine could wrap up “in the foreseeabl­e future,” either through achievemen­t of Moscow’s battlefiel­d goals or through negotiatio­ns with Kyiv. But Western and Ukrainian officials doubt any willingnes­s by Russian President Vladimir Putin to wind down what he refers to as his “special military operation.” Multiple rounds of peace talks have so far produced no tangible results, and Peskov himself vowed that the siege of the southern port city of Mariupol, at least, would continue.

“Mariupol is going to be liberated from nationalis­tic battalions, and we hope it will happen sooner (rather) than later,” Peskov said, alluding to Moscow’s contention that Ukrainian fascists are oppressing Russian speakers in eastern and southern Ukraine.

Mariupol, whose residents have endured intense bombardmen­t and terrible deprivatio­n for weeks, is of strategic importance to Russia, which wants to use it to block Ukraine’s access to the Sea of Azov and to establish a land corridor to Crimea, the peninsula Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.

Farther west along the southern coast, Ukrainian officials said the historic city of Odessa — which would also be a major prize were it to fall — was hit by a Russian missile strike from the sea and that infrastruc­ture was damaged. The report could not be independen­tly verified.

Zelenskyy said any investigat­ion in Mariupol would show more of “the same cruelty, the same terrible crimes” by Russian troops as had been unearthed elsewhere.

Ukraine’s Prosecutor General’s Office announced Friday that it had logged 5,149 “crimes of aggression and war crimes.” In Kyiv-area towns including Bucha, whose name has become synonymous with alleged atrocities against civilians, authoritie­s say at least 400 residents were killed by enemy occupiers.

The German newsweekly Der Spiegel reported that Berlin’s foreign intelligen­ce agency had intercepte­d radio exchanges between Russian soldiers casually discussing the killing of civilians.

Despite the growing dossier of independen­tly collected evidence, Peskov repeated Russia’s denials of any massacres by its forces, calling the images of bodies lying in Bucha’s streets “a bald fake.”

In a clear attempt to try to dispel Russian propaganda, the president of the European Commission, Ursula Von der Leyen, visited Bucha on Friday, where she appeared visibly shaken by the sight of bodies lined up, wrapped in black plastic bags.

“The unthinkabl­e has happened here,” said Von der Leyen. “We have seen the cruel face of Putin’s army. We have seen the recklessne­ss and the cold-heartednes­s with which they have been occupying the city.”

She and the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, also met with Zelenskyy in Kyiv on Friday, part of a wave of diplomats and other internatio­nal officials returning to the capital after many nations shut down their embassies and called staff members back home for fear of Russian forces overrunnin­g the city. The European Union, Lithuania and Turkey have all returned their ambassador­s to Kyiv.

At the same time, Russia was becoming more and more isolated on the internatio­nal stage, with hundreds of its diplomats expelled from countries around the world in the seven weeks since it launched its invasion of Ukraine. On Thursday, the United Nations General Assembly voted to oust Russia from its top human rights panel in an unpreceden­ted action against one of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council.

The EU on Friday also formally adopted sweeping new sanctions against Russia, passing new regulation­s that by midsummer will ban the import of coal, wood, chemicals and other products.

 ?? Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press ?? Relatives cry at the mass grave of civilians killed during the Russian occupation of Bucha, a suburb of Kyiv, Ukraine.
Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press Relatives cry at the mass grave of civilians killed during the Russian occupation of Bucha, a suburb of Kyiv, Ukraine.

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