Death toll rises to 12 in Ukraine’s Kramatorsk after Russian strike
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June 29 (Reuters) – Rescuers have pulled another body from the ruins of a restaurant in eastern Ukraine’s city of Kramatorsk, taking to 12 the death toll following a Russian missile strike, Ukraine’s emergency services said on Thursday.
Three children were among the dead, while 60 more people were wounded, the authorities said.
The restaurant building was reduced to a twisted web of metal beams.
“I ran here after the explosion because I rented a cafe here…. Everything has been blown out there,” said Valentyna, a 64-year-old woman who declined to give her surname.
“None of the glass, windows or doors are left. All I see is destruction, fear and horror. This is the 21st century,” she told a Reuters correspondent in Kramatorsk.
A second missile hit a village on the fringes of Kramatorsk, wounding five.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in his nightly video message on Tuesday that the attacks showed Russia “deserved only one thing as a consequence of what it has done — defeat and a tribunal”.
Russia has frequently hit Ukrainian cities since its full-scale invasion in February 2022 but denies targeting civilians.
Kramatorsk lies west of front lines in Donetsk province and is a likely objective in any westward advance by Russia.
The city has been a frequent target of Russian attacks, and a missile strike killed 63 people at a railway station in April 2022.
A handout picture made available by the National Police press service shows Ukrainian rescuers and policemen work on the site of a rocket strike in downtown Kramatorsk, Donetsk area, Ukraine, 27 June 2023 (issued 28 June) amid the Russian invasion. According to the National Police report, two S300 rockets hit Kramatorsk. EPA-EFE/National police of Ukraine