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Widespread protests in Russia’s railway station attack, killing 39 | NRI

Houston: The world community has condemned the inhumane rocket attack by Russia. The Russian attack on a busy train station in eastern Ukraine took place on Friday morning. Ukrainian officials say at least 39 people have been killed and at least 90 injured. It was a major attack on the main evacuation site for many trying to flee. There were about 4,000 people at the railway station at the time of the attack, most of them women, children and the elderly. The photos, provided by Ukrainian officials, show people lying on the ground surrounded by luggage and debris.


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Russia’s rocket attack comes as the war enters its seventh week. Russia has now resorted to destroying cities such as Kharkiv and Mariupol in an attempt to demoralize the Ukrainian population. This attack proves that the Russian strategy of targeting civilians and infrastructure here is continuing again. Various countries, including the European Union, have reacted with harsh language against Russia. The rocket attack took place while trying to escape from the battlefield. Russia has been blamed for the attack on Kramatorsk. However, Russia’s Defense Ministry called it a “provocation.” Indications are that the Russian army, which is retreating from the north, is reorganizing for a major advance in the east. Officials therefore warned that the window for civilians to flee was being closed. Ukraine’s railway service said the exodus from the east of the country would continue from nearby Slovenesk.


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APTOPIX Ukraine Invasion

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Selensky has called on Western nations to go further to confront Russia, accusing Moscow of “despicably destroying the civilian population.” Russia is already facing new sanctions imposed by Western countries against increasing evidence of atrocities in Bucha and other suburbs of Kiev. On Friday, President Vladimir Vladimir Putin called on the European Union to ban coal imports and urge high-ranking Russians. The embargo against Putin’s two daughters was officially approved. This is the group’s fifth round of siege since the war began.

There are indications that the city is on its way back to Kiev this week. Here, instead of seeking refuge on the subway, people are now driving it; It works on all lines, though not all stops are open. 150 buses and 30 trams are running again. City Council reports that more than 500 businesses have reopened in the past week. The Kiev School District has launched online instruction for students, including locations in western Ukraine and elsewhere in Europe.

Many residents fled Kiev, but others were reluctant to leave despite the long-running danger. City officials estimate that about half of Kiev’s population of about three million before the war remained in the city. The president of the European Council said in response to images of dozens of civilian deaths reported at a train station in eastern Ukraine on Friday. Adopt more sanctions against Russia. “It is frightening that Russia is attacking one of the main stations used by civilians to evacuate territory where Russia is intensifying its attacks,” European official Charles Michael said on Twitter. “Action is needed: more sanctions in Russia and more arms to Ukraine from the European Union.”

His remarks came shortly after the European Union formalized the fifth round of sanctions against Russia since the start of the war. In the first weeks of the war, Ukraine called on Western governments to provide more modern and NATO-made weapons than the Soviet-made equipment on which their troops relied heavily, the country’s defense minister said. Minister Oleksi Resnikov said that weapons of the Soviet era were decades old and often in poor condition, and that ammunition for them was running out.

The Soviet-made weapons were useful from the beginning because they were familiar to Ukrainian soldiers, he said. But he said Ukraine needed more sophisticated weapons used by NATO countries as the war intensified and Russia called it a ‘long phase’. As the war becomes more competitive for resources, such reinforcements will send a “strong signal that Russia will not succeed in eliminating the Ukrainian military,” Resnikov said.

His comments came on the same day that Slovakian Prime Minister Edward Heger said his country was ready to supply Ukraine with Soviet-made anti-aircraft missiles if it could secure a replacement for its own defense. The United States said last week that it would work with its allies to transfer Soviet-made tanks to Ukraine. The Pentagon’s $ 300 million security assistance list for Ukraine includes ‘substandard’ weapons and ammunition – a term commonly used by the Department of Defense to refer to Soviet-designed weapons.