At least 12 people were killed in Zaporizhzhia, one of the highest tolls from a
single attack so far this year. The cities of Dnipro and Kramatorsk were also
attacked.
VIDEO [not usable on this entry]: Russian forces launched an attack
on three Ukrainian cities on Tuesday, killing more than 20 people and injuring
dozens of others. The attack came after Russia announced a cease-fire timed to
Moscow’s Victory Day celebrations on May 9, commemorating the Soviet victory
over the Nazis in World War II. CreditCredit...Serhii Chalyi/Reuters
Russian bombs tore into Ukrainian cities on Tuesday afternoon and evening,
killing more than 20 people and wounding dozens of others.
The deadly strikes
drew a furious response from President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, who said
they showed the cynicism behind Russia’s announcement of a cease-fire timed to
Moscow’s Victory Day celebrations on May 9.
Mr. Zelensky had challenged the
announcement of the truce by President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia by proposing
instead an open-ended cease-fire beginning at midnight on Tuesday. He said that
Ukraine sought a lasting cease-fire, not just a break to protect a parade in
Moscow.
At least 12 people were killed and 37 others wounded in the southern
city of Zaporizhzhia as the daytime Russian strikes got underway on Tuesday
afternoon, according to Ukraine’s emergency services. The toll in Zaporizhzhia
was one of the highest from a single attack so far this year. Separate strikes
also killed at least four people in the city of Dnipro and five in the center of
Kramatorsk, according to the Ukrainian authorities.
Images posted on social
media of the aftermath in Kramatorsk showed bodies in the street, with flames
and thick black smoke.
Mr. Zelensky said the “absolutely cynical” strike in
Zaporizhzhia had targeted civilian infrastructure, and he accused Russian forces
of showing “no restraint in destroying human life.”
“We need silence from such
strikes and all others like them every single day, not just for a few hours
somewhere out there for ‘celebrations,’” he wrote in a scathing post on social
media that shared images of the destruction.
Air-raid warnings sounded as
rescuers dug through the rubble and firefighters worked to extinguish burning
vehicles and businesses. Residential buildings, a car repair shop and a carwash
sustained damage, according to Ivan Fedorov, the head of the regional military
administration. Mr. Fedorov said Wednesday would be an official day of mourning.
Large-scale daytime attacks are a less common occurrence in Ukraine, where most
nights are filled with wailing air-raid sirens warning of incoming Russian
drones and missiles. The wee hours of Tuesday were no different, when at least
four Ukrainians were killed by a Russian strike on a gas production facility in
the Poltava region on Monday night into early Tuesday.
Ukraine has conducted
several strikes on energy-related facilities deep inside Russia in recent weeks,
part of an expansion of its long-range strikes. Mr. Putin’s announcement of the
Saturday cease-fire and the Kremlin’s decision to significantly scale back its
Victory Day Parade were seen as an acknowledgment of the growing threat posed by
Ukrainian drones.
That risk was underscored when a drone slammed into a Moscow
high-rise on Monday. While Ukraine did not claim responsibility for that attack,
Mr. Zelensky said Russia’s decision to downsize the parade showed its weakness
and “fear drones may buzz over Red Square.”
On Tuesday, he highlighted Ukraine’s
deep-strike campaign in announcing that Ukrainian missiles had traveled more
than 1,500 kilometers (about 930 miles) to strike targets in the Cheboksary
region of Russia. The long-range attacks, he said, were an “entirely just
response to Russian strikes.”
A few hours later, explosions cut through
Zaporizhzhia’s sunny afternoon.
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