Zürcher Nachrichten - Fifty killed in train station strike as civilians flee east Ukraine

EUR -
AED 3.874351
AFN 70.672481
ALL 98.206772
AMD 409.529379
ANG 1.902292
AOA 961.98469
ARS 1053.240083
AUD 1.632197
AWG 1.893379
AZN 1.79736
BAM 1.951687
BBD 2.131209
BDT 126.134215
BGN 1.954399
BHD 0.397559
BIF 3057.359101
BMD 1.054807
BND 1.415032
BOB 7.2937
BRL 6.114617
BSD 1.055476
BTN 88.681275
BWP 14.429731
BYN 3.454254
BYR 20674.224038
BZD 2.127637
CAD 1.485258
CDF 3022.023436
CHF 0.935277
CLF 0.037481
CLP 1034.217927
CNY 7.628899
CNH 7.631342
COP 4683.966965
CRC 537.173181
CUC 1.054807
CUP 27.952395
CVE 110.596966
CZK 25.250021
DJF 187.460777
DKK 7.45828
DOP 63.714461
DZD 140.670985
EGP 52.059705
ERN 15.82211
ETB 128.686874
FJD 2.400689
FKP 0.832577
GBP 0.835371
GEL 2.88494
GGP 0.832577
GHS 16.824589
GIP 0.832577
GMD 74.891697
GNF 9102.987795
GTQ 8.151823
GYD 220.726985
HKD 8.212467
HNL 26.502077
HRK 7.524214
HTG 138.757615
HUF 408.109004
IDR 16773.546462
ILS 3.95511
IMP 0.832577
INR 89.063872
IQD 1382.325031
IRR 44399.482357
ISK 145.07861
JEP 0.832577
JMD 167.626783
JOD 0.747968
JPY 162.620745
KES 136.601561
KGS 91.244843
KHR 4271.970133
KMF 492.14678
KPW 949.326214
KRW 1472.870098
KWD 0.324375
KYD 0.879655
KZT 524.539682
LAK 23156.186098
LBP 94457.998459
LKR 308.360235
LRD 194.084919
LSL 19.218992
LTL 3.114572
LVL 0.638043
LYD 5.142227
MAD 10.562318
MDL 19.178769
MGA 4920.676648
MKD 61.480451
MMK 3425.973124
MNT 3584.235315
MOP 8.463746
MRU 42.150501
MUR 49.797854
MVR 16.297172
MWK 1831.145921
MXN 21.457915
MYR 4.71552
MZN 67.406123
NAD 19.218988
NGN 1756.254599
NIO 38.780033
NOK 11.691443
NPR 141.890359
NZD 1.798468
OMR 0.406127
PAB 1.055486
PEN 4.011473
PGK 4.240062
PHP 61.944657
PKR 292.923905
PLN 4.316188
PYG 8235.64615
QAR 3.840136
RON 4.976374
RSD 116.98134
RUB 105.533529
RWF 1444.031261
SAR 3.961836
SBD 8.850276
SCR 15.510982
SDG 634.470498
SEK 11.57129
SGD 1.415261
SHP 0.832577
SLE 23.842514
SLL 22118.787698
SOS 602.826263
SRD 37.251053
STD 21832.382474
SVC 9.235539
SYP 2650.234959
SZL 19.218979
THB 36.740526
TJS 11.251797
TMT 3.702374
TND 3.330558
TOP 2.470468
TRY 36.326303
TTD 7.166966
TWD 34.295483
TZS 2805.787901
UAH 43.598444
UGX 3873.837193
USD 1.054807
UYU 45.294985
UZS 13538.452675
VES 47.941006
VND 26781.558588
VUV 125.228848
WST 2.944591
XAF 654.571505
XAG 0.03487
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.85067
XDR 0.795132
XOF 653.456945
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.570026
ZAR 19.209466
ZMK 9494.535692
ZMW 28.979211
ZWL 339.647536
  • RBGPF

    1.6500

    61.84

    +2.67%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.78

    -0.15%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

Fifty killed in train station strike as civilians flee east Ukraine
Fifty killed in train station strike as civilians flee east Ukraine

Fifty killed in train station strike as civilians flee east Ukraine

A rocket attack on a train station in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk killed dozens on Friday as civilians raced to flee the Donbas region bracing for a feared Russian offensive.

Text size:

Fifty people were killed, including five children, the regional governor of Donetsk, Pavlo Kyrylenko, said as the toll rose on one of the deadliest strikes of the six-week-old war.

President Volodymyr Zelensky reported 300 were injured, saying the strike showed "evil with no limits".

AFP journalists saw the bodies of at least 30 people grouped and lying under plastic sheets next to the station, before being loaded onto a military truck.

Blood was pooling on the ground and packed bags were strewn outside the building where the remains of a large rocket was lying with the words "for our children" in Russian.

"I'm looking for my husband. He was here. I can't reach him," a woman told AFP, sobbing and holding her phone to her ear.

Another woman in a state of shock said: "I was in the station. I heard like a double explosion. I rushed to the wall for protection.

"Then I saw people covered in blood entering the station and bodies everywhere on the ground."

Body parts, broken glass and abandoned baggage lay scattered around the station and across the platform.

Russia's defence ministry said suggestions it had carried out the attack were "absolutely untrue".

The bombing came as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell were in Kyiv to show solidarity with Ukraine.

More than a month into President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has shifted its focus to eastern and southern Ukraine after stiff resistance torpedoed plans to swiftly capture the capital Kyiv.

Instead, Russian troops appear set on creating a long-sought land link between occupied Crimea and the Moscow-backed separatist statelets of Donetsk and Lugansk in Donbas.

Heavy shelling has already begun to lay waste to towns in the region, and officials have begged civilians to flee, while the intensity of fighting is impeding evacuations.

But officials continued to press civilians to leave.

"There is no secret -- the battle for Donbas will be decisive. What we have already experienced -- all this horror -- it can multiply," warned Lugansk regional governor Sergiy Gaiday.

"Leave! The next few days are the last chances. Buses will be waiting for you in the morning," he added.

- 'More horrific' -

Meanwhile, near the capital Kyiv, residents and Ukrainian officials returning after a Russian withdrawal from the area were trying to piece together the scale of the devastation.

Violence in the town of Bucha, where authorities say hundreds were killed -- including some found with their hands bound -- has become a byword for allegations of brutality inflicted under Russian occupation.

But Zelensky warned worse was being uncovered.

"They have started sorting through the ruins in Borodianka," northwest of Kyiv, he said in his nightly address.

"It's much more horrific there. There are even more victims of Russian occupiers."

Violence in the area has caused massive destruction, levelling and damaging many buildings, and bodies are only now being retrieved.

Ukraine's Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova said on Thursday that 26 bodies had been recovered from two destroyed apartment buildings so far.

"Only the civilian population was targeted. There is no military site here," she said, describing evidence of war crimes "at every turn".

Fresh allegations emerged from other areas too, with villagers in Obukhovychi, northwest of Kyiv, telling AFP they were used as human shields.

- 'Help us now' -

Moscow has denied targeting civilians but growing evidence of atrocities has galvanised Ukraine's allies to pile on more pressure.

On Thursday, the EU approved an embargo on Russian coal and the closure of its ports to Russian vessels as part of a "very substantial" new round of sanctions that also includes an export ban and new measures against Russian banks.

In addition, it backed a proposal to boost its funding of arms supplies to Ukraine by 500 million euros ($544 million), taking it to a total of 1.5 billion euros.

So far, the bloc had frozen 30 billion euros in assets from blacklisted Russian and Belarusian individuals and companies under sanctions, it said Friday.

In a show of support, the EU's von der Leyen and Borrell were in Kyiv Friday for talks with Zelensky and to visit the scene of civilian deaths in Bucha.

En route to Kyiv, Borrell told journalists the EU would supply 7.5 million euros to train Ukrainian prosecutors to investigate war crimes, which Russia is accused of committing in the country.

The Group of Seven industrialised nations also agreed to more sanctions, including a ban on new investments in key sectors and fresh export restrictions, as well as the phasing out of Russian coal.

At the United Nations, 93 of the General Assembly's 193 members voted on Thursday to suspend Russia from the body's human rights council over its actions in Ukraine.

Russia blasted the move as "illegal and politically motivated", while US President Joe Biden said it confirmed Moscow as an "international pariah".

"Russia's lies are no match for the undeniable evidence of what is happening in Ukraine," Biden said, calling Russia's actions in the country "an outrage to our common humanity".

Ukraine has welcomed new measures on Moscow, as well as the UN suspension, but it continues to push for more support.

Zelensky called for a "cocktail" of sanctions in an address to the Finnish parliament, scolding "those who are making us wait, wait for the things that we need badly, wait for the means of protecting our lives".

The president's appeal echoed a call from his foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, who earlier asked NATO for heavy weaponry, including air defence systems, artillery, armoured vehicles and jets.

"Either you help us now -- and I'm speaking about days, not weeks -- or your help will come too late and many people will die, many civilians will lose their homes, many villages will be destroyed," Kuleba said after meeting NATO foreign ministers in Brussels.

burs-sah-sea/jbr/kjm

P.E.Steiner--NZN