Russian full-scale war killed 559 Ukrainian children, including four in 8 July attack on Kyiv
Russia massive attacks on different cities of Ukraine killed 4 children aged from 8 to 14 and injured 10 children, aged from 2 to 17.
Russian strike on the apartment building in Kyiv killed 12 people, including 4 children, and injured 25. Two girls aged 8 and 14, as well as 2 boys aged 8 and 10 died after Russian attacks on 8 July, according to the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office.
On 8 July, Russian forces launched 38 missiles at different cities in Ukraine, including the capital city of Kyiv, with Ukrainian air defenses intercepting 30. The attack was carried out using a Russian Kh-101 strategic cruise missile, according to the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU).
The rescue operations were ongoing throughout the night and still continue.
As of the morning of 9 July, Russian full-scale aggression in Ukraine killed 559 children. More than 1,449 were injured of varying degrees of severity, the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office reports.
Russian forces also targeted Okhmatdyt, the biggest children’s hospital in Ukraine, killing two people and injuring 32. The rescue operations in the hospital were concluded. All patients from the hospital were successfully transferred to other medical facilities.
As of 12:15, 31 people died, and 117 people were injured, including 10 children aged from 2 to 17, after the Russian attack on Kyiv, according to Serhiy Popko, Chief of the Kyiv City Military Administration
Russian missiles also struck Dnipro and Kryvyi Rih on 8 July. The total death toll so far is 38 killed and 190 injured people, according to Zelenskyy.
World’s reaction to 8 July Russian attacks
World leaders and diplomats condemned Russia’s 8 July missile strike on Ukraine.
The Austrian ambassador, Arad Benkö, called the attack “pure terror” from Russia. German Ambassador Martin Jaeger labeled it a war against civilians, while US Ambassador Bridget Brink expressed shock and sadness. Lithuanian Foreign Affairs Minister Baiba Braže called Putin a “butcher” and war criminal. Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský criticized those seeking peace with Putin, stressing the need for a strong deterrence strategy.
Related:
- Low altitudes, anti-air defense systems: Russia’s evolving military tactics for missile assaults pose new challenges for Ukraine
- Russia struck children’s hospital in Kyiv with Kh-101 missile, SBU says
- Prosecutor General: Russian aggression killed 546 children, injured 1,330 injured during all-out war
- UNICEF reports 40% increase in children killed in Ukraine this year due to war