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Ukraine says soldiers among 51 killed in Poltava missile attack

Ukraine says soldiers among 51 killed in Poltava missile attack
Ukraine says soldiers among 51 killed in Poltava missile attack


BBC A screenshot from a clip filmed on a mobile phone of a damaged building in Poltava. There are bars either side of the image to fit the aspect ratio.BBC

At least 51 people have been killed and more than 200 others injured in a Russian missile strike on the city of Poltava, in central Ukraine.

A military communications institute and a nearby hospital were hit. Ukraine’s land forces confirmed that military personnel were killed in the attack.

People did not have enough time to get to bomb shelters after the air raid alarm sounded, Ukraine’s ministry of defence said.

President Volodymyr Zelensky promised that what he called “Russian scum” would pay for the attack, and repeated calls for more air defences so that Ukraine could protect itself by carrying out its own long-range missile attacks. Moscow has not commented on the attack.

Teaching was in progress at the Poltava Military Communications Institute when the missiles hit, a later statement from Ukraine’s defence ministry said.

Earlier reports from Russian military bloggers had suggested that cadets were gathered at a military parade being held at the institute, but the ministry confirmed there was no parade happening at the time of the strike.

Alarms sounded at 09:08 (07:08 BST) and everyone headed to the shelter, the defence ministry added, and the explosions started a few minutes after the alarms.

A fire engine is seen through some trees

Emergency services were called to the scene of the strikes in Poltava

Ukrainian MP Oleksiy Goncharenko told the BBC the two minutes between the air raid siren in Poltava and the missiles landing was “nothing”.

“You just imagine you’re on the sixth floor of some building and you need to run away downstairs. Is it realistic that you can do this in two minutes?” he said.

“Just imagine this life and like this several times per day. We can’t continue like this. It’s just not fair.”

In a statement on Telegram which confirmed the deaths of the military personnel, Ukraine’s land forces said an investigation was under way to establish whether enough was done to protect those in the facility the missile hit.

It confirmed additional measures to ensure safety at military facilities will be increased.

One Poltava resident, Olena Serdyuk, said: “The air raid alert started in just a minute, and then there were two explosions.

“At home, we immediately ran into the bathroom with the child, but then gathered ourselves”. She added that there is no bomb shelter “in our radius”, and it “takes a long time to run somewhere”.

Another local, Anastasiia Artyukh, heard “two very strong explosions” and called the situation “really scary”.

“There is a house nearby, everything was blown out, all the windows. We don’t have a basement in our house. So our only option was to sit [and wait].”

‘A cunning and cynical Russian strike,’ says governer

Poltava regional governor Philip Pronin called the attack a “cunning and cynical Russian strike,” and later said that 15 people were still thought to be trapped under the rubble.

Mr Pronin said search groups were on site, and that 10 residential buildings had been damaged in the attack.

More details could not immediately be given due to security reasons, he said.

Ukraine’s first lady Olena Zelenska posted on X calling the attack “a stunning tragedy for all of Ukraine,” and added: “Russia is taking away the most valuable thing from us – life.”

In a video on the Ukrainian presidential website, President Zelensky said Russia would be held accountable for the strike.

In the clip, which was also posted on X, Mr Zelensky said a “full and prompt” investigation had been ordered and that “all necessary services are involved in the rescue operation”.

He went on to say that Ukraine needed long-range air defence systems “that can protect us from Russian terror” and added that “every day of delay, unfortunately, means more lost lives”.

The UK’s Foreign Secretary David Lammy condemned the “sickening act of aggression in Putin’s abhorrent and illegal war in Ukraine,” and said “my thoughts are with all the victims and their loved ones.”

Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said that Vladimir Putin “knows no limits to brutality”.

There has also been criticism of the Ukrainian authorities in the aftermath of the attack.

Maria Bezugla, a Ukrainian MP who often criticizes the country’s military leadership, accused officials of putting soldiers in danger.

“These tragedies keep repeating themselves. When will it stop?” she wrote on Telegram.

A BBC map of eastern Ukraine showing the territories held by Russia and Ukraine. Poltava is highlighted on the map

Putin in Mongolia despite arrest warrant

The attack on the military institute in Poltava came as Russian leader Vladimir Putin arrived in Mongolia – his first visit to an International Criminal Court (ICC) member since it issued a warrant for his arrest last year.

He was welcomed by Mongolia’s leader at a lavish ceremony in the Asian nation’s capital Ulaanbaatar on Tuesday.

Ahead of his visit, Ukraine had urged Mongolia to arrest Mr Putin.

“We call on the Mongolian authorities to comply with the mandatory international arrest warrant and transfer Putin to the International Criminal Court in the Hague,” the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said on Telegram.

The court alleged last year that the Russian president was responsible for war crimes, focusing on the unlawful deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia.

EPA Mongolia's president Ukhnaagiin Khurelsukh and Russian leader Vladimir Putin behind a Mongolian man dressed in a traditional red and blue outfit. There are hedges behind them.EPA

Poltava, located in central Ukraine, had a pre-war population of 300,000 and is located 300 kilometres (189 miles) east of Kyiv.

Founded in the 1960s, when Ukraine was still part of the USSR, the Poltava military communications institute trains telecommunications specialists.

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