At least 50 killed, dozens wounded in Russian missile strike on Ukrainian train station, say officials

Ukraine said at least 50 people were killed on Friday and many more wounded in a rocket strike at a railway station in eastern Ukraine packed with civilians fleeing the threat of a major Russian offensive in the country's east.

As regional authorities scrambled to evacuate the vulnerable, European Union leaders visited Kyiv to offer Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky support and expedite Ukraine's path toward EU membership.

Zelensky called the strike on the station in Kramatorsk in the eastern region of Donetsk a deliberate attack on civilians. The town's mayor estimated that about 4,000 people were gathered there at the time.

Regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said the station was hit by a Tochka U short-range ballistic missile containing cluster munitions that explode in mid-air, spraying small lethal bomblets over a wider area.

Ukrainian soldiers help carry bodies to a military truck after a missile attack killed at least 50 people on Friday at a train station in Kramatorsk, Eastern Ukraine. (Fadel Senna/AFxjmtzywP/Getty Images)

"They wanted to take as many civilians as possible," he said, adding that evacuations by rail from the region, where Ukrainian officials are anticipating a new thrust by Russian forces, would continue.

Reuters was unable to verify what happened in Kramatorsk.

Cluster munitions are banned under a 2008 convention. Russia has not signed it but has previously denied using such armaments in Ukraine.

In Washington, a senior defence official said the United States was "not buying the denial by the Russians that they weren't responsible," and believed Kyrylenko correctly identified the type of missile used in the attack.

 

Ukraine says dozens killed in Russian rocket strike on train station

8 hours agoDuration 4:39At least 39 people were killed and 87 wounded when two rockets hit a railway station packed with evacuees in Kramatorsk in Eastern Ukraine, Ukrainian authorities said. 4:39

The Russian defence ministry was quoted by RIA news agency as saying the missiles said to have struck the station were used only by Ukraine's military and that Russia's armed forces had no targets assigned in Kramatorsk on Friday.

Zelensky said no Ukrainian troops were at the station.

"Russian forces (fired) on an ordinary train station, on ordinary people," he told Finland's parliament in a video address.

Burnt-out vehicles are seen after an attack on the railway station in the eastern city of Kramatorsk, in Ukraine's Donbas region, on Friday. (Hervé Bar/AFP/Getty Images)

Kramatorsk Mayor Oleksander Honcharenko told an online briefing that some victims of the attack had lost a leg or arm.

The wreckage of the missile bore the words "(this is) for the children" on its side. Russia has for years accused Ukraine of killing civilians including children with strikes in separatist-held eastern Ukraine.

Referring to that message, EU executive head Ursula von der Leyen told a Kyiv news conference: "The cynical behaviour has almost no benchmark anymore… It is unbelievable."

Ukrainian officials say Russia's military is regrouping after withdrawing eastwards from the zone around Kyiv, where a forensics team on Friday began exhuming a mass grave in the town of Bucha.

Casualties are laid out at the railway station in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk following a reported missile attack on Friday. (Hervé Bar/AFP/Getty Images)

The grave's discovery last week galvanized the West into toughening sanctions against Russia and speeding up arms deliveries to Ukraine.

Since Russian troops pulled back from Bucha, Ukrainian officials say hundreds of dead civilians have been found there.

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Visiting the town on Friday, von der Leyen said the "unthinkable" had been witnessed.

She later handed Zelensky a questionnaire forming a starting point for the EU to decide on membership, telling him: "It will not as usual be a matter of years to form this opinion but I think a matter of weeks."

Russia denies Bucha killings

Russia has called allegations that its forces executed civilians in Bucha a "monstrous forgery" aimed at denigrating its army.

Moscow has denied targeting civilians since invading Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what it calls a "special military operation" to demilitarize and "denazify" its neighbour.

Rescue workers are seen on Thursday as they search the rubble of a residential area in Borodyanka on the outskirts of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. (Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images)

Ukraine and Western supporters call that a pretext for an unprovoked invasion that has displaced a quarter of the population and killed or injured thousands.

Ukrainian officials now expect an attempt by Russian forces to gain full control of Donetsk and neighbouring Luhansk, both partly held by Moscow-backed separatists since 2014.

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The Kremlin said on Friday the "special operation" could end in the "foreseeable future" with its aims being achieved with work by the Russian military and peace negotiators.

Russian forces have however failed to take any major cities so far, confronted by unexpectedly strong Ukrainian resistance and dogged by what Western intelligence officials say have been logistical, supply and morale problems.

Ukraine braces for Russian assault in Donbas, pressures NATO for more weapons

19 hours agoDuration 2:25Attention is turning to Eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region, where there’s anxiety a looming Russian assault could rival battles of the Second World War. To prepare, Ukrainian officials are making an urgent appeal to NATO allies for more heavy tanks. 2:25

Kyiv has called on its allies for deliveries of more, heavier weapons needed to respond and on Thursday secured a new commitment from the NATO alliance to supply a wide range of weapons.

Slovakia has donated its S-300 air defence system to Ukraine, Prime Minister Eduard Heger said on Friday, while Britain will send a further 100 million pounds ($130 million US) of military support, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said.

In Prague, defence sources said the Czech Republic had delivered tanks, rocket launchers, howitzers and infantry fighting vehicles, and would ship more.

Trapped in school basement

Residents of areas north of Kyiv were meanwhile still coming to terms with the month-long occupation.

In the village of Yahidne, residents recounted how more than 300 people were trapped for weeks in a school basement, with names of those who did not survive or were killed by soldiers scrawled on the wall.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, centre, walks with Bucha Mayor Anatoly Fedoruk, left, during a visit Friday to the city of Bucha, northwest of the Ukrainian capital. (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)

Reuters was not able to verify independently the villagers' accounts. Reporters saw one freshly dug grave and two bodies wrapped in white plastic sheets.

Ukraine's prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktova, said authorities had found 650 bodies, 40 of them children, in the Kyiv region.

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The West has imposed more sanctions on Russia since the images surfaced, with Washington sanctioning top Russian lenders and President Vladimir Putin's daughters, a move echoed by Britain on Friday, while the EU banned nearly $22 billion US worth of trade, including Russian coal.

Zelensky has urged Brussels to also ban Russian oil and gas.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, in Kyiv with van der Leyen, said a potential oil ban would be discussed on Monday, but called oil sanctions "a big elephant in the room" given concerns over its impact on Europe's economy and its consumers.

Von der Leyen said the EU needed to monitor Russian attempts to circumvent existing sanctions and impose stricter ones if necessary.