Exactly six months after Moscow invaded its western neighbour, a Russian strike on Ukraine's independence day killed at least 22 people and wounded scores of others at a railway station in the centre of the country — according to a new death toll announced on Wednesday evening by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
"At the moment there are 22 dead, including five people who burned in a car" and an 11-year-old boy, Zelenskyy said in his evening address about the attack at Chaplyne.
The Ukrainian leader had warned of the risk of "repugnant Russian provocations" ahead of the 31st anniversary of Ukraine's independence from Moscow-dominated Soviet rule, and public celebrations were cancelled.
Earlier in the day, he had announced a death toll of at least 15 and 50 injured, at the start of a speech to the UN Security Council.
"I have just received information about a Russian missile strike on a railway station in the Dnipropetrovsk region, right on the carriages at the station in Chaplyne. Four passenger carriages are on fire," Zelenskyy told the session.
Images shared by Ukrainian outlets showed several train carriages, as well as several cars and what is said to be the town's train station completely devastated by an apparent explosion and resulting fire.
"We will fight for it until the end," the Ukrainian president had earlier proclaimed, specifying that he referred to all of Ukraine "without any concessions or compromises," including the Donbas basin, partly in the hands of Moscow-backed separatists since 2014, and Crimea, annexed by Russia the same year.
The attack came after warnings that the Kremlin might use the public holiday in Ukraine — as well as the death of the daughter of radical nationalist philosopher Aleksandr Dugin,
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