The demolition of the Kremenchuk Mall and looking for survivors after the Russian missile strike continued last night Wednesday and until Thursday, according to the Mayor of KrempentenChuk, Vitalii Maletskyi.
The rescue worker is now unpacking the mall “near the explosion center,” he said. Maletskyi added that the missile struck and exploded in a house equipment store and that the debris in the mall was wide, so he was worried that it might be where other bodies could be found.
The number of dead remains at the age of 18, but 21 people are still missing, he said.
The attack is targeting a site in Central Ukraine which is far from the center of the new Russian war, which is recently focused in eastern the country. Ukraine officials said the attack was carried out by the Russian KH-22 missile, who was able to bring upstream explosions of explosions up to 1 ton.
Russian troops have left Snake Island in the Black Sea, the Ukraine armed forces said Thursday, after they did what they said was an “successful” operation.
On Monday, the Ukraine military said it crashed into the second missile system on the island, as well as many Russian personnel in their efforts to look after them.
In a short post about the Operation Command Telegram to the south on Thursday, the Ukrainian armed forces said that “the enemy with a hurry to evacuate the remnants of Garrison in two speedboats and may leave the island.”Snake Island is a small but strategic island in the black sea. It was the place of one of the opening of the War Salvos in Ukraine, with the demands of the Russian warship that called for Ukraine defenders to surrender, who boldly answered with “Russian ships leftMall bombing in Kreemlekuk, Ukraine, “must be investigated as a potential war criminal,” Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Thursday.
In a report published on Thursday, Yulia Gorbunova, a senior Ukraine researcher at HRW added that “If the Russian authority is not, the International Criminal Court and other Investigation Agency must.”
In a comprehensive report on the bombing, HRW talked with 15 people to publish their reports, including those injured, doctors, staff malls, other witnesses and local officials.
Gorbunova added “Kreempenkuk civilians who suffered extraordinary losses since the strike June 27, deserves justice. There needs to be a thorough investigation, and those who are responsible must be accounted for. “