War in Ukraine: “Three dead, among them a little girl” from the bombing of a pediatric hospital

The news that the Russians bombed a pediatric hospital in Mariupol yesterday, Wednesday, has caused global disgust.. Three people, including a child, were killed in the Russian bombing, the local authorities of this city in Ukraine announced today.

“Three people were killed, among them a little girl”the authorities reported on their Telegram account.

An earlier report said 17 people had been injured.

Earlier, Russia claims Ukraine’s allegations “false news”explaining that it was a former maternity clinic which has long been occupied by the army.

“This is how false news is created,” Dmitry Poliansky, Russia’s first deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, said on his Twitter account.

Ukrainian authorities are opening 7 “humanitarian corridors” today

At the same time, Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine Irina Verestsuk announced that Ukraine today opens 7 “Humanitarian corridors” for civilians seeking to flee cities besieged by Russian forces; including Mariupol, the port in southern Ukraine.

Civilians began withdrawing from the city of Sumy in northeastern Ukraine today through a “humanitarian corridor” for a third day, following an agreement on a local ceasefire, said regional governor Dmitry Zivitsky.

Several thousand people fled the besieged city this week under agreements with Russia, which invaded Ukraine on February 24. People are also leaving nearby settlements in Krasnopilia and Trostyanets, Zivitsky added.

“The remittances (of those who leave) are leaving. “There was an agreement for a ceasefire!”, He noted.

At the same time, the regional governor of Kiev, Oleksiy Kuleba, said today on a local television network that more than 10,000 people were evacuated yesterday, Wednesday, from villages and towns around the Ukrainian capital.

Putin’s adviser: Moscow will eventually emerge victorious from sanctions

Meanwhile, Sergei Semezov, head of the Russian state defense company Rostec and a close ally of the president Vladimir PutinHe said the military operation in Ukraine had prevented an attack on Russia, and stressed that his country would emerge victorious from Western sanctions.

“It will not be an easy life,” Semezov said. “The sanctions are quite serious,” he added.

“But if you look at the history of Russia, Russia throughout its history has been fighting against various sanctions, enemies that surrounded it and has always emerged victorious,” he said.

“The same thing will happen now,” he concluded, according to Reuters and the Athens News Agency.


Source: News Beast

You may also like