Tag: Missile attack

  • The soldiers are to blame: Russia ascribes missile attack on mobile phone distractions

    The soldiers are to blame: Russia ascribes missile attack on mobile phone distractions

    Russia has asserted that a New Year’s Day missile attack that killed at least 89 Russian soldiers occurred because troops were distracted by their cellphones.

    According to officials, the enemy was able to locate its target due to the use of prohibited phones. An investigation has already been launched.

    Ukraine claims 400 soldiers were killed and 300 were injured in an attack on a conscript training college in Makiivka, in the occupied Donetsk region.

    It is the highest number of deaths acknowledged by Russia during the war.

    Russia said that at 00:01 local time on New Year‘s Day, six rockets were fired from a US-made Himars rocket system at a vocational college, two of which were shot down.

    The deputy commander of the regiment, Lt Col Bachurin, was among those killed, the ministry of defence said in a statement on Wednesday.

    A commission is investigating the circumstances of the incident, the statement said.

    But it is “already obvious” that the main cause of the attack was the presence and “mass use” of mobile phones by troops in range of Ukrainian weapons, despite this being banned, it added.

    “This factor allowed the enemy to locate and determine the coordinates of the location of military personnel for a missile strike.”

    Officials found guilty in the investigation will be brought to justice, the statement added, and steps are being taken to prevent similar events in the future.

    Russia also raised the number of Russian soldiers killed in the attack to 89 – up from 63 – although there is no way of verifying how many soldiers were killed. It is extremely rare for Moscow to confirm any battlefield casualties.

    The vocational college was packed with conscripts at the time – men who were among the 300,000 called up in President Vladimir Putin’s partial mobilisation in September. Ammunition was also being stored close to the site, which was reduced to rubble.

    Workers remove debris of a destroyed building, purported to be a vocational college used as temporary accommodation for Russian soldiers, 63 of whom were killed in a Ukrainian missile strike, as stated the previous day by Russia's Defence Ministry, in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict in Makiivka (Makeyevka), Russian-controlled Ukraine, January 3, 2023.
    Image caption,The building housing the conscripts was all but flattened in the Ukrainian attack

    Some Russian commentators and politicians have accused the military of incompetence, saying the troops should never have been given such vulnerable accommodation.

    Pavel Gubarev, a former leading official in Russia’s proxy authority in Donetsk, said the decision to house a large number of soldiers in one building was “criminal negligence”.

    “If no-one is punished for this, then it will only get worse,” he warned.

    The deputy speaker of Moscow’s local parliament, Andrei Medvedev, said it was predictable that the soldiers would be blamed rather than the commander who made the original decision to put so many of them in one place.

    President Putin signed a decree on Tuesday for families of National Guard soldiers killed in service to be paid 5 million roubles (£57,000; $69,000).

    Source: BBC.com
  • Motive for Putin’s escalation is ‘pretty understandable’ says Ukrainian MP

    An alleged Russian missile strike on a new power plant in the area has been reported, according to Ukrainian MP Volodymyr Ariev, who is in Kyiv this morning.

    He said: “We know that yesterday’s strike was preplanned since Russian policy is still in effect. Although the perpetrator of the explosion in Crimea hasn’t been identified, [Vladimir] Putin would like to respond to it.”

    Mr Ariev added that the reason for this escalation is “pretty understandable”.

    “In one month, Putin is going to the meeting of G20 countries on Bali Island in Indonesia,” he said. “So he would like to present himself not as a weak leader after the defeat of Russian army in conventional battlegrounds.

    “He would like to speak to the world from a position of strength. So that’s why he changed the commander… and his first day was an air strike to scare Ukraine.

    “Of course, Ukrainians were not scared.”

     

  • Ukraine war: Two people allegedly killed in a hotel attack in Kherson by Kyiv forces

    Kremlin authorities say Ukrainian soldiers killed two persons, including a former member of parliament, in a missile attack on a hotel located in Kherson.

    Oleksiy Zhuravko, a pro-Russian former politician from Ukraine, was alleged to have perished in the strike by a regional official.

    Kirill Stremousov said in a statement that Ukrainian armed forces fired a missile on the Play Hotel by Ribas at 05:30 (03:30 BST) on Sunday.

    Kyiv has not responded to the claims.

    The Russian-installed administration said in a post on Telegram that this “was a planned terrorist act”, adding that the building of the hotel was not used for military purposes.

    The statement said that two people were killed in the attack according to “preliminary information”.

    The authorities said journalists from Russian media were in the hotel when the missile struck, news agency AFP reports. These claims could not be independently verified.

    A representative of the law enforcement agencies in the region was quoted by the TASS news agency as saying that the attack “was clearly carried out with the help of Nato representatives, according to their intelligence and on their tip”.

    Rescue workers were said to be combing the rubble in search of victims at the hotel, located in the center of the southern Ukrainian city.

    The strike comes as Kherson – one of the first places to come under Moscow’s control after the invasion – is taking part in a so-called referendum, asking people if they want to join Russia. As well to Kherson, people in Luhansk, Donetsk, and Zaporizhzhia have also been casting their ballots since Friday and voting is due to finish on Tuesday.

    The West and Kyiv have condemned the votes as “shams” and pledged not to recognize their results. There have also been reports of armed Russian soldiers going door-to-door to collect votes.

    The votes come after Ukrainian forces launched a large-scale counter-offensive in the south. Last month, Ukraine’s military said it had broken through Russia’s first line of defence.