Many Injured As Russia Bombed Hospital, Says Ukraine
Ukraine says Many Injured As Russia Bombed Hospital
A maternity hospital in the southern port city of Mariupol was bombed by Russian forces on Wednesday, Ukrainian authorities claimed.
This marks a brutal new low in the two-week-old invasion.
“Mariupol. Direct strike of Russian troops at the maternity hospital. People, children are under the wreckage. Atrocity! How much longer will the world be an accomplice ignoring terror? Close the sky right now! Stop the killings! You have power but you seem to be losing humanity,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted.
Footage shared by the country’s Ministry of Defense, and verified by the BBC, showed smoke rising from the destroyed building. The city council wrote on Facebook that the destruction was “colossal.”
Ukrainian MP Dmitry Gurin initially told BBC anchor Yalda Hakim that there were “a lot of dead and wounded women” in the building, which holds both maternity and children’s hospitals.
But Donetsk military administration chairman, Pavel Kirilenko later said there were no casualties among mothers and children. He said at least 17 people were wounded, mainly medical staff, Ukrainian news outlet Hromadske reported.
It’s unclear how much of the damage was sustained in the previous airstrikes that have hammered Mariupol for days, Daily Beast reports. No media outlets had first-hand accounts of the attack and Russia has not commented.
The hospital said last week that it had moved patients down to a basement transformed into a bomb shelter, leaving a glimmer of hope that any remaining occupants might have survived a possible attack.
It’s also unclear if the facility was evacuated entirely when Russian forces cut the city’s water and power supply a week ago.
Regardless, any attack would provide further evidence that Russia is blatantly lying when it claims it is not targeting civilians.
Mariupol had been under heavy attack for almost the entirety of the invasion, with Russian forces all but encircling the city, according to Britain’s Defense Ministry.
More than 1,000 deaths have been recorded in the city of 430,000 and the Associated Press’ correspondents reported earlier Wednesday that the scene was extremely grim. “Corpses lie in the streets… Hungry people break into stores in search of food and melt snow for water. Thousands huddle in basements, trembling at the sound of Russian shells pounding this strategic port city,” the outlet reported.
One city official told The New York Times he’d seen people “drink from puddles in the streets” and Deputy Mayor Sergiy Orlov described the situation as “medieval.”
Russia had initially promised to recognise a safe evacuation corridor for Mariupol’s civilians but Ukrainian officials reported that Russian attacks prevented a convoy of rescuers from reaching the city.
Ukrainian officials said on Tuesday that a six-year-old girl had died of dehydration as a result and civilians were being held “hostage.”