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Russian attack kills 17 at Ukraine market as Blinken visits Kyiv – National

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Russian attack kills 17 at Ukraine market as Blinken visits Kyiv - National

At least 17 people were killed and 32 wounded in a Russian attack on a crowded market in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kostiantynivka on Wednesday as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Kyiv, Ukrainian officials said.

Footage circulated online by presidential officials showed people falling to the ground or running for cover after a huge explosion in front of them, seconds after some look up to the sky when they hear what sounds like a missile approaching.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned the attack, saying a market, shops and a pharmacy had been struck in the industrial city close to the battlefield.

“This Russian evil must be defeated as soon as possible,” Zelenskyy said on the Telegram messaging app.

“When someone in the world still attempts to deal with anything Russian, it means turning a blind eye to this reality. The audacity of evil. The brazenness of wickedness. Utter inhumanity.”

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He later told a press conference in the capital Kyiv that he believed it had been a deliberate attack on “a peaceful city.”

Reuters video footage after the attack showed shattered store fronts, gutted cars and a street littered with debris and twisted metal. Emergency services picked through the rubble.

“I only saw a flash and then shouted to my colleagues: ‘Lie on the floor. All the customers lay down on the floor … I heard things falling over, then everything was covered in smoke and fire started,” said Diana Khodak, an employee of a pharmacy hit in the attack.

“One woman walked into the pharmacy on her own. Her arm and leg were bleeding, she had a big wound on her arm. Another woman was carried inside by soldiers. She had an open fracture and her bone was sticking out from her leg,” Khodak said.

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Kostiantynivka, which had a population of about 70,000 before Russia’s invasion 18 months ago, is about 30 km (19 miles) from the devastated city of Bakhmut, where fighting has been heavy for months.

It is about 560 km from Kyiv, where Blinken met Zelenskyy and other Ukrainian leaders on a visit intended to show support for Ukraine against Russia’s invasion.

Blinken said Ukraine had made important progress in its three-month-old counteroffensive against Russian forces and announced a new package of U.S. wartime assistance worth more than US$1 billion.

Russia did not immediately comment on the attack, and has denied deliberately targeting civilians. The Kremlin had earlier on Wednesday said of Blinken’s visit that Moscow believed Washington planned to continue funding Ukraine’s military “to wage this war to the last Ukrainian.”

Wednesday’s strike followed a series of Russian attacks on cities in eastern Ukraine in which civilian infrastructure has been hit, including a popular cafe, a hotel and shops.

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It also followed air strikes hours earlier on Kyiv and the southern region of Odesa. No casualties were reported in the capital but officials said one person was killed in the Odesa region.


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Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said the search and rescue operation in Kostiantynivka had been completed.

“As of 18:00 (1500 GMT) 17 people were killed and 32 were injured as a result of Russian shelling,” he said.

Police said the market had been crowded when it was hit at around 2 p.m. (1100 GMT), and that nearly 30 shopping kiosks, an apartment block, a bank and cars were damaged.

A video released by police showed rescuers searching through the kiosks and, as bodies were taken out in black sacks, people shouting: “Who have you found?”

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The video also showed the pharmacy, its floor covered in blood.

“At the moment of the strike civilians were here, they were buying medicines and this is what happened. People died here, the entire floor is covered in blood,” a police spokeswoman is heard saying in the video.

RISING OPPOSITION TO UKRAINE AID

Blinken’s visit follows the dismissal this week of Oleksii Reznikov who, as Ukraine’s defence minister, had lobbied Washington and its allies for arms to fight the Russian invaders. Parliament was expected to confirm former lawmaker Rustem Umerov as his successor.

The new aid package announced by Blinken on Wednesday would include HIMARS missile launch systems, Javelin antitank weapons, Abrams tanks and other weapons systems, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said. The Pentagon said it would also send depleted uranium ammunition.

“In the ongoing counteroffensive, progress has accelerated in the past few weeks. This new assistance will help sustain it and build further momentum,” Blinken told reporters at a news conference with Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.

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Kuleba said he and Blinken had discussed the U.S. providing ATACMS long-range missiles and he hoped for a positive decision, adding that arming Ukraine was protecting the world from Moscow’s aggression.


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During his train ride to Kyiv, Blinken also held talks with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen – coincidentally visiting the same day. Blinken thanked Frederiksen for “Denmark’s leadership in the F-16 coalition of partner nations to train Ukrainian pilots, and for its decision to donate F-16 jets to Ukraine,” State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said.

Denmark and the Netherlands announced last month they would supply more than 60 U.S.-made F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine as soon as pilots are trained to fly them, the first countries to offer the jets after winning U.S. approval to send them.

Despite staunch U.S. support for Ukraine so far since Russia’s invasion in February last year, several Republican presidential hopefuls have questioned U.S. aid, fueling concerns over whether Washington will still back Ukraine at the same level once the U.S. 2024 election campaign intensifies.

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The U.S. government has so far provided more than $43 billion in weaponry and other military aid to Ukraine. A new package of security assistance is set to be announced this week, Reuters reported on Friday.

U.S. President Joe Biden asked Congress in August to approve about US$40 billion in additional spending, including US$24 billion for Ukraine and other international needs.

The request could face opposition in Congress, where some far-right Republicans – especially those with close ties to former President Donald Trump – want to pare back the billions in assistance Washington has sent to Ukraine.

(Additional reporting by Anna Pruchnicka, Editing by Timothy Heritage, Ron Popeski and Grant McCool)

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