Russia-Ukraine war live: Zelenskyy condemns Russian attack on hospital as death toll rises | Ukraine
Zelenskyy condemns Russian attacks on Sumy hospital, updates death toll
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has posted an update to the death toll in Saturday’s attacks on a medical centre in Sumy. Eight people have now been killed in the Russian strikes, with 11 more injured. Zelenskyy said 113 patients have been evacuated from the hospital.
“Everyone in the world who speaks about this war must pay attention to what Russia is targeting,” Zelenskyy wrote on X. “They are waging war on hospitals, civilian objects, and people’s lives. Only strength can force Russia into peace. Peace through strength is the only right way.”
Key events
One civilian killed in attack on Russia's Belgorod oblast
A civilian was killed in a drone attack in the city of Shebekino in Russia’s Belgorod oblast on Saturday, the regional governor said.
Images and video posted on Telegram by regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov showed smoke billowing out of a window on the top floor of a building. In addition to the civilian who was killed, two more civilians were injured, Gladkov said – a man with a “mine-explosive injury and facial wounds” and a woman with a “mine-explosive injury and head and hand wounds”.
The attack that struck the building caused a fire that was quickly put out, and damaged four other nearby buildings, puncturing gas and water pipes, Gladkov said. The attack blew out the glass of two social buildings and two commercial buildings, and damaged some vehicles.
A drone that detonated in the courtyard of an apartment building damaged the windows of several apartments and hit four cars with shrapnel.
Shebekino is located just under five miles (7.8 km) from the border of Ukraine. While Ukrainian armed forces have not claimed responsibility for the attack, there has been an increase of drones hitting Russia from across the border over the past months.
Here are some images from this morning’s Russian attack on a medical centre in Sumy. Authorities said Russian kamikaze drones struck the hospital twice: once destroying several floors of the building and killing one, and again while patients were evacuating.
At least even people were killed and 12 people were injured in the consecutive attack.
Australia’s ABC News is rejecting Moscow’s claims that two of its journalists acted illegally by entering the Ukrainian-occupied Kursk region in Russia.
The Russian news agency Tass reported on Friday that the Russian Federal Security Service had “initiated and is investigating criminal cases” against the broadcaster’s Europe correspondent Kathryn Diss and camera operator Fletcher Yeung, as well as Romanian journalist Barbu Mircea, for the crime of “Illegal crossing of Russia’s State Border” – a crime punishable by up to five years’ imprisonment.
Diss and Yeung were escorted by a Ukrainian military unit to Sudzha in the Kursk region on 31 August, marking the first time the broadcaster had entered Russia since its invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
“We reject Russia’s claim that the ABC’s reporters have done anything illegal,” an ABC spokesperson said.
“They were reporting from occupied territory in a war zone and in full compliance with international law.
“Their reporting was done in the interests of keeping the public fully informed on a story of international importance.”
More here:
Update: seven killed in Russian strikes on hospital in Sumy
The regional military administration for the Sumy oblast has updated the death toll in Saturday’s attack on a medical centre. Seven people have now been killed, with 12 reported seriously injured.
The regional military administration said on Telegram that Russian forces used Shakhed unmanned aerial drones to carry out the attack. A policeman was among those killed – this comes as rescuers continue searching the rubble that once was a police administration building in the central city of Kryvyi Rih. A Russian missile attack that struck this five-storey building on Friday killed at least three people and injured six others.
Opening summary
At least six people were killed Saturday morning following two consecutive Russian strikes on a medical centre in Sumy, a city in northeastern Ukraine.
Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine’s interior minister, said on Telegram that one person died in the initial shelling that destroyed several floors of the hospital – but during the evacuation of the hospital’s patients, Russian forces struck again, killing more. A policeman was one of the six confirmed dead.
The deadly attack came after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with Donald Trump in New York amid concerns over the future of US aid to Ukraine if Trump – who has frequently made complimentary remarks about Vladimir Putin – wins in November. The sit-down lasted less than an hour, during which Trump told Zelesnkyy that if he won November’s presidential election he would get the Ukraine war “resolved very quickly”.
“We have a very good relationship, and I also have a very good relationship, as you know, with President Putin,” Trump said as he stood next to Zelenskyy before the meeting. “And I think if we win, I think we’re going to get it resolved very quickly … I really think we’re going to get it … but, you know, it takes two to tango.”
Zelenskyy described the meeting as “very productive”.
Elsewhere:
China and Brazil on Friday pressed ahead with an effort to gather developing countries behind a plan to end Russia’s war in Ukraine – an effort that Zelenskyy has dismissed as one that serves Moscow’s interests. Seventeen countries attended a meeting on the sidelines of the UN general assembly chaired by China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, and Brazilian foreign policy adviser Celso Amorim. Wang told reporters they discussed the need to prevent escalation in the war, avoid the use of weapons of mass destruction and prevent attacks on nuclear power plants. Zelenskyy, in a speech to the assembly earlier this week, questioned why China and Brazil were proposing an alternative to his own peace formula. Proposing “alternatives, half-hearted settlement plans, so-called sets of principles” would only give Moscow the political space to continue the war, he said.
US secretary of state Antony Blinken, speaking after a meeting with Wang, underscored strong US concerns about China’s support for Russia’s defence industrial base. He told reporters that China, while saying it seeks an end to the Ukraine conflict, “is allowing its companies to take actions that are actually helping Putin continue the aggression. That doesn’t add up.”
South Korea’s foreign minister said Russia was engaging in illegal arms trade with North Korea, reiterating statements by the US, Ukraine and independent analysts that Pyongyang is supplying rockets and missiles in return for economic and other military assistance from Moscow. Misuse of Russia’s right to veto as a permanent member of the UN security council is hindering the UN’s efforts to end war, foreign minister Cho Tae-yul said during the UN general assembly on Saturday.
Finland will place a key Nato base less than 200 kilometers (125 miles) from its border with Russia, “sending a message” to its eastern neighbour, the defence ministry said Friday. Finland became a Nato member last year, dropping decades of military non-alignment after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
A Russian drone may have breached the national airspace of Nato member Romania for “a very brief period of under three minutes” overnight during an attack on neighbouring Ukraine, the Romanian defence ministry said on Friday. Three people were killed in the attack, according to Ukrainan officials.
Russia’s FSB security service is investigating three foreign journalists for reporting in parts of Russia’s Kursk region occupied by Ukrainian forces, bringing the total of such investigations to 12. The three, Kathryn Diss and Fletcher Yeung from Australia’s ABC News and Romanian journalist Mircea Barbu, are being investigated for illegally crossing the Russian border, state news agency Ria Novosti reported.