Two babies among 10 killed as Russia hits Odesa apartment block
CNN carries an article about the death toll as a result of a Russian drone attack on an apartment block in the Ukrainian city of Odesa, Caliber.Az reprints the article.
“The body of another baby has just been found next to the woman’s body. The child is believed to be less than a year old,” Oleh Kiper, the head of Odesa regional military administration, wrote on Telegram.
The bodies of a mother and her four-month-old were also found in the rubble on March 2, authorities said.
The dead woman’s sister told CNN that the mother’s name was Anna, and that she was in her bedroom on the second floor of her apartment building when the strike happened. She was a florist and a decorator.
Her husband and daughter survived the drone attack, her sister told CNN.
According to March 2 daily address by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a toddler named Mark was also killed - he was two, set to turn three on March 3.
The attack left the front facade of an apartment block in ruins.
Andriy Kostin, Prosecutor General of Ukraine noted that there is no military facility nearby, calling the attack a deliberate targeting of civilians.
March 3 has been declared a day of mourning in Odesa, according to the city’s administration.
Zelenskyy said the attack showed the need to further strengthen the country’s air defense capacities.
“One of the enemy drones hit a residential building in Odesa. 18 apartments have been destroyed,” Zelenskyy said on March 2.
“More air defense systems, more missiles for air defense is what saves lives,” he said.
Ukraine has been asking its western allies for more military aid as Russia’s war against Ukraine enters its third year.
Last week, Zelenskyy warned CNN that “millions” could die if US lawmakers don’t approve President Joe Biden’s $60 billion aid request for Kyiv, hours after announcing some 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed so far in the conflict.
Republican leadership in the House has so far been refusing to hold a vote on providing more funding.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon is weighing whether to tap into the last remaining source of funding it has for military aid to support Ukraine’s war effort against Russia even without guarantees that those funds will be replenished by Congress, multiple defense officials told CNN.