logo
UN Rights Mission Condemns Civilian Toll In Deadly Missile Strikes On Ukraine

UN Rights Mission Condemns Civilian Toll In Deadly Missile Strikes On Ukraine

Scoop4 days ago

25 June 2025
At least 24 people were reported killed and over 300 injured – including 32 children – when ballistic missiles struck Ukraine's Dnipro and Odesa regions on Monday and Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU) said on Wednesday.
The attacks destroyed homes, schools, hospitals, and other civilian infrastructure, and left hundreds wounded.
'The attacks struck during the day when civilians were at work, on trains, or at school,' said Danielle Bell, head of HRMMU.
'The timing alone made the high number of civilian casualties entirely foreseeable.'
On 23 June, two ballistic missiles launched by Russian forces hit Lyceum No. 1, a middle school in Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Odesa region. Although the school year had ended, staff and students were present for administrative work. The strike killed three educators and injured 14 others, including two boys.
The school, which served over 700 students, sustained critical damage.
No military objective
HRMMU, which visited the attacks sites, reported no evidence of military presence at the school, and people confirmed that no military presence had been stationed there.
'The school in Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi was not a military objective,' Ms. Bell said.
'Yet it was hit by two ballistic missiles, killing educators and injuring children.'
The following day, 24 June, missiles struck an industrial area of Dnipro city at around 11 AM local time. The blast shattered windows in nearby schools, hospitals and residential buildings.
HRMMU confirmed that two dormitories were hit, injuring numerous residents. A nearby passenger train was also impacted – windows blown out by the shockwave – injuring more than 20 travellers, according to a UN monitor onboard.
A troubling trend
These strikes followed a series of other attacks in June that have resulted in significant civilian harm, including in Kyiv city on 17 and 23 June, according to the human rights mission.
Civilian casualties in the first five months of 2025 were nearly 50 percent higher than during the same period last year, with increases typically seen during the summer months.
'Ballistic missiles, when used in densely populated areas, cause predictable and widespread harm to civilians, as demonstrated by these recent attacks,' Ms. Bell said.
'The rising civilian casualties reflect the severity of that risk.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Short-Range Drone Attacks Deepen Crisis On Ukrainian Frontlines
Short-Range Drone Attacks Deepen Crisis On Ukrainian Frontlines

Scoop

time43 minutes ago

  • Scoop

Short-Range Drone Attacks Deepen Crisis On Ukrainian Frontlines

27 June 2025 According to the rights mission, while the majority (89 per cent) of civilian casualties were documented in Ukrainian-controlled territory as a result of attacks by the Russian armed forces, the remaining occurred in territory occupied by Russian authorities, including in attacks that struck public transport and clearly marked ambulances. While individually less destructive than artillery or missiles, 'the sheer scale and increasing frequency of short-range drone attacks have made them one of the deadliest weapons in Ukraine,' said Danielle Bell, Head of HRMMU. Not compliant with laws of war Forcing residents to drastically restrict their movements, limiting access to essential goods and affecting livelihoods, the large number of short-range drone attacks exacerbated an already dire humanitarian situation. Most short-range drones have on-board cameras that provide operators with a real-time view of potential targets. However, the high number of civilian casualties resulting from drone attacks suggests that these weapons have been deployed in ways that violate international humanitarian law, in particular the principles of distinction and precaution, HRMMU noted. In some instances, drone operators appear to have intentionally attacked civilians or civilian objects, including medical transport and personnel, which would amount to war crimes, it added. 'It is clear that these weapons are not being used in compliance with the laws of war,' Ms. Bell said. Call for accountability Information verified by the mission showed that the number of civilian casualties from short-range drones steadily increased in late 2023 and early 2024, before spiking in July 2024 and reaching record numbers in April 2025. Casualties continued in May and June, such as during a strike on a minibus in Kostiantynivka, Donetsk region, on 23 June, in which the 65-year-old driver was killed. On 22 May, a 58-year-old woman, a local volunteer, was killed in a frontline village in Kharkiv region when a drone dropped a munition on the balcony of a two-story residential building, according to the HRMMU. 'Each of these attacks must be investigated,' Ms. Bell said. 'Those responsible for targeting civilians and humanitarian personnel must be held to account.'

International Criminal Court: Investigate Russian Airstrikes And Drone Attacks On Civilians
International Criminal Court: Investigate Russian Airstrikes And Drone Attacks On Civilians

Scoop

time4 days ago

  • Scoop

International Criminal Court: Investigate Russian Airstrikes And Drone Attacks On Civilians

(KYIV, June 24, 2025)—The International Criminal Court (ICC) should investigate a pattern of recent Russian missile and drone attacks targeting Ukrainian civilians, following one of the deadliest assaults on civilian areas in recent months, Fortify Rights said today. During the night of June 16 to the morning of June 17, a nearly nine-hour-long assault struck multiple civilian locations in Ukraine, including the cities of Kyiv, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, Sumy, and Poltava. According to the Ukrainian State Emergency Service, the attack killed at least 28 civilians and injured more than 140 in Kyiv alone and caused damage to civilian buildings in eight districts of the capital. Furthermore, reportedly at least nine more civilians died during Russian drone and missile attacks on Kyiv on the morning of Monday, June 23. 'Russia's egregious violations of the laws of war must not be ignored,' said Aliona Kazanska, Human Rights Associate at Fortify Rights. 'Even though Putin's top military commanders have already been indicted by the International Criminal Court for their massive attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure, such attacks continue unabated, causing many civilian casualties.' Fortify Rights interviewed six survivors and eyewitnesses to recent attacks, including the June 16–17 missile and drone attacks. Fortify Rights also visited the site of a Russian attack and documented the destruction to civilian infrastructure caused by the attacks. Yulia, 40, a Kyiv resident who survived the June 16-17 attack, described to Fortify Rights the moment her apartment building, where she lives with her husband and young daughter, was struck by a Russian missile: [On June 16th] It all started with the [drones], and the air defense shooting them down. When they [drones] started arriving, we went down to the first floor. … Then it became all quiet. We returned to the ninth floor. We still have a small child, so we put her to bed. We heard flying [drones] again. My husband and I went down to the first floor and sat on the floor. It's literally been 15 minutes. … Sitting on the floor in the corridor, in a half-asleep state, I was holding my baby. Then I just saw from the other end of the corridor, from where the shock wave came, the doors flew open, and everything was covered in sand and plaster. It just took a second. In a second, everyone was down. Then I didn't know what to do. … A lot of wounded people were around me. Yulia added: 'You know, we live on the ninth floor, where the missile struck. If we were at home there, we would not be [alive] anymore.' The June 16-17 attack was not an isolated incident. Just days earlier, on June 10, Russian forces launched waves of missile and drone attacks targeting residential areas and civilian infrastructure. Iryna, 53, a resident of Kyiv, told Fortify Rights her experience of the June 10 attack: I did not sleep [because of the incoming attack alerts], and my mother is paralyzed … we had just put her to bed and were about to go to bed. Suddenly, there was a bang! It was deafening, louder than it's ever been. And we also heard the glass shattering. … There was debris almost all over the kitchen. My mother had such thick curtains, and the blinds were also thick. This must have protected her. But we were left without windows. During the early morning hours of April 24 in the Sviatoshynskyi District of Kyiv, Russian forces launched a massive aerial night-time drone and missile attack, which killed 13 people and injured 87, including six children. Fortify Rights spoke with Olena, 64, a survivor of the attack: It was sometime after midnight. I heard the alarm. … I didn't react, I just got up, covered my husband [with a blanket], and went to bed. … Then I heard an explosion that was so loud for us. … I opened the door and was going to sit in the corridor, and then [the shockwave of the explosion] hit me. I didn't hear the second explosion. It was just so dark and warm. … I [lost consciousness] and just remember waking up on the floor a minute later. She continued: My husband was saved. … He was under a heavy carpet and only had small cuts. … Both my arm and leg were injured. … Now, when the air raid alert goes off, I feel paralyzed with fear. I can't hold it back. I want to give up everything and run somewhere. I used to be very calm about all this. According to the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), on June 16-17, Russia launched 440 long-range drones and 32 missiles into Ukraine, of which 175 drones and 14 missiles were directed at Kyiv. OHCHR also reported that in the first 17 days of June, Russia launched at least 3,340 drones mostly manufactured by Iran and 135 missiles at Ukrainian targets, mostly striking civilian areas. The recent wave of Russian aerial attacks directed against Ukraine fails to distinguish between civilian populations and military targets, and should be considered war crimes, Fortify Rights said. It continues a pattern of attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure since the beginning of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, showing clearly that Russia continues to violate the laws of war to a degree that reaches the level of crimes against humanity. International humanitarian law, also known as the laws of war, governs the conduct of parties to international armed conflicts. Article 43 of Additional Protocol 1 to the Geneva Conventions states that: In order to ensure respect for and protection of the civilian population and civilian objects, the Parties to the conflict shall at all times distinguish between the civilian population and combatants and between civilian objects and military objectives and accordingly shall direct their operations only against military objectives. Further, Article 8 of the Rome Statute of the ICC explicitly categorizes 'Intentionally directing attacks against the civilian population' as a war crime. Before Ukraine ratified the Rome Statute of the ICC in 2024, Ukrainian authorities twice accepted the court's jurisdiction. On April 9, 2014, Ukraine accepted the ICC's jurisdiction under Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute pertaining to acts committed in Ukraine from November 21, 2013, to February 22, 2014. On September 8, 2015, Ukraine extended the court's jurisdiction to focus on alleged crimes committed throughout Ukraine from February 20, 2014, onwards. Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute allows non-ICC member states to accept the jurisdiction of the Court. As part of the investigation into war crimes and crimes against humanity during Russian aggression against Ukraine, the ICC has already issued an arrest warrant against Lieutenant General Sergei Kobylash and Admiral Viktor Sokolov for directing attacks at civilian objects and for causing excessive harm to civilians or damage to civilian objects. 'Russia's continuing direct attacks against Ukrainian civilians and civilian infrastructure demand international attention and accountability,' said Aliona Kazanska. 'The International Criminal Court must respond to this pattern of deliberate aerial attacks against civilians, and countries around the world must intensify their efforts to block the Russian military from continuing its attacks against Ukrainian civilians by strengthening sanctions and blocking its access to weapons technology.'

UN Rights Mission Condemns Civilian Toll In Deadly Missile Strikes On Ukraine
UN Rights Mission Condemns Civilian Toll In Deadly Missile Strikes On Ukraine

Scoop

time4 days ago

  • Scoop

UN Rights Mission Condemns Civilian Toll In Deadly Missile Strikes On Ukraine

25 June 2025 At least 24 people were reported killed and over 300 injured – including 32 children – when ballistic missiles struck Ukraine's Dnipro and Odesa regions on Monday and Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU) said on Wednesday. The attacks destroyed homes, schools, hospitals, and other civilian infrastructure, and left hundreds wounded. 'The attacks struck during the day when civilians were at work, on trains, or at school,' said Danielle Bell, head of HRMMU. 'The timing alone made the high number of civilian casualties entirely foreseeable.' On 23 June, two ballistic missiles launched by Russian forces hit Lyceum No. 1, a middle school in Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Odesa region. Although the school year had ended, staff and students were present for administrative work. The strike killed three educators and injured 14 others, including two boys. The school, which served over 700 students, sustained critical damage. No military objective HRMMU, which visited the attacks sites, reported no evidence of military presence at the school, and people confirmed that no military presence had been stationed there. 'The school in Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi was not a military objective,' Ms. Bell said. 'Yet it was hit by two ballistic missiles, killing educators and injuring children.' The following day, 24 June, missiles struck an industrial area of Dnipro city at around 11 AM local time. The blast shattered windows in nearby schools, hospitals and residential buildings. HRMMU confirmed that two dormitories were hit, injuring numerous residents. A nearby passenger train was also impacted – windows blown out by the shockwave – injuring more than 20 travellers, according to a UN monitor onboard. A troubling trend These strikes followed a series of other attacks in June that have resulted in significant civilian harm, including in Kyiv city on 17 and 23 June, according to the human rights mission. Civilian casualties in the first five months of 2025 were nearly 50 percent higher than during the same period last year, with increases typically seen during the summer months. 'Ballistic missiles, when used in densely populated areas, cause predictable and widespread harm to civilians, as demonstrated by these recent attacks,' Ms. Bell said. 'The rising civilian casualties reflect the severity of that risk.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store