'Undisguised terror': Russia's Kharkiv strike chills Ukraine
ABC News
Ukrainians are seeing in the dust and debris and the dead in Kharkiv’s central square what might become of other cities if Russia’s invasion isn’t countered in time
KHARKIV, Ukraine -- In the dust and debris — and the dead — in Kharkiv’s central square, Ukrainians on Tuesday saw what might become of other cities if Russia’s invasion isn’t countered in time.
Not long after sunrise, a Russian military strike hit the center of Ukraine’s second-largest city, badly damaging the symbolic Soviet-era regional administration building. Closed-circuit television footage showed a fireball engulfing the street in front of the building, with a few cars continuing to roll out of the billowing smoke.
“You cannot watch this without crying,” a witness said in a video of the aftermath, verified by The Associated Press.
An emergency official said the bodies of at least six people had been pulled from the ruins, and at least 20 other people were injured. It wasn’t immediately clear what type of weapon was used or how many people were killed, but Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said there were dozens of casualties.