In Ukraine’s Cherkasy region, a boy named Mikhail sobs in front of the coffins of his brother and sister.
The siblings, Sofia and Kyrylo, were killed in a Russian missile attack that destroyed their building on Friday.
A total of 25 other people were killed in last week’s missile barrage that hit cities across Ukraine.
Most of the dead were construction inmates in the city of Uman.
Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto appears to have taken aim at the Ukrainian president as diplomatic tensions continue to rise.
He said the other people in his country had “already paid an incredibly high price” for the war in Ukraine, after Volodymyr Zelensky accused the Hungarian government of “inappropriate behavior. “
Hungary has been the EU member most reluctant to impose sanctions on Russia and has expressed objections to Western countries sending weapons to Ukraine.
He further angered Ukraine by going to great lengths to prevent Kiev from joining the NATO military alliance.
He has been complaining for years about Ukraine’s entry into NATO, largely about the rights of Hungarian-speakers in western Ukraine.
Over the weekend, the Ukrainian president said: “I think this behavior is beside the point. I give you my subjective opinion.
“A best friend isn’t just a word, it’s a substance. It is a union of states with the same vision of security and values.
“They treat certain times differently, but there is an agreement between the allies, who they are to each other and their respective values. “
Szijjarto said the Hungarians have “constant assistance” to Ukraine and “have accepted and cared for more than a million refugees” from the country.
He added that “several Hungarians died in this war, members of the Hungarians in the Transcarpathian region. “
Last month, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said all allies had agreed that Ukraine would be a member.
But Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban later tweeted an article about Mr. Orban’s comments. Stoltenberg, writing: “What?”
Ukrainian resistance forces claimed that Russian forces were initiating arrangements for an imaginable evacuation of the Zaporizhzhia region.
Parts of the region have been occupied by Russian forces since last February, when the city of Berdiansk fell under Russian control.
However, the capital, known as Zaporizhzhia, remained in Ukrainian hands.
The National Resistance Center, which was established through a branch of the Ukrainian army, said: “According to the resistance forces, the pro administrations have prepared an evacuation plan for the corps of workers and their families in the temporarily occupied spaces of the Zaporizhzhia oblast. “
The organization also claimed that Russian forces were giving to destroy army documents and equipment.
Ukraine is still preparing for its spring offensive, which may see parts of the Zaporizhzhia region as the next theater of war.
Recently, it has been reported that Ukraine has transferred new ones to the region.
Following last night’s missile barrage, defense and security analyst Michael Clarke said Ukraine is likely to run out of air defense missiles.
Commanders will have to “hold back” so as not to run out of reserves before the counteroffensive, they are “very worried about having to start letting more missiles through,” the expert said.
He explained that Ukrainian forces get Patriot missiles from the US. But six rockets and the device (called a battery) used to launch them cost a billion dollars.
They may not need to waste them on reasonable drones or rockets, Clarke said.
“They use two hundred [Soviet S-300] anti-aircraft missiles a month, so even if they did something, they would possibly run out,” Clarke said.
Ukraine has been forced to use up its stockpiles since Oct. 10, when Russia introduced a crusade of giant missile bombings.
They have introduced 16 since then, and Clarke estimated that the last one likely failed largely because of the distance the missiles had to travel.
Returning to missile strikes, the Russian Defense Ministry conducted the first since the 18-missile attack on Ukraine last night.
He said the rockets hit all their designated targets, which army, such as depots and ammunition factories, state media reported.
This contradicts Ukrainian claims that no rocket fired at Kiev has been successful; that only 3 missiles passed through the country’s air defenses; and the photographs we have reported showing the destruction of residential areas.
Sky News independently determines those battlefield reports.
Stepping away from the front line for a moment: Liverpool and Kiev are about to host a simultaneous rave in what is a “party with a purpose”.
Rave Ukraine aims to allow Ukrainians to “feel the wonderful support” of the UK through music on May 7 while raising money for humanitarian aid.
Among the carry outsiders is Ukrainian DJ Nastia Haman, or Mingulitka, who will perform at Content, Liverpool, while rave is broadcast live from the HVLV Bar feat Hangout in the Ukrainian capital.
“I was very happy to receive an invitation to play as part of Rave Ukraine,” said the 31-year-old musician, who came to the UK as part of the Homes for Ukraine programme.
“I hope many Ukrainians will also come to this occasion and I think it’s vital for the other people of Kiev and Ukraine to feel that connection to the UK and feel wonderful support. “
Hot Chip, James Lavelle and Jodie Harsh will rise to the level in Liverpool’s rave.
Andy Yankovsky, 29, co-owner of the corridor in Kiev, said that despite the war, last year was “one of the most attractive years of Ukrainian music. “
“If you take a look at the number of records that have come out, it’s just crazy, it’s probably one of the biggest hits the years have had,” he said.
The explosions derailed a cargo exercise and blew up a line of force in Russia, the governors said.
Dark gray smoke can be noticed rising from a chimney scattering several cars on its sides in photographs posted on social media.
The Russian government claims that the Bryansk region, which borders Ukraine and Belarus, has been attacked several times, and the railway operator confirmed the derailment at 10:17 a. m. m. hour.
Separately, a line of force exploded overnight and an explosive device was found near a line near St. Petersburg, the governor of the Leningrad region said.
The steel supports of an electric power tower were shown collapsed in a Telegram message via Alexander Drozdenko.
He said Russia’s federal security service runs on site.
Sky News independently determines the reports of governors.
Lyubov Vasylieva and Serhii Lytvynenko are two citizens whose homes were destroyed by a Russian missile strike in Pavlohrad early this morning.
Pavlohrad, in the Dnipro region, appears to be the most affected by the night attacks we reported yesterday.
Its top official, Serhii Lysak, said at least 34 other people were wounded, adding up to five youths, the youngest of eight.
“People have bruises, fractures, cuts and lacerations, bruises, poisoning from combustion products,” he wrote on Telegram.
In intensive care are two women, elderly forty-five and 55 years old, he added.
There is some controversy over the exact amount of missile movements in the region, but what the attack shows is that Russia’s missile crusade has intensified, following a barricade that killed another 25 people on Friday.
More main points about this rapid attack can be discovered below.
Accept a Russian passport to “survive”, the Commissioner for Human Rights of Ukraine to its citizens living in the regions occupied by Russia.
Dmytro Lubinets warned the Ukrainians that Russia would exert “physical pressure” to take away the documentation, Ukrinform reported.
Last week, Vladimir Putin signed a decree authorizing the expulsion of Ukrainians from the occupied territories who refused to download Russian passports until July 1, Liga. net reported.
“All Ukrainian citizens who refuse their Russian passport will be arrested,” M. Lubinets in Ukrinform.
He said he was “categorically against” suggestions that the Ukrainian government punish citizens who settle for passports, adding that the most important thing is to survive.