Ukraine says Russian bomb killed 21 retirees as they lined up to collect pension payments

This version of Russian Glide Bomb Kills 21 People Ukrainian Village Ukraine Says Rcna230016 - World News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the attack "brutally savage" and said his Western backers should punish the Kremlin.
Get more newsRussian Glide Bomb Kills 21 People Ukrainian Village Ukraine Says Rcna230016 - World News | NBC News Cloneon

KYIV, Ukraine — A Russian glide bomb killed at least 21 people as they lined up to receive their pensions in a Ukrainian village Tuesday, the Ukrainian government said.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the strike on Yarova, in the key battleground region of Donetsk, "brutally savage." His foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, labeled it a "barbaric" "heinous crime" that “demands worldwide condemnation and action.”

The attack is the latest example of Ukrainian civilians being killed or injured in daily Russian aerial strikes.

On Sunday, Russia launched the largest such attack since launching its full-scale invasion in February 2022. While many of these strikes use Iran-designed drones, Russia has increasingly used glide bombs: cheap, Soviet weapons retrofitted with wings and satellite navigation guidance systems.

With diplomatic efforts by President Donald Trump making little progress, both Zelenskyy and his minister used Tuesday’s attack to renew calls for the United States, Europe and the Group of 20 to punish Russia for its daily assault on its smaller neighbor.

“The Russians continue destroying lives while avoiding new strong sanctions and new strong blows,” the president said. “The world must not remain silent. The world must not remain idle.”

The aftermath of the strike in Yarova on Tuesday in an image released by Ukraine's foreign affairs minister.
The aftermath of the strike in Yarova on Tuesday in an image released by Ukraine's foreign affairs minister.Andrii Sybiha / X

The victims were "ordinary citizens, gathered for one of the most routine moments of daily life, cut down by Russian terror," Yulia Svyrydenko, a Ukrainian lawmaker, said in an online post. "The world must not remain passive," she said.

NBC News has requested comment from the Russian Defense Ministry.

As well as Russia's deliberate, nightly bombardment of Ukrainian cities, some 98% of civilian casualties along the front lines have happened in Ukraine-controlled territory, indicating that Russia was the aggressor, according to United Nations monitors. In total, July saw 286 people killed and another 1,388 injured, the highest since May 2022.

Russia currently controls around 20% of Ukrainian territory, including all of the Luhansk region and part of Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. Russian President Vladimir Putin has made full control over these a key demand in his war aims, claiming that he wants to protect ethnic Russians there.

Trump has taken an increasingly tough rhetorical line on Putin, giving him various ultimatums to stop the killing. But he has rarely followed through with significant steps to punish Moscow, often extending his deadlines.

On Sunday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent signaled that the U.S. is open to partnering with European countries to impose more sanctions on countries that buy Russian oil in an attempt to "collapse" Moscow’s economy.

A day later, U.S. and European officials met at the U.S. Treasury Department to discuss various forms of economic pressure to exert on Russia, including new sanctions and tariffs on Russian oil purchases, a person familiar told The Associated Press.

Trump once said he could stop the war in 24 hours but has found the reality thornier.

Putin, who is making grinding, attritional battlefield gains, has not shifted his stance that he will only end the war if Ukraine effectively surrenders, demilitarizes and abandons ambitions of growing ties with the West. Zelenskyy says he is ready to accept an immediate ceasefire but is wary of allowing Russia to regroup and attack again.

Artem Grudinin reported from Kyiv and Alexander Smith from London.

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