At least eight dead as Russia strikes Pokrovsk hotel used by journalists

Rescuers carry a wounded woman following the strike in Pokrovsk
Rescuers carry a wounded woman following the strike in Pokrovsk - AFP
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Russian forces launched missile strikes on the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, killing eight people and hitting a hotel used by journalists.

Kyiv said dozens were injured in the strikes which also hit a block of flats and a pizza restaurant.

Videos posted on social media after the attack on Monday showed the Druzhba Hotel had been badly damaged.

Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, said Moscow had struck an “ordinary residential building” and published footage of a typical Soviet-era five-storey building that had its top floor destroyed.

Pokrovsk lies some 43 miles north-west of the city of Donetsk, held by Russia, about 30 miles from the front line. It had a pre-war population of around 60,000 people.

Emergency services are thought to have been responding to the first missile strike when they were caught in a second some 40 minutes later. Two rescuers and a member of the military are among the dead.

Multiple people are dead and injured
Multiple people are dead and injured - AFP

Pavlo Kyrylenko, the regional governor, said a total of eight people, including five civilians, were killed in the attack.

The second attack killed a high-ranking emergency official of the Donetsk region, according to Igor Klymenko, Ukraine’s minister of internal affairs.

He later said the number of wounded increased to 31, including 19 police officers, five rescuers and one child.

Mr Klymenko added that the rubble was still “being cleared” and that “search and rescue operations are ongoing”.

Rescuers at work near a damaged residential building
Rescuers at work near a damaged residential building - AFP

Mr Zelensky had earlier warned of “victims” in the strike, sharing a video of people clearing rubble from the building.

It showed civilians helping people lying on the floor outside a building and an ordinary car covered in rubble.

The footage also showed a second building that appeared to be heavily damaged.

Lidia, a 75-year-old resident, was injured in the second blast when a window caved in on her.

“My back has cuts. I just got back from the hospital… My knee and my thigh have cuts. I had glass here,” she said, pointing at her head.

A local woman stands near her destroyed flat in an apartment building having sustained injuries in the blast
A local woman stands near her destroyed flat in an apartment building having sustained injuries in the blast - VIACHESLAV RATYNSKYI/Reuters

Mr Kyrylenko said the strikes damaged two “private sector residential buildings, a hotel, catering establishments, shops and administrative buildings”.

He warned of the “threat of repeated attacks” and urged residents to take shelter.

In June, a Russian missile strike killed 13 people at a popular pizza restaurant in eastern Ukraine.

More than 60 people were injured in that attack, in Kramatorsk.

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