Russia-Ukraine war live: civilians killed in missile attack on Zaporizhzhia apartment block | Ukraine


Two dead in attack on Zaporizhzhia apartment block

Russia attacked a five-storey apartment block in Zaporizhzhia overnight, killing two people, the city’s acting mayor, Anatoly Kurtev, said. Rescuers are searching for survivors under the rubble.

The building was “almost completely destroyed”, Kurtev said.

The Zaporizhzhia Regional Military Administration said Russia appears to have used a S-300 missile.

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Olena Zelenska, Ukraine’s first lady, has tweeted about the overnight attack on Zaporizhzhia, writing:

Zaporizhzhia bravely resists the Russian aggressor. In retaliation, it attacks civilians. A high-rise building was deliberately hit last night. Three floors are completely destroyed. People died. We continue to search under the rubble. My condolences to the victims. We will not forgive this.

Zaporizhzhia bravely resists ru-aggressor. In retaliation, it attacks civilians. A high-rise building was deliberately hit last night. 3 floors are completely destroyed, people died. We continue to search under the rubble. My condolences to the victims. We will not forgive this. pic.twitter.com/b0t2WCKuLG

— Олена Зеленська (@ZelenskaUA) March 2, 2023

Europe’s chief prosecutor Laura Codruta Kovesi has told Agence France-Presse she wants to go after people undermining sanctions against Russia.

The European public prosecutor’s office is charged with probing any offence deemed to have cost the EU money, which often means tracking international crime gangs and sophisticated cross-border VAT fraud operations.

The EU has imposed a series of ten packages of economic sanctions on Moscow as punishment for its year-old invasion of Ukraine, and the 49-year-old anti-graft champion wants to go after the gangs circumventing the measures to supply Russia’s war machine.

“This is something that we already have been asked by the Commission – if we can deal with it. And our answer was: ‘Yes, we can do it. We are ready to do it’,” she said.

“We have specialised prosecutors. We have offices in 22 member states … We are the only available tool in this moment at the European level that can fight with this kind of criminality.”

Any decision to add sanctions-busters to the EPPO’s targets would be a political one, taken by the leaders of the EU member states. Not all have been supportive of her role – Denmark, Sweden, Hungary, Poland and Ireland have assigned no prosecutors to the EPPO.



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