World
17 killed, nearly 300 injured in Russian missile strikes on Ukraine’s Dnipro region

At least 17 people were killed and nearly 300 injured after Russian missile strikes hit Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region, including a strike that damaged a passenger train.
According to Dnipropetrovsk Governor Serhiy Lysak, Russian ballistic missiles struck infrastructure, as well as educational, medical, and administrative buildings—primarily in the regional capital of Dnipro. Nearly 50 high-rise residential buildings were also damaged in the strikes.
The attacks left 17 dead and 279 injured, including 29 children, Lysak said. Nearly 100 people remain hospitalized, several of them in critical condition.
One of the missiles struck a factory as a passenger train carrying more than 500 people was passing nearby. At least five train cars were damaged, and several passengers were injured by broken glass, though no fatalities were reported.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called for a “significant strengthening” of sanctions against Russia following the attacks, stating that Russia cannot manufacture ballistic missiles and other weapons without external support.
“We know exactly what we are fighting for — and it is the protection of life,” Zelenskyy said. “Russia knows exactly why it continues this war — and it is a complete disregard for life and an attempt to cleanse our land of people.”

-
Legal3 days ago
3 killed after gunman on boat opens fire at Southport, NC restaurant
-
World1 week ago
Israeli strike in Lebanon kills 4 U.S. citizens, including 3 children
-
US News3 days ago
At least 10 people shot at Mormon Church in Michigan, others missing
-
World6 days ago
Magnitude 6.2 earthquake strikes Venezuela; strong shaking reported
-
Legal5 days ago
Top Model USA among 3 dead in murder-suicide outside El Paso police HQ
-
US News1 week ago
Erika Kirk forgives husband’s killer at memorial
-
World1 week ago
Gang clash in Ecuador prison leaves 14 dead
-
Legal6 days ago
Florida man arraigned in plot to bomb New York Stock Exchange