World

Dozens of Ukrainian soldiers are feared to have been killed after a military base was attacked amid Russia’s full-scale invasion.

Up to 200 troops were thought to have been inside the barracks in Mykolaiv, in the south of the war-torn country, when they were targeted on Friday.

At least 50 bodies have been recovered, a Ukrainian serviceman told the AFP news agency.

“We do not know how many others are in the rubble,” he added.

Latest updates on Russia’s attack on Ukraine

Other news from Ukraine:

Russia fires ‘hypersonic missile’ for first time since invasion
More than 1,000 people still trapped in bombed theatre
Extraordinary survival as man rescued after hours under debris
Boris Johnson claims Putin in a ‘panic’ over revolution in Moscow

Belgian media outlet VTM visited the scene of the missile attack and filmed the destruction caused, as dead bodies were pulled from the rubble.

A source at a morgue told the broadcaster that 80 people were believed to have been killed.

A soldier called Alexander who survived the attack said he was woken by the sound of explosions at about 6am.

He told VTM: “I heard the first explosion, I woke up and took my gun, and then came the most devastating explosion.

“I will never forget it, it shook everything up.

“There was no more air to breathe. I put on this mask and sat down closer to the floor, took my gun, and turned on the light on my phone.

“It wasn’t until I got outside that I realised what had happened.”

Read more: Everything you need to know about what happened in Ukraine this week

VTM said at least two missiles hit the military base.

The death toll has not been confirmed by Ukrainian authorities because the attack involved a military site, according to reports.

Alexander said his colleagues “keep dying for Ukraine because of one stupid dwarf who wants war” and “wants to test his weapons”, in an apparent reference to Vladimir Putin.

He added: “I don’t want to think about it, I don’t like to cry, but sometimes the emotional blow is too hard.”

Articles You May Like

Starmer defends China policy after spy scandal
Sue Gray nominated for peerage
New Study Challenges Planet Formation Models with PDS 70b’s Chemical Mystery
Killing of general will ring alarm bells inside embarrassed Kremlin
Waymo to begin testing in Tokyo, its first international destination