Polish 7-year-old girl among victims of Russian strike on Ternopil, death toll rises to 31


A seven-year-old Polish citizen Amelia was among those killed in a Russian missile strike on the western Ukrainian city of Ternopil on Nov. 19, according to Poland’s Foreign Ministry. She died together with her mother during the attack, which has so far claimed at least 31 lives.  

“Amelka was seven years old. Seven. A Polish child,” Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk wrote on Nov. 21. “She died in Ternopil during a brutal Russian missile attack. She will no longer fulfill any of her dreams. This cruel war must end, and Russia cannot win it. Because this is also a war about the future of our children.”

Search and rescue operations in the western Ukrainian city have entered the third day, with 16 people still missing after a Russian attack, local officials reported on Nov. 21.

“Over 230 rescuers from nine regions of Ukraine are involved in the operation. In some areas, work can only be done manually due to severe damage and fragmentation of structures,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said.

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Ukraine’s Ternopil Oblast. (Nizar al-Rifai/The Kyiv Independent)

Russia carried out a large-scale overnight attack on multiple Ukrainian regions on Nov. 19. Oblasts in western Ukraine, including Ternopil, Khmelnytskyi, Ivano-Frankivsk, and Lviv, which are located over 500 kilometers (about 300 miles) from the front line and the Russian border, were hit in the attack.

A Russian strike on an apartment building in Ternopil killed at least 31 people, including six children, and injured 94 others, among them 18 children, according to Ukraine’s Emergency Service.

Rescue and search operations continue for a second day at the site of a Russian attack in Ternopil. (Volodymyr Zelensky / Telegram)

Two nine-story apartment buildings were damaged in the strike. In one of them, the damage extended from the third to the ninth floor, according to Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko.

Klymenko described the destruction he encountered at the site. “I walked between the burnt walls — it was a terrible feeling,” he said. “In each apartment — a whole life that Russia destroyed in an instant.”

Residents tried to leap from upper-floor windows to escape the fire after the missile hit the building, Klymenko said.

The Ukrainian Air Force later confirmed that Russian forces carried out the strike using Kh-101 missiles launched from aircraft located in Russia’s Vologda and Astrakhan oblasts.

Rescue workers continue search-and-recovery efforts and expect to be work throughout the night.

The Ternopil Oblast Military Administration also urged residents to stay indoors and keep their windows closed, warning that the level of toxic substances in the city’s air had risen to six times the normal limit.

Local authorities designated Nov. 19–21 as days of mourning for the victims.

“In light of the tragedy, all entertainment events in Ternopil have been canceled, and government buildings will lower their flags to half-mast,” the statement said.

Suspilne Ternopil reported on Nov. 20 that during a nationalwide minute of silence local residents went on the city’s streets and held posters with slogans such as “Remember,” “Adults and children,” “11/19,” referring to the date of the attack.

The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) in Ternopil Oblast classified the attack as a war crime.

Investigative authorities have opened a criminal case under Article 438 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine (war crimes involving intentional killing).

‘Destroyed in an instant’ — 26 killed, 142 injured, blackouts across Ukraine after Russian mass missile, drone attack



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