World leaders slam deadly Russian strike on Ukraine
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
A Ukrainian rescuer working to extinguish a fire at the site of a missile attack in Sumy, north-eastern Ukraine, on April 13.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
SUMY - World leaders condemned a Russian missile strike on Ukraine on April 13
Two ballistic missiles hit the centre of the north-eastern city of Sumy, close to the Russian border, in the morning, killing at least 34 people and wounding more than 100 others, the Ukrainian authorities said.
The strike came two days after US presidential envoy Steve Witkoff travelled to Russia to meet President Vladimir Putin and push Mr Trump’s efforts to end the more than three-year war.
“I think it was terrible. And I was told they made a mistake. But I think it’s a horrible thing. I think the whole war is a horrible thing,” Mr Trump told reporters on board Air Force One while headed back to Washington on the evening of April 13.
Asked to clarify what he meant by a “mistake”, Mr Trump said that “they made a mistake… you’re gonna ask them” – without specifying who or what he was referring to.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the attack “horrifying” and a “tragic reminder of why President Trump and his administration are putting so much time and effort into trying to end this war and achieve durable peace”.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky on April 13 urged Mr Trump to visit his country to better understand the devastation wrought by Russia’s invasion.
“Please, before any kind of decisions, any kind of forms of negotiations, come to see people, civilians, warriors, hospitals, churches, children destroyed or dead,” he said according to a transcript of an interview broadcast on CBS.
Mr Zelensky stressed that the attack occurred on Palm Sunday, a major Christian feast.
“Only completely deranged scum can do something like this,” he said in his evening address on April 13.
Emergency services said the missiles killed 34 people, including two children, and wounded 117, including 15 children.
People ran for cover amid burning cars and the dead were seen covered in silver sheets at the scene where rescuers worked through the rubble of a building near a destroyed trolleybus.
Mr Zelensky said eight injured people were in serious condition.
The Russian attack damaged 20 buildings in total, including a university, five apartment buildings, cafes, shops and the district court, he added.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “deeply alarmed and shocked” by the strike, which highlighted a “devastating pattern of similar assaults on Ukrainian cities and towns in recent weeks”, his spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
‘A lot of corpses’
The head of Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence Kyrylo Budanov said on Telegram that Russia had used two Iskander-M/KN-23 ballistic missiles on Sumy.
One witness told AFP she heard two explosions.
“A lot of people were very badly injured. A lot of corpses,” she said, struggling to speak.
It was the second Russian attack in April to cause a large civilian death toll. An attack on Mr Zelensky’s home city of Kryvi Rig killed at least 18 people, including nine children.
A resident reacting over a body at the site of a Russian missile strike in Sumy on April 13.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Mr Trump is pushing for a quick end to the war, with the US holding direct talks with Russia despite its unrelenting attacks on Ukraine.
Washington has also held talks with Ukrainian officials on a potential truce, while European nations are discussing a military deployment to reinforce any Ukraine ceasefire.
Kyiv had previously agreed to a US-proposed unconditional ceasefire, but Moscow turned it down.
Mr Zelensky called on the US and Europe to give a “strong response” to Russia, adding: “Talking has never stopped ballistic missiles and bombs.”
Mr Trump had previously voiced anger at Russia for “bombing like crazy” in Ukraine.
France’s President Emmanuel Macron said the strike on Sumy showed Russia’s “blatant disregard for human lives, international law and the diplomatic efforts of President Trump”.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “appalled” by the attack, which Italian counterpart Giorgia Meloni described as a “cowardly” act by Russia.
Germany’s chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz described it as “a serious war crime, deliberate and intended”.
Russia has relentlessly attacked Ukraine in recent weeks.
Sumy had been under increasing pressure since Moscow pushed back many of Ukraine’s troops from its Kursk region inside Russia, across the border.
Kyiv has warned for weeks that Moscow could mount an offensive on the city.
Russia launched its invasion partially through the Sumy region and briefly occupied parts of it before being pushed back by Ukrainian forces.
On April 13, Russia said it had captured another village in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region. AFP

