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Two-year-old among 28 dead in Thursday’s Russian attack on Kyiv

Two-year-old among 28 dead in Thursday’s Russian attack on Kyiv
Rescuers work in a destroyed apartment building after a Russian missile attack in Kyiv on July 31, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 01 August 2025

Two-year-old among 28 dead in Thursday’s Russian attack on Kyiv

Two-year-old among 28 dead in Thursday’s Russian attack on Kyiv
  • City authorities declared Friday a day of mourning as rescue operations continued

KYIV: A two-year-old child was found dead in the rubble after Thursday’s sweeping Russian drone and missile attack on Kyiv, Ukraine’s prime minister said on Friday, taking the death toll to 28, with over 150 wounded.

The toddler was the third child to have died in the attack, in which Russia launched more than 300 drones and eight missiles in the early hours of Thursday morning. The other two underage victims were six and 17 years old, the head of Ukrainian presidential office Andriy Yermak said.

The rescue service said 16 of the injured were children, the largest number of children hurt in a single attack on Ukraine’s capital since Russia started its full-scale invasion almost 3-1/2 years ago.

City authorities declared Friday a day of mourning as rescue operations continued.

“This morning, the body of a 2-year-old child was pulled from the rubble, bringing the total dead to 28, of which 3 are children,” Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said on X, adding that over 150 people had been wounded.

“The world possesses every instrument required to ensure Russia is brought to justice. What is lacking is not power – but will,” Svyrydenko said.

US President Donald Trump, speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday, sharply criticized Russia’s “disgusting” behavior against Ukraine but said he was not sure whether sanctions would deter Russia.

He has given Russian President Vladimir Putin until August 8 to make a deal or else he will respond with economic pressure.


Christians in Bangladesh alarmed after bomb attacks

Updated 5 sec ago

Christians in Bangladesh alarmed after bomb attacks

Christians in Bangladesh alarmed after bomb attacks
DHAKA: Fear has gripped Bangladesh’s tiny Christian minority after three crude bomb attacks on churches and a Catholic school, which police on Sunday said caused no injuries but were “certainly” designed to sow terror.
No group has claimed responsibility for the incidents or explained why the Christian community, which numbers around 500,000 people of the South Asian nation’s 170 million citizens, was targeted.
“We are trying to determine whether the incidents are connected or isolated — they are certainly aimed at terrifying people,” Dhaka police spokesman Muhammad Talebur Rahman told AFP.
Bangladesh has been in political turmoil since a deadly uprising toppled the autocratic government of Sheikh Hasina more than a year ago.
The recent attacks on Christian sites add to tensions as parties gear up for elections slated for February 2026.
A churchgoer said on Sunday there was an “eerie feeling” within the community.
“Anxiety grips many of us while going to church,” the 25-year-old university graduate said, asking not to be named.
The first attack took place on October 8, when a crude bomb was hurled at the capital’s oldest church, the Holy Rosary Catholic Church, established by the Portuguese in the 17th century.
Then, overnight Friday, attackers targeted two more Catholic sites — St. Mary’s Cathedral and St. Joseph’s School and College.
Nirmal Rozario, president of the Bangladesh Christian Association, said that the crude bomb exploded in front of St. Mary’s Cathedral, but that around 500 people came the next day to worship.
Rahman said attackers targeting the cathedral zoomed up on a motorbike, and “threw a crude bomb inside the school campus and fled.”
Brother Chandan Benedict Gomes, school principal at St. Jospeh’s, said that the attack had caused “anxiety” but that “classes were held as usual.”
Interim leader Muhammad Yunus, the 85-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner serving as chief adviser, has repeatedly promised that the first elections since the uprising will be held in February as planned, despite violent incidents.
On November 5 major parties opened their campaigns, which turned violent almost immediately, with a shooting at a rally for the powerful Bangladesh National Party.
Bangladesh police this month also offered cash rewards for the surrender of more than 1,300 machine guns, rifles and pistols looted during last year’s uprising.