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Ukraine accuses Russia of targeting rescue workers with ‘double tap’ missile strike

People carrying injured victim of Russian missile strike in Pokrovsk, Ukraine
People carry a woman wounded by a Russian missile strike in Pokrovsk, Ukraine, on Monday.
(Ukrainian Emergency Service)
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Ukrainian officials Tuesday accused the Kremlin’s forces of targeting rescue workers as the death toll from two Russian missile strikes that slammed into residential buildings in the downtown area of a Ukrainian city climbed to seven.

The dead in the Monday evening strikes in the city of Pokrovsk were five civilians, one rescuer and one soldier, Donetsk Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko said. Dozens more were wounded, most of them police officers, emergency workers and soldiers who had rushed to the scene to assist residents.

The Russian missiles slammed into the center of Pokrovsk, in the eastern Donetsk region, which is partially occupied by Russia. Emergency crews were still removing rubble at the scene Tuesday. The Iskander missiles, which have an advanced guidance system that increases their accuracy, hit within 40 minutes of each other, according to Kyrylenko.

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Since the start of the war, Russia has often aimed artillery and missiles at the same spot 30 minutes apart, frequently hitting emergency workers who deployed to the scene after the first strike. It’s a tactic — called a “double tap” in military jargon — that the Russians also used in Syria’s civil war.

“All of [the police] were there because they were needed, putting their efforts into rescuing people after the first strike,” Ivan Vyhivskyi, the chief of Ukraine’s National Police, said Tuesday. “They knew that under the rubble were the injured — they needed to react, to dig, to retrieve, to save. And the enemy deliberately struck the second time.”

Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed that it had hit a Ukrainian army command post in Pokrovsk. Neither side’s claims could be independently verified.

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The huge Mother Ukraine statue in Kyiv, one of the nation’s most recognizable landmarks, has lost its Soviet hammer and sickle, replaced by a trident.

Among those injured was Volodymyr Nikulin, a police officer originally from the now Russian-occupied port city of Mariupol.

Arriving at the scene after the first missile strike, Nikulin was wounded in the second strike when shrapnel pierced his left lung and left hand.

“Today is not my happy day because Russian criminals committed another awful crime in Pokrovsk,” he said in a video he sent to the Associated Press from a hospital ward in the city.

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In the video, he is seen lying on a bed shirtless, dried blood on his side and covering his left hand. He moves with pain to show his injuries.

In a week, Russia has fired dozens of missiles and drones at the Odesa region of Ukraine, hitting the historic city center that had been largely spared in the war.

Pointing his camera to show other injured security forces in the ward, he says: “Look, these are Ukrainian heroes who helped [injured] people.”

Like others, Nikulin was taken to a hospital in the city. But there were so many wounded that he was still waiting for surgery Tuesday morning. He was later transported to a hospital in Dnipro, where he was to undergo surgery to remove the shrapnel.

Nikulin had already witnessed some of the war’s horrors. He helped an Associated Press team escape after Russian troops who had besieged the city entered the downtown area and searched for them. He was featured in the award-winning documentary “20 Days in Mariupol,” a joint project between the Associated Press and PBS Frontline about the earliest phase of the Russian invasion of Mariupol.

The head of the Pokrovsk City Administration, Serhii Dobriak, described the attacks on Pokrovsk as “a typical Russian scenario: 30 to 40 minutes between missiles.”

“When rescuers come to save people’s lives, another rocket arrives. And the number of casualties increases,” he said in a video comment to local media.

Kyrylenko, the regional governor, said that 12 multistory buildings were damaged, as well as a hotel, a pharmacy, two stores and two cafes.

Russian missiles, drones and artillery have repeatedly struck civilian areas in the war. The Kremlin says its forces target only military assets and claims that other damage is caused by debris from Ukrainian air-defense weapons.

Meanwhile, an overnight attack on the town of Kruhliakivka, in the northeastern Kharkiv region, killed two people and injured nine others, Gov. Oleh Sinegubov said.

Russian shelling hits Ukrainian church in Kherson that held the remains of Catherine the Great advisor Prince Grigory Potemkin until last year.

Russia also dropped four guided bombs on a village near Kupiansk, in the Kharkiv region, killing two civilians, Ukraine’s presidential office said.

Rescuers later came under fire, and two of them were injured, it said.

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