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Svetlana Velmar-Janković

2024 Kostiantynivka supermarket missile attack
Part of Attacks on civilians in the Russian invasion of Ukraine
Map
Impact site of the Kh-38 missile strike on the EKO-Market hypermarket on 9 August 2024: Epicenter of the Kh-38 missile strike
LocationKostiantynivka, Ukraine
Coordinates48°30′32″N 37°40′29″E / 48.50889°N 37.67472°E / 48.50889; 37.67472
Date9 August 2024
~11:04 (UTC+3) [1]
Attack type
Missile strike
WeaponsKh-38 missile [2]
Deaths14 (including three children)
Injured44
PerpetratorsRussian Armed Forces

On 9 August 2024, the Russian Armed Forces conducted a missile attack on the EKO-market supermarket[3] in Kostiantynivka, Donetsk Oblast, killing 14 people and injuring 44 others.[4] Damaged were 10 private houses, 9 stores, a supermarket, a post office, retail pavilions, a gas pipeline, a car wash, and 12 vehicles.[5] At the impact site, rescuers dismantled 76 tons of building debris.[6]

Background

The EKO-market supermarket opened on December 30, 2008, at the intersection of Gromova and Levanievskogo Streets. It had a daily attendance of about 4,000 people. Later, the supermarket began gradually leasing part of its space, leading to the appearance of new establishments such as a Nova Poshta branch, an entertainment complex, cafes, a cinema, shops, and other retail outlets within its premises.

Attack

Vadym Filashkin, the governor of Donetsk Oblast, at first said that the attack was conducted using artillery,[4] but later stated that a Kh-38 missile was used.[3] Fourteen people, including three children, were killed, while 44 others were injured.[7]

According to Ukrainian interior minister Ihor Klymenko, the attack also hit houses and shops.[4] Filashkin later said that four houses, nine shops, a car wash and 12 cars had been damaged. A freight department of the postal service firm Nova Poshta located inside the supermarket was also damaged, injuring one of its employees.[3]

The attack was followed later in the day by a round of shelling from Smerch multiple launch rocket systems that injured two people and damaged six houses and a gas pipeline.[3]

Reactions

The head of the Presidential Administration of Ukraine Andriy Yermak called the attack "another case of Russian terror", while President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pledged to hold Russia responsible.[3]

See also

References