kyiv, where Russian missiles write obituaries in rubble
Ah, Russia’s “special touch” in kyiv: a well-aimed missile strike at a nine-story building, because nothing says “we are open to dialogue” like turning apartments into collective tombs. This Wednesday, rescue teams—those heroes who work for free while politicians get paid for tweets—removed more bodies, bringing the count to 28 dead. Twenty-three of them were in the building; the other five, scattered around the city as if the tragedy needed a surprise effect.
The attack: when Russian “diplomacy” is measured in tons of explosives
The Solomianskyi district now has a new macabre record: the deadliest attack in kyiv this year. Achievement? Yes. To show off at the UN? Probably. While cranes lifted debris and dogs sniffed corpses, neighbors wondered if their broken windows would make it into the top 10 of collateral damage. The explosion was so generous that it spread destruction over a wide radius, because why settle for just one building?
The attack – part of a pyrotechnic festival of 440 drones and 32 missiles – was dubbed by Zelenskyy as “one of the largest bombings of the war”. Fourth year of conflict, and Russia continues to innovate: now with offensives on a thousand kilometers of front and attacks on civilians, because the soldiers are no longer enough to fill the graves.
The world responds (or not)
While kyiv declared a day of mourning—that Ukrainian tradition that should already have its own calendar—the US embassy tweeted its de rigueur outrage: “This senseless attack goes against Trump’s call to stop the war.”. Because, of course, Putin cares as much about Trump’s opinion as a shark cares about a vegetarian menu.
Between flowers on swings and parents waiting for corpses, Valentín Hrynkov—a 64-year-old man who survived by a mere millimeter—described the attack with poetic words: “helplessness and primitive fear.”. His wife, for her part, wore shrapnel wounds and glass as if they were props of war. Thirty minutes trapped in his apartment, because in this war, even rescue arrives late.
And meanwhile, the world looks the other way: the Middle East is burning, tariffs are rising, and Ukraine continues to be that uncomfortable conflict that no longer sells as many covers. But hey, at least there are tweets.
Did this news outrage you? Share it (before the algorithm buries it).Explore more stories the world would rather ignore.




