Ukraine denies Russian claim it killed 600 soldiers
Ukraine has labelled as "propaganda" a Russian claim that it killed hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers in an attack.
Moscow claimed, without providing any evidence, that a "mass missile strike" in the eastern city of Kramatorsk had killed more than 600 Ukrainian forces.
It said it was in retaliation for a Ukrainian attack on a Russian base that killed dozens of Russian soldiers on New Year's Day.
But the Ukrainian military says this is untrue.
"This is another piece of Russian propaganda," Serhiy Cherevaty, a spokesman for the Ukrainian army, told the BBC.
Russia's defence ministry said it had killed more than 600 Ukrainian servicemen in a strike on buildings temporarily housing Ukrainian forces. More than 1,300 Ukrainian troops were housed in two buildings, Moscow said.
It called the attacks a "retaliatory strike" to avenge the deaths of 89 Russian troops killed in Makiivka. Ukraine says as many as 400 people were killed or wounded in that incident, while numbers into the hundreds have been given by Russian nationalists on social media.
Moscow is yet to offer any proof of its claim about the Kramatorsk deaths.
By matching pictures of the attack published by local officials to Google satellite imagery and other images online, the BBC has confirmed the location of two sites about a mile apart in Kramatorsk.
The strikes happened near two school buildings - vocational schools number 28 and 47 - which match with the dormitory numbers provided by Russia. Moscow says the buildings were housing Ukrainian military personnel.
However, there's no visual evidence that shows these two buildings were badly hit or that there has been mass deaths on the scale claimed by Russia.
By James Waterhouse, BBC Ukraine correspondent
Not that Russia's 36-hour ceasefire remotely resembled a truce, but almost immediately after it ended, we felt seven or so explosions in the city of Kramatorsk.
The rattle of the windows made us decide to head to the shelter. Until then, we'd only heard faint thuds and a few sirens. This marked a return to the almost daily missile strikes which Kramatorsk has had to endure.
Moscow's truce had only led to the faintest of let ups in the city, which can't be said for the surrounding area.
The local mayor posted images of damaged buildings and said two educational sites, eight apartment blocks and garages were damaged from the explosions.
There were no reported casualties, contrary to the claims from the Kremlin.
There was further shelling in various parts of Ukraine overnight after the end of what Russian President Vladimir Putin said was a 36-hour ceasefire by Russian forces so Orthodox Christians could celebrate Christmas. Evidence suggests this so-called ceasefire was not adhered to by Moscow.
Ukrainian officials said at least one person was killed in the Kharkiv region in the north-east.
Explosions were also reported in the southern cities of Zaporizhzhia and Melitopol.
Separately, Russia's defence ministry said that Ukraine had returned 50 captured Russian soldiers after negotiations. Kyiv confirmed that it had received the same number of soldiers in return from Russia.
Additional reporting by Jake Horton and Hanna Chornous
-
San Francisco judge orders police bodycam footage of Paul Pelosi assault to be released Acclaimed US chef denies workplace abuse claimsTurkish evacuation plane fired on in SudanBuying banknotes to survive Zimbabwe's sky-high inflationAngry guest crashes car into hotel in ShanghaiSyria on way back to Arab fold as isolation crumblesMeeting the would-be queen of ItalyDeaths raise fresh fears over cow vigilantism in IndiaSri Lanka urges China and India to reduce its debtsMexico claims proof of Chinese fentanyl smuggling
Next article:FBI responds to 'barricade situation' inside Fort Belvoir Army base in Virginia
- ·Man assaulted with a samurai sword at Manhattan subway station
- ·US Declaration of Independence goes on display
- ·Syria on way back to Arab fold as isolation crumbles
- ·Israel kills top Gaza militants in waves of attacks
- ·Two men arrested in connection with rape of LSU consequentlyrority student Madi Brooks have been released from jail: Casen Carver, 18, and Everett Lee, 28, post $125K bond
- ·UK doctor who was shot pleads for help leaving Sudan
- ·UK weighs Sudan evacuation options as pressure grows
- ·Man arrested after second mass shooting in Serbia
- ·Man assaulted by 'NINJA' with sheath of samurai sword is panhandler who triggered a bomb scare in New York City by planting two rice cookers in subway station three years ago: Attacker is still on the run
- ·Irishman Finbar Cafferkey dies in Ukraine
- ·Irish army to help evacuate citizens from Sudan
- ·E Jean Carroll and Trump lawyers spar over rape claim
- ·The trauma of living in India's sinking Himalayan town
- ·Foreign nationals to be evacuated from Sudan - army
- ·Teen missing in cave as massive floods hit Auckland
- ·Student fearful for mother's safety leaving Sudan
- ·Young Chinese self-infect amid Covid fears for elderly
- ·Zelensky holds first war phone call with China's Xi
- ·Paraguay country profile
- ·Proud Boy extremists have a new target: drag shows
- ·Sylvia Syms dies at age 89: Actress who starred in Ice Cold In Alex, Victim, The Queen and EastEnders passes away 'peacefully' at a care home, her family reveal
- ·Curfew in Indian state after protests turn violent
- ·At least 22 dead as boat capsizes in south India
- ·Israeli Arabs torn over protest movement
- ·Wimbledon's 2019 champion Simona Halep fails a drugs test for blood-booster Roxadustat - but former world No 1 says she feels 'betrayed' and will fight 'until the end' to clear her name
- ·Covid whistleblower returns home to Wuhan after jail
- ·British woman is found dead along with Swedish man in a tourist acomponentment in Portugal, sparking police investigation
- ·Heavy drinkers told to leave India police force
- ·BBC reporter: 'I'm drinking water from the Nile'
- ·Sri Lanka central bank lays out extent of crisis
- ·Sean Dyche expected to be Everton's new manager after positive, fast-moving talks over replacing Frank Lampard, as Marcelo Bielsa says NO notwithstanding flying in from Brazil to discuss
- ·India Parkinson's patients find joy through dance
- ·Why South Koreans want the nuclear bomb
- ·Harvard academic gets house arrest over China ties
- ·Yeezy come, Yeezy go! GAP rips Kanye West merchandise from their stores and removes collab website and Universal drops him - hours after Adidas terminated its componentnership with the rapper over his anti-Semitic outbursts
- ·Man charged after €100,000 Garda drugs seizure