Devastating view of a Ukrainian village following Russian (Photo) bombings

Veronica, 9, will remember on February 21st for the rest of her life. On Monday, a missile fell into her living room. She and her parents were in the kitchen in their building when the missile hit. The explosion damaged the whole bathroom wall and removed the first floor to the wire. [...]
Veronica, 9, will remember on February 21st for the rest of her life.
On Monday, a missile fell into her living room. She and her parents were in the kitchen in their building when the missile hit.
The explosion damaged the whole bathroom wall and removed the first floor to the wire.
The wooden ladders to the bedroom are almost all damaged, while Veronica's room is full of debris, her windows are torn by the force of the blow.
The dominant fear of people in Nevoluhanske, eastern Ukraine, is not a full Russian invasion, but a escalation of the bombings they have already lived with for eight years, the news broadcasts.net.
They live in the Ukrainian-controlled section of the Donnetsk region.
Only a few hundred meters from here are borders with breakaway enclaves supported by Russia.
Bombings stemming from those territories in the last five days are the worst local residents have seen, reports CNN, broadcast news.
On the same day, Veronica's house was attacked when the missile fell on Roman Shirokit's street in the corner.
He had heard the promotions and was moving his car to the garage, hoping to protect him, but the shock destroyed the body and he died.
He couldn't be buried in his hometown, because the Nevoluhanske cemetery was surrounded years ago by fighting, the front line separating the pro-Russian rebels from Ukrainian forces and is too dangerous to use. His wife wept uncontrolledly as he was resting in the nearby village of”.













