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Ukraine's military confirms four deaths in Russian attack on Kursk region boarding school

Ukraine's military announced on Saturday that Russian troops had attacked a boarding-school housing people preparing to evacuate in a part held by Ukrainian forces of Russia's Kursk Region, killing at least 4 people.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the president of Ukraine, said that the attack destroyed the Sudzha boarding school "even though there were dozens of civilians present."

According to a statement from the Ukrainian General Staff, rescue efforts were underway as of 10:00 pm (2000 GMT).

The statement stated that four people were killed, and 84 others had been rescued. Four of the injured are in serious condition.

Could not independently verify the Ukrainian story. The Russian Defence Ministry didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.

Zelenskiy wrote in English about the incident on X. He said that it exposed Russia as a "state devoid of civility".

Zelenskiy wrote: "This is the way Russia waged war--Sudzha and Kursk region in Russian territory. A boarding school where civilians were preparing to leave.

"A Russian aerial bombardment. The building was destroyed despite the presence of dozens civilians. It was the same way Russia waged its war on Chechnya in decades past. The same thing happened to Syrians. "Russian bombs also destroy Ukrainian homes in the same manner."

A general staff announcement earlier said that a Russian glide bomb or guided bomb had struck the boarding-school in the late afternoon.

The strike was planned. "At the time of strike, local residents were preparing to evacuate the building," the report said.

Oleksiy Dmytrashkivskyi was a military spokesperson who had said earlier in a Facebook video that there were nearly 100 people under the rubble. He said they had been mostly elderly or infirm people.

According to at least one unofficial Russian blogger, the attack was carried out by Ukrainian forces.

Since August, when Ukrainian forces launched a major invasion across the border, they have controlled large parts of the Kursk area. (Reporting and editing by Nick Zieminski, Diane Craft and Oleksandr Kozoukhar)

(source: Reuters)