After Russian forces threatened to deploy chemical weapons, in Ukraine, Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky has raised an alarm, warning that it is ‘very real’.
As the invasion enters its third week, Zelensky in a televised address to the nation, addressed Russian troops and asked where they planned to deploy chemical weapons.
‘Where will you strike with chemical weapons?’ he asked. ‘At the maternity hospital in Mariupol? At the church in Kharkiv? Okhmadit children’s hospital? Or at our laboratories, which have been around since Soviet times and work on regular technology, not military technology?’
The embattled president also announced civilians were evacuated from the cities of Sumy, Trostyanets, Krasnopillya, Irpin, Bucha, Hostomel and Izyum despite constant shelling, but Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said not a single civilian was able to leave Mariupol on Thursday as Russian forces failed to respect yet another temporary ceasefire.
The constant bombardment of the southern port city, which has been without water and electricity for close to a fortnight due to Russia’s refusal to respect ceasefires, was described by Zelensky as ‘outright terror, from experienced terrorists’.
‘The invaders launched a tank attack exactly where this ‘corridor of life’ was supposed to be. They have a clear order to hold the city of Mariupol hostage, to torture it,’ he said.
There was also widespread destruction elsewhere in Ukraine as the invaders continued their indiscriminate bombardment of civilian targets.
According to reports, the Institute of Physics and Technology in Kharkiv (KIPT) and a high-pressure gas pipeline near Svitlodarsk are two of the latest locations to be decimated in the attacks as the Russian invasion of Ukraine entered its third week.
KIPT was first attacked by Russian bombing campaigns on Monday, but footage has emerged of a new blaze at the complex’s dormitories today after the institute’s neutron source was destroyed in what Ukraine’s Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate called ‘an act of nuclear terrorism’.
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