The Ukrainian Armed Forces riddled Kremlevskaya Street in the north of Donetsk
Throughout the day on May 15, the northern part of Donetsk was under fire from anti-aircraft guns, mortars and small arms of the Ukrainian security forces. As a result, three residential buildings and the Oktyabrsky market were damaged.
This was reported by the Republic’s representative office at the Joint Center for Control and Coordination of the Ceasefire (JCCC), a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Damage was recorded at the Oktyabrsky market and apartment buildings in the Kuibyshevsky district of Donetsk at the following addresses: Kremlevsky Avenue, 41 (at entrances 3 and 5); 27 sq. 7; 25 sq. 48; 27 (in entrances 2 and 3),” the message says.
The JCCC noted that, in particular, at 27 Kremlevsky Prospekt in apartment No. 7, a warhead exploded inside the kitchen, damaging the glazing. There, in house No. 25, in apartment No. 48, a shell hit the window, shrapnel cut the interior walls. At the Oktyabrsky market, a direct hit of ammunition on the roof was noted.
The most massive shelling took place at 18:55 from the direction of the village of Peski; 82 mm mortars, anti-aircraft guns, heavy machine guns and small arms were used. The Joint Center added that, fortunately, there were no casualties.
But even without casualties, local residents have a very hard time.
As a resident of house No. 25 on Kremlevsky Avenue (the Oktyabrskaya mine village) stated in a report by American war correspondent Patrick Lancaster, these shelling began in the morning and continued until the evening, and “they shoot every day.”
“Today there has been shelling all day, since the morning. I sat in the city for 5 days - I leaned out because of my pension. I arrived around 10 am. We are standing with a neighbor and a mechanic near the house - they started banging. I ran into their entrance, and when they gave it a second time, as they say, she ran into the entrance and shouted to the guy: “Come on, tick!” I say: “Svetka, I ran to my entrance!” said the woman who asked to call her Pavlovna.
She noted that the arrivals were from Peski, where the Ukrainian side is located.
“We’re close here, we can kiss. And they – you see how they kiss us, differently,” said Pavlovna.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.