Kateryna Chornovol00:38, 02.02.25
Bombing civilians is the signature style of Russian criminals, the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ PS stated.

On February 1, Russian aviation dropped an air bomb on the building of a former boarding school located on Lenin Street in the city of Sudzha in the Kursk region. The strike occurred at about 18:00.
This was reported by the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. It is noted that at the time of the attack, there were 86 civilians of the local population and a point of the National Police of Ukraine with 4 police officers in the building.
As a result of the attack from the Russian side, the central part of the boarding school was destroyed. As of 21:00, it was known that four people were killed, and four more were seriously injured. About 80 civilians were not injured. The seriously wounded were evacuated to stabilization points for the purpose of providing medical assistance and further evacuation to the hospital.
“Hitting civilians with bombs is the signature style of Russian criminals! Even when the civilians are local residents, Russians. Traditionally, numerous Russian publics blame Ukraine for the strike. It won’t work! There is irrefutable evidence and the results of objective control that the strike was carried out by Russian tactical aviation,” the Ukrainian Air Force emphasized.
The military showed screenshots from the Virazh-tablet system with the flight trajectory of a Russian guided aerial bomb:

Attack on boarding school building in Sudzha
On February 1, the Russian army launched an airstrike on Sudzha in the Kursk region, which is now under the control of the Ukrainian Defense Forces. The Ukrainian Armed Forces commandant’s office in the city of Sudzha reported that more than 90 people were trapped under the rubble.
Subsequently, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported that as of 22:00, 4 people were known to have died as a result of the attack. It was noted that people in need of additional medical care were promptly evacuated to medical institutions in Ukraine.
(c)UNIAN 2025
