34 killed as Russian missiles hit Ukrainian city of Sumy during Palm Sunday celebrations
13 Apr 2025
This handout photograph released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on Sunday, shows the covered body of a victim killed in a missile attack in Sumy. AFP
Russian missiles struck the heart of the Ukrainian city of Sumy as people gathered to celebrate Palm Sunday, killing at least 34 people, officials said, in the second large-scale attack to claim civilian lives in just over a week.
The two ballistic missiles hit around 10:15am, officials said. Images from the scene showed lines of black body bags on the side of the road, while more bodies were seen wrapped in foil blankets among the debris.
Video footage also showed fire crews fighting to extinguish the shells of burned-out cars among the rubble from damaged buildings. The dead included two children, the State Emergency Service of Ukrain said in a statement.
A further 117 people were wounded, including 15 children, it said. "Only filthy scum can act like this — taking the lives of ordinary people," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said. In a statement on social media, he said the first strike hit buildings belonging to a city university, while the second exploded above street level.
President Volodymyr Zelensky demanded a tough international response against Moscow over the attack, which came with US President Donald Trump's push to rapidly end the war struggling to make a breakthrough.
Dead bodies were strewn on the ground in the middle of a city street near a destroyed bus and burnt-out cars in a video posted by Zelensky on social media.
"Only scoundrels can act like this. Taking the lives of ordinary people," he said, noting that the attack had come on Palm Sunday when some people were going to church.
Russian authorities did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A man cries at the bus that was hit by a Russian missile in Sumy on Sunday. AP
It followed a missile strike in the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, Zelensky's hometown and far from the ground war's front lines in the east and south, earlier this month that killed 20 people, including nine children.
Sumy, with a population of around a quarter of a million and located just over 25km from the Russian border, became a garrison city when Kyiv's forces launched an incursion into Russia last August that has since been largely repelled.
The people who were caught in Sunday's strike were out on the street or inside cars, public transport and buildings when the missiles hit, Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said. "Deliberate destruction of civilians on an important church feast day," he wrote.
A view shows the site of a Russian missile strike in Sumy. Reuters
Andriy Yermak, Zelensky's chief of staff, said the missiles contained cluster munitions. "The Russians are doing this to kill as many civilians as possible," he said.
Maryana Bezuhla, an outspoken Ukrainian lawmaker known for her sharp public criticism of military commanders, suggested on the Telegram app that the attack had taken place due to information about a gathering of soldiers leaking out.
Reuters was not able to verify that information. Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and currently holds nearly 20% of the neighbouring country's territory in the east and south. Russian forces have been slowly advancing in the east.
Ukrainian servicemen carry a body from a trolleybus after a Russian missile strike on Sumy. AP
Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Kyiv was "sharing detailed information about this war crime with all of our partners and international institutions."
The International Criminal Court in The Hague, which Ukraine officially joined this year, is conducting investigations into high-profile cases of alleged war crimes in the conflict.
Andriy Kovalenko, a security official who runs Ukraine's Centre for Countering Disinformation, noted that the strike came after a visit to Russia by US envoy Steve Witkoff for talks with top officials including President Vladimir Putin.
"Russia is building all this so-called diplomacy ... around strikes on civilians," he wrote on Telegram.
Under Trump's administration, US officials have held separate rounds of talks with Kremlin and Kyiv officials to try to move towards a cessation of hostilities in Ukraine.