Published: 29 July ‘2025. The English Chronicle Desk
In one of the deadliest assaults on civilian infrastructure in recent months, a Russian airstrike on a prison facility in southeastern Ukraine has claimed the lives of 17 people and left at least 42 others wounded. The overnight attack, which struck the Bilenke penitentiary in the frontline Zaporizhzhia region, has been condemned as a war crime by Ukrainian officials.
Regional governor Ivan Fedorov reported that Russian forces deployed eight high-explosive aerial glide bombs in the strike, not only decimating parts of the prison but also damaging nearby civilian homes. According to Ukraine’s justice ministry, the assault destroyed critical areas of the prison including the dining hall, administrative building, and quarantine zone. All those killed or injured were confirmed to be inmates, underscoring the severity of the attack on an institution where detainees are supposed to be protected under international humanitarian law.
The head of the Ukrainian president’s office, Andriy Yermak, did not mince words in his reaction, labelling the attack “another war crime” in a series of ongoing atrocities attributed to Russian aggression. Ukraine’s human rights commissioner added that attacking detainees violates both humanitarian and international law, noting that incarceration does not strip individuals of their basic rights to life and safety.
Zaporizhzhia, one of four Ukrainian regions Russia claimed to have annexed in 2022, remains largely under Ukrainian control and has been a frequent target of Russian missile and bomb attacks since the onset of the full-scale invasion. The prison strike represents a sharp escalation in tactics and raises renewed alarm over the Kremlin’s willingness to strike beyond military targets.
In a parallel development on the international stage, former U.S. President Donald Trump—currently a key figure in diplomatic backchannels—issued a renewed ultimatum to Moscow. Speaking from Scotland, Trump warned that Russia has only “10 or 12 days” to agree to a ceasefire or face sweeping economic sanctions. He signaled that formal announcements of penalties could come within 24 hours, indicating a growing impatience in Western capitals over Russia’s continued refusal to de-escalate.
Trump’s previous 50-day deadline for the Kremlin to agree to a truce appears to have had little deterrent effect, as Russian forces intensified their operations across multiple Ukrainian regions in recent days. In the industrial city of Kamyanske, within Dnipropetrovsk, another missile and drone attack late Monday resulted in two fatalities and five injuries. Strikes in the Synelnykivsky district claimed additional lives, and in a nearby village, a 75-year-old woman was killed when her home was hit, leaving her 68-year-old husband wounded.
Moscow continues to press further into eastern Ukraine, claiming over the weekend to have taken control of Maliyevka—a village in the Dnipropetrovsk region. Ukraine, however, rejected these claims as unfounded, accusing Russia of manipulating battlefield narratives to mask its broader failures.
Meanwhile, across the border in Russia, Ukrainian drone strikes caused significant disruption overnight in the southern Rostov region. Officials reported the death of one person in Salsk after a drone hit their car, as well as a fire that engulfed a goods train. In the Belgorod region, another civilian was killed and his wife injured in a separate drone incident.
As both sides intensify military operations, civilians continue to bear the brunt of the violence. The latest wave of destruction across Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk highlights the increasingly indiscriminate nature of the conflict and the fragile limits of international law in curbing such brutality. With diplomacy under pressure and hostilities escalating, the prospect of a ceasefire seems distant, even as the cost in human lives continues to rise.


























































































