On April 11, Russian forces conducted a drone strike in Kherson, targeting both public and private transportation. The incident occurred around 11:00 AM in the Korabelny district, where a minibus was struck, injuring the 42-year-old driver, as reported by the head of the city’s military administration, Yaroslav Shanko.
Emergency services transported the driver to a hospital, where he was diagnosed with blast injuries and shrapnel wounds to the chest. Shortly after, authorities confirmed that two additional individuals—a 69-year-old driver and a 57-year-old passenger—were also hospitalized due to the drone attack. Both sustained concussions and blast injuries, but their lives are not currently in danger.
This incident is part of a broader pattern of attacks by Russian military forces, which have increasingly targeted Ukrainian cities and civilian infrastructure using various types of weaponry, including strike drones, missiles, and multiple rocket launch systems. Such assaults have drawn condemnation from Ukrainian officials and international organizations, who classify them as war crimes.
Ukrainian authorities assert that these strikes are deliberate attempts to undermine essential services and civilian safety. The systematic targeting of energy systems, healthcare facilities, and other critical infrastructure is viewed as an effort to deprive the population of basic necessities, which some legal experts and human rights advocates argue may constitute genocidal actions.
Legal definitions of genocide, as outlined in the 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, include acts intended to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. The signs of genocide can manifest through various means, such as causing serious bodily or mental harm, deliberately inflicting living conditions calculated to bring about destruction, and public incitement to commit such acts.
Despite these accusations, Russian leadership continues to deny that their military is intentionally targeting civilian infrastructure or causing civilian casualties.
A recent drone strike by Russian forces in Kherson injured multiple civilians, highlighting ongoing attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure. Authorities classify these actions as potential war crimes and raise concerns about their implications for civilian safety and human rights.
