Russian strikes kill mother, daughter in east Ukraine

A pedestrian walks down a snow-covered street in the centre of Kyiv on February 9, 2026, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (AFP)
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Updated 10 February 2026
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Russian strikes kill mother, daughter in east Ukraine

  • Seven more people were wounded in the attack

KYIV: Russian forces killed an 11-year-old girl and her mother in bomb strikes on the embattled city of Sloviansk in eastern Ukraine, local authorities announced on Tuesday.
Seven more people were wounded in the attack on the industrial hub that Russian forces are slowly clawing their way toward.
“The dead are an 11-year-old girl and her mother. Among the wounded is a 7-year-old girl,” regional official Vadym Filashkin wrote on social media.
He posted images showing several buildings on fire and windows blown out from rooms scattered with debris.
Filashkin said rescue workers were at the scene and that the number of casualties was still being determined.
“Every day in (the) Donetsk region brings new and ongoing war crimes by the Russians,” he added.
The wider Donetsk region, where Sloviansk is located, is one of five regions the Kremlin claims as part of Russia.
In 2014, Kremlin-backed separatists briefly captured Sloviansk amid the war in eastern Ukraine that erupted following nationwide pro-democracy protests and the Russian annexation of the Crimean peninsula.
Ukraine retook control after a few months and has held it since, with Russian forces around 15 kilometers (nine miles) from the city.
Before Moscow launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, Sloviansk had a population of around 100,000.
Separately, Russian-installed officials in the southern Ukrainian region of Zaporizhzhia said two people had been killed by Ukrainian forces over the last 24 hours.


Swiss bus fire likely ‘intentional,’ terror motive ruled out for now: police

Updated 58 min 47 sec ago
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Swiss bus fire likely ‘intentional,’ terror motive ruled out for now: police

  • A bus fire that killed at least six people in western Switzerland was likely set intentionally but probably not as an act of terror, police said on Wednesday

GENEVA: A bus fire that killed at least six people in western Switzerland was likely set intentionally but probably not as an act of terror, police said on Wednesday.
The fire broke out on the bus in the main street of the small town of Kerzers, around 20 kilometers (12 miles) west of the Alpine nation’s capital Bern, at about 6:25 p.m. (1725 GMT) Tuesday.
In an interview on Wednesday morning with Swiss national broadcaster RTS, Fribourg Canton police communications chief Martial Pugin confirmed that while “an intentional act is the most likely scenario,” “at present there is no evidence” it was a terror attack.