Russian terror continues: drones hit civilian cars, then ambulance
Two people died when a Russian drone hit their car on a highway in Kherson Oblast on 13 August morning. But that wasn’t the end of it.
When police arrived to help, Russian forces struck again. Three officers were wounded in the second attack.
Russian drones hunted civilian cars in broad daylight across southern and eastern Ukraine, killing three people and then striking again when rescuers arrived.
— Euromaidan Press (@EuromaidanPress) August 13, 2025
The city of Kherson and part of its region was liberated from the Russians in 2022 but another part east of the Dnipro… pic.twitter.com/xBRwZI6uFR
Why target rescue workers? Ukrainians authorities describe this pattern as what appears to be a coordinated campaign to cause terror among the civilian population.
Three separate attacks, same target – civilians
Russian forces hit civilian vehicles in three locations on 13 August. In another part of Beryslav district, a drone killed one person and wounded a woman in a passenger car. Emergency crews pulled out the dead and got the injured woman to medical care.
Then came the ambulance strike. Russian forces hit the emergency vehicle directly, sparking a fire that local firefighters had to extinguish, the State Emergency Service reported.
Over in Donetsk region? Same story, different location. A Russian drone slammed into a car carrying three people, sending it careening into a roadside ditch. Police pulled two men from the wreckage while rescue teams freed the third passenger and handed him to medics.
Ukraine documents more Russian war crimes
The Beryslav prosecutor’s office isn’t treating this as random violence. They’ve opened a war crimes investigation under Article 438 of Ukraine’s Criminal Code—the section that covers war crimes resulting in death.
What makes this a war crime? Deliberately targeting civilians. And the follow-up strike on police during rescue operations? That crosses another line entirely.
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