Russia struck a highway in Dnipro. According to the Office of the Prosecutor General, four people were killed and 25 more sustained injuries. In addition to the road, at least one civilian infrastructure facility was damaged — the PG's office did not provide further details.
The strike on the city's transport artery is more than just destroyed asphalt. Highways in Dnipro are part of the logistics network that ensures both the evacuation of civilians and the movement of cargo toward the front. Each damage to a key road creates a domino effect: detours, traffic jams, slowdown of critical shipments.
Dnipro is one of the largest cities functioning under constant threat of rocket and drone attacks. The city has repeatedly become a target of strikes on infrastructure: energy, transportation, and residential. The pattern is clear — Russia strikes at what ensures the resilience of the rear.
Prosecutors from the PG's office are working at the scene. The legal classification of the strike as a war crime is a standard procedure that documents evidence for international tribunals. The question is not whether a case will be opened, but whether it will lead to a verdict — and under what conditions this becomes possible.