Since launching its full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022, Russia has conducted one of the most comprehensive campaigns of deliberate civilian destruction seen in Europe since World War II.
As of early 2026, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission has confirmed at least 14,999 Ukrainian civilians killed and more than 40,601 injured, and those numbers continue to climb.
Civilian casualties rose 31 percent in the first ten months of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024, making it the deadliest year for Ukrainian non-combatants since the war began.
No category of civilian life has been spared. Hospitals, schools, shopping centers, apartment buildings, thermal power plants, and cultural monuments have all been deliberately targeted in what multiple independent bodies, including the United Nations, the International Criminal Court, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the World Health Organization, have characterized as systematic war crimes.
The attack on Ukraine's healthcare system has been relentless and meticulously documented.
The WHO's Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care has verified more than 2,665 incidents affecting health facilities and personnel since February 2022.
By 2025, attacks on healthcare were running at 577 verified incidents per year, a figure that continues to rise.
Russia has repeatedly employed the "double-tap" tactic, striking the same location twice to kill first responders arriving at the scene, a practice explicitly prohibited under international humanitarian law. Drone operators have been documented hunting ambulances on the move.
The single most shocking hospital attack came on July 8, 2024, when a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile struck Okhmatdyt, Ukraine's largest children's hospital, located at Viacheslava Chornovola Street 28/1 in Kyiv (50.4514°N, 30.4808°E).
The missile destroyed the Toxicology wing, where children received dialysis, and damaged twelve departments including surgical wards, oncology units, and intensive care.
Three patients were on the operating table when the missile hit.
Two people were killed, 340 children evacuated, and eight critically ill children airlifted to Germany.
Russia denied targeting the hospital, weapons experts recovered fragments of a Russian Kh-101 missile, complete with serial number, at the scene.
On the same day, a children's hospital in Dnipro (48.4647°N, 35.0462°E) was also struck, illustrating the breadth of the assault. Earlier, on March 9, 2022, Russian forces bombed the Mariupol Maternity Hospital No. 3 (47.0945°N, 37.5370°E) during a declared ceasefire, killing three people including a child and injuring seventeen.
The OSCE investigated and formally concluded Russia had perpetrated a war crime.
Russia has destroyed or damaged more than 3,500 Ukrainian educational facilities since the invasion began.
At least 400 schools have been completely destroyed, roughly one in every seven schools in the country.
UNICEF estimates that more than five million Ukrainian children have only restricted access to traditional schooling.
The consequences for an entire generation are severe, PISA data showed Ukrainian students lost the equivalent of two full years of learning between 2018 and 2022.
The deadliest single strike on an educational facility came on September 3, 2024, when two Russian ballistic missiles hit the Military Institute of Telecommunications in Poltava (49.5883°N, 34.5514°E) as students were moving toward a bomb shelter.
The interval between air raid alert and impact was so short that hundreds were caught in the open. Fifty-nine people were killed and more than 328 injured.
Three days into the new school year in 2024, on September 4, Lviv was struck by a coordinated attack using Kinzhal hypersonic missiles and Shahed drones.
Seven people were killed, including a mother and her three daughters aged 7, 18, and 21.
Fifty civilian objects were damaged across the UNESCO World Heritage historic center, including at least seven educational facilities, among them Lyceum No. 5 on Kokorudza Street (49.8319°N, 24.0040°E), disrupting the education of 1,456 children.
Kharkiv has fared worst of all, 796 educational buildings have been partially or completely destroyed in that city alone, forcing authorities to relocate schools into metro stations underground.
Perhaps the most strategically calculated element of Russia's campaign has been its systematic destruction of Ukraine's energy infrastructure.
The International Energy Agency described the assault as unprecedented in modern warfare.
By September 2024, Ukraine had lost approximately 70 percent of its thermal generation capacity.
Between February 2022 and mid-2024, Russia destroyed or damaged eighteen large combined heat and power plants, 815 boiler houses, and 354 kilometers of district heating pipes, direct damage estimated at $2.4 billion by the Kyiv School of Economics.
On April 11, 2024, Russia completely destroyed the Trypilska Thermal Power Plant near Ukrainka in Kyiv Oblast (50.1353°N, 30.7504°E), the largest coal-fired plant supplying the Kyiv, Cherkasy, and Zhytomyr regions.
It was the last of three plants owned by state energy company Centrenergo, effectively wiping out the entire company's generating capacity in a single strike.
In Kharkiv, CHP Plant No. 5 (approximately 49.9500°N, 36.2800°E) was destroyed, eliminating half the city's heat supply for 1.3 million residents.
By December 6, 2025, Russia launched 653 Shahed drones, 36 cruise missiles, and 17 ballistic missiles in a single night, the largest such barrage of the war.
Christmas Day 2024 saw the thirteenth large-scale coordinated energy strike of that year alone, leaving approximately 500,000 people in Kharkiv without heat and cutting power to more than 2,677 residential buildings across multiple regions.
Beyond infrastructure, Russian missiles and drones have struck apartment buildings, shopping centers, markets, and public squares with devastating regularity.
On March 21, 2022, a ballistic missile struck the Retroville shopping mall in Kyiv's Obolonskyi district (50.5035°N, 30.4164°E), killing eight civilians and wounding thirty.
On April 4, 2025, an Iskander-M ballistic missile detonated in mid-air above a residential playground in Kryvyi Rih (approximately 47.9000°N, 33.3700°E), maximizing shrapnel spread across the surrounding neighborhood.
Nine children and eleven adults were killed, seventy-three people were injured, including a three-month-old baby.
Thirty-four apartment buildings, six schools, and multiple businesses were damaged.
On September 9, 2025, a Russian guided bomb struck the village of Yarova in Kharkiv Oblast (approximately 49.3700°N, 37.3200°E), killing twenty-four elderly people who were collecting their pensions at the local administration building, and wounding nineteen others.
In Sumy on April 13, 2025, Palm Sunday, two Iskander ballistic missiles struck the city center.
The first destroyed a conference hall at Sumy State University (50.9077°N, 34.7981°E), the second, loaded with cluster munitions, landed 150 meters away to maximize casualties among people in the streets and on a passing city bus.
Thirty-five people were killed, including two children, 129 were injured.
The international legal response has been significant, if incomplete.
The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for four senior Russian officials in connection with these attacks, Lieutenant General Sergei Kobylash and Admiral Viktor Sokolov for directing missile strikes on civilian energy infrastructure, and former Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov for broader conduct of the war.
Ukraine became the 125th state party to the Rome Statute on January 1, 2025, and in June 2025 signed an agreement with the Council of Europe to establish a special tribunal to prosecute Russian officials for the crime of aggression.
The UN's Independent Commission of Inquiry has concluded across multiple reports that many of Russia's attacks constitute war crimes, and its May 2025 report specifically found that Russia's drone campaign targeting individual civilians on the streets of Kherson rises to the level of crimes against humanity.
Russia has denied virtually every documented strike, offering explanations that independent investigators have consistently refuted through recovered missile fragments, satellite imagery, eyewitness testimony, and open-source geolocation.
The pattern, scale, and deliberateness of the destruction leave little ambiguity. More than ten million Ukrainians have been displaced. An entire nation's infrastructure, its hospitals, schools, power stations, and neighborhoods, is being systematically dismantled, one missile at a time.
14,999 confirmed civilians killed, 40,601+ injured, 1 in 7 schools damaged, 1,800+ medical facilities hit, 70% of thermal generation capacity destroyed, and 10.6 million people displaced.
Key documented sites with coordinates include:
Hospitals:
Mariupol Maternity Hospital No. 3 - 47.0945° N, 37.5370° E (March 9, 2022 - 3 killed, OSCE confirmed war crime)
Okhmatdyt Children's Hospital, Kyiv - 50.4570° N, 30.4461° E (July 8, 2024 - 60%+ destroyed)
Poltava Military Institute + adjacent hospital - 49.5883° N, 34.5514° E (59 killed, 328+ injured)
Vilnyansk Maternity Ward - 47.5483° N, 35.8816° E (newborn killed)
Izium City Council/boiler facility - 49.2071° N, 37.2781° E (6 killed)
Schools/Education:
Kharkiv city schools (796 buildings destroyed) - 49.9935° N, 36.2304° E
Lviv historic center schools - 49.8397° N, 24.0297° E (7 killed including 3 sisters)
Sumy State University (Palm Sunday attack) - 50.9077° N, 34.7981° E (35 killed)
Energy:
Trypilska Thermal Power Plant - 50.1469° N, 30.7564° E (completely destroyed April 2024)
Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant - 47.5058° N, 34.5858° E (seized, 6 GW lost)
Kharkiv CHP Plant No. 5 - 49.9500° N, 36.2800° E (half city's heat destroyed)
Civilian strikes:
Kryvyi Rih playground strike - 47.9000° N, 33.3700° E (9 children killed, April 4, 2025)
Yarova pension office - 49.3700° N, 37.3200° E (24 elderly killed)
KYIV - 5 Locations
Okhmatdyt Children's Hospital Viacheslava Chornovola St, 28/1 50.4514°N, 30.4808°E July 8, 2024 - Kh-101 cruise missile; Toxicology wing destroyed; 2 killed, 340 children evacuated
Retroville Shopping Mall Yevropeiskoho Soiuzu Ave, 47 50.5035°N, 30.4164°E March 21, 2022 - Ballistic missile, 8 killed, 30 wounded
Shevchenkivskyi District Shevchenkivskyi Raion 50.4642°N, 30.4664°E July 8, 2024 - Multiple residential buildings struck; boy's body recovered from rubble, 33 killed citywide that day
Lukianivka Residential Zone Lukyanivka neighborhood 50.4611°N, 30.4836°E Multiple strikes 2022–2024, civilian apartment buildings repeatedly hit
Trypilska Thermal Power Plant Ukrainka, Kyiv Oblast 50.1353°N, 30.7504°E April 11, 2024 - Completely destroyed, largest power plant in the Kyiv region, wiped out Centrenergo's entire generation capacity
LVIV - 5 Locations
Lyceum No. 5 (Kokorudza Street) Kokorudza St, 9 49.8319°N, 24.0040°E Sept 4, 2024 - Damaged by Kinzhal hypersonic missiles & Shahed drones, school building struck days after new school year began
Railway Station Area / Brativ Mikhnovskikh St Dvirtseva Square area 49.8399°N, 23.9937°E Sept 4, 2024 - Residential fires broke out, first explosion on Brativ Mikhnovskikh Street triggered the chain of strikes, family of four killed (mother + 3 daughters ages 7, 18, 21)
Historic City Center / Rynok Square Area Rynok Square, Old Town 49.8422°N, 24.0328°E Sept 4, 2024 attacks damaged about 50 civilian objects, including homes, medical facilities, and local architectural landmarks in the UNESCO World Heritage Site
Svobody Ave / Opera Area (CHP-1 strike zone) Svobody Ave, 28 area 49.8440°N, 24.0262°E Oct 10, 2022 Russian missiles targeted Lviv CHP-1 thermal plant, almost entire city lost power and water supply
Lviv National Agrarian University Horodotska St area 49.8397°N, 23.9944°E Jan 1, 2024, Drone strike damaged the university building on New Year's Day
According to Amnesty International, as of October 2024, Lviv had been hit 21 times in 2024 alone, with Russian missiles and drones often damaging residential buildings, schools, and other educational institutions.
The September 4 attack used Kinzhal hypersonic missiles, Kh-22 cruise missiles, Kh-101 cruise missiles, Iskander-K cruise missiles, and 29 Shahed-type drones simultaneously.
Kai Tutor | The Societal News Team
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