
Russia deliberately hit journalists' hotels in Ukraine: NGOs
PARIS: Russia has deliberately targeted hotels used by journalists covering its war on Ukraine, the NGOs Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and Truth Hounds said on Friday, calling the strikes 'war crimes.'
At least 31 Russian strikes hit 25 hotels from the start of Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022 to mid-March 2025, the two organizations said in a report.
One attack in August 2024 in the eastern city of Kramatorsk killed a safety adviser working with international news agency Reuters, Ryan Evans.
The hotels hit were mostly located near the front lines, the organizations said.
Just one was being used for military purposes.
'The others housed civilians, including journalists,' said RSF and Truth Hounds, a Ukrainian organization founded to document war crimes in the country.
'In total, 25 journalists and media professionals have found themselves under these hotel bombings, and at least seven have been injured,' they said.
At least 15 of the strikes were carried out with high-precision Iskander 9K720 missiles, they said, condemning 'methodical and coordinated targeting.'
'The Russian strikes against hotels hosting journalists in Ukraine are neither accidental nor random,' Pauline Maufrais, RSF regional officer for Ukraine, said in a statement.
'These attacks are part of a larger strategy to sow terror and seek to reduce coverage of the war. By targeting civilian infrastructure, they violate international humanitarian law and constitute war crimes.'
RSF says 13 journalists have been killed covering Russia's invasion, 12 of them on Ukrainian territory.
That includes AFP video journalist Arman Soldin, who was killed in a rocket attack near the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakmut on May 9, 2023. He was 32.
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