
Defiant Putin bombs key Kherson bridge as Ukraine strikes back with massive drone strike on Russia's biggest resort
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
RUSSIAN forces last night bombed a key bridge used to transport military logistics in the Ukrainian frontline city of Kherson
Footage shows a Russian airstrike destroying the key road crossing on the Dnipro River after dropping two guided bombs.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
7
A view of damage at the road bridge connecting the central part of Kherson with the Korabel after a Russian attack
Credit: Getty
7
Russian army bombs a bridge in Kherson, damages gas pipeline as residents urged to evacuate
Credit: East2West
7
The moment Putin's army bombs a bridge in Kherson, Ukraine
Credit: East2West
7
Fire breaks out after a Russian attack at the 3 private houses and one apartment building as the emergency officials work at
Credit: Getty
The attack damaged a bridge connecting the city to the Korabel neighbourhood.
A few homes and a high-rise residential building were also damaged, officials said.
Governor Oleksandr Prokudin urged residents of the Korabel district to evacuate, citing complications with logistics and infrastructure.
He wrote on Telegram: "As a result of the enemy airstrike, logistics have been complicated.
"Because of this, it will be difficult to deliver food and other things for the time being."
Kherson Oblast, which is just near the Russian-occupied Crimean region, is frequently targeted by the Russians.
Kyiv sought revenge by launching a massive drone attack targeting Russia's main resort city of Sochi, where Putin is said to be rebuilding one of his palaces.
More than 120 firefighters were trying to extinguish a blaze at an oil depot that was sparked by the drone attack, regional Governor Veniamin Kondratyev said.
A massive fuel tank with a capacity of 2,000 cubic metres was on fire, Russia's RIA news agency reported.
Some 30 huge explosions led to a massive inferno at the facility close to the main airport often used by the Russian dictator.
Watch moment huge mushroom cloud erupts over Russian plant after massive Ukrainian strike in major blow to Putin
The Russian defence ministry said that its air defence units destroyed 93 Ukrainian drones overnight, including one over the Krasnodar region and 60 over the waters of the Black Sea.
Rosaviatsia, Russia's civil aviation authority, temporarily halted flights at Sochi's airport to ensure air safety.
The attacks come just three days after 31 people died including five children after Putin's forces fired an Iskander missile into a residential tower block in Kyiv.
US President Donald Trump branded Putin's tactics "disgusting" as emergency workers worked through the night to pull bodies from the ruins.
Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, he said: "Russia – I think it's disgusting what they're doing. I think it's disgusting."
Putin's bloodbath comes as Russia faces Trump's new deadline for peace on August 7.
Trump warned the Kremlin that it had just 10 or 12 days to come to the table and agree on peace.
As the death toll climbed this morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky lamented the deaths.
7
Emergency workers face the grim task of searching the rubble
Credit: Reuters
7
A car damaged during Russian missile and drone strikes
Credit: Reuters
He said: "The youngest child was only two years old. My condolences to the families and loved ones of the deceased. 159 people were injured, 16 of them children.
"Once again, such a vile strike by Russia shows that additional pressure on Moscow and sanctions are necessary.
"No matter how much the Kremlin denies their effectiveness, they work and must be stronger – hitting everything that allows such strikes to continue.
"And it is very important that the world does not remain silent about them.
"I thank everyone who has supported our people. We appreciate that President Trump, European leaders, and our other partners clearly see what is happening and condemn Russia."
Trump has said that the US is "totally prepared" for a nuclear war following a slew of threats against America from a Kremlin comrade.
In an extraordinary escalation, the commander-in-chief ordered that two nuclear submarines be positioned near Russia.
The nuclear sabre-rattling comes after Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chairman of Russia's security council, made an ominous threat and warned that the US is taking drastic steps towards war with Moscow.
Trump slammed Medvedev's words as "foolish and inflammatory" before ordering the placement of nuclear submarines near Russian territory.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
US citizens jailed in LA Ice raids speak out: ‘They came ready to attack'
As two masked men dragged her into an unmarked SUV, Andrea Velez tried to focus on details she might later remember – one man's red shirt, the car's leather seats, a black backpack inside. At 9.20am on 24 June in downtown Los Angeles, the 32-year-old was heading into work at a footwear company when the men in gator masks jumped out of their car and started chasing vendors and other people on the street, she recalled. As people fled, Velez froze and held on to her bag. Suddenly, she recalled, one of the men slammed her to the ground and placed her into his car. The men had 'Police' vests, but otherwise were in plainclothes and didn't identify themselves. She didn't know why they had taken her. The men, it turned out, were Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) deportation officers. They were looking to question people about 'whether they were lawfully present' in the US, an agent later wrote. Velez is a US citizen who grew up in downtown, not far from the incident. 'They just came out ready to attack anyone,' said Velez, in her first interview since her arrest. 'I thought they were kidnapping me.' A day after her arrest, the Department of Justice charged Velez with assaulting an officer, which could carry a 20-year sentence. The claim was shocking to Velez, who is 4ft 11in and said she had not laid hands on anyone. She is one of many southern California residents swept up as the Trump administration has aggressively jailed and prosecuted protesters, as well as civilians who film and object to Ice arrests and bystanders caught up in haphazard raids. Ice detained more than 2,000 immigrants in the region in June. Bill Essayli, the Trump-appointed US attorney for the region, has prosecuted at least 18 people on claims they interfered with immigration arrests, with most defendants accused of assault. Prosecutors have been forced to dismiss at least five of those felony cases, including the one against Velez. The Guardian revealed last week that the justice department also dropped felony assault cases against four anti-Ice demonstrators after officers made false and misleading statements about events captured on film. Before her arrest, Velez was not protesting against Ice – she was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time, she said. The graduate of the local Cal Poly Pomona university and lifelong LA resident said her mother and sister had dropped her off by her office just as Ice officers arrived at the intersection. After she was forced into the Ice agents' car, she spotted Los Angeles police department (LAPD) officers, left the vehicle and ran toward them, she said: 'I thought they would help me.' She told an LAPD officer she thought the men were kidnapping her: 'If I did something wrong, I'd rather have you arrest me. I trust people with uniforms.' Bystander footage taken from a nearby building shows what happened next: an LAPD officer holds on to Velez as one of the Ice agents runs up and handcuffs her. She does not appear to resist, but the Ice officer picks her up and carries her off the ground across the street. In another clip, a witness is heard saying, 'This girl was just standing there … they are causing chaos.' A third video shows LAPD shielding the Ice officers from civilians filming and protesting about her arrest. Velez is seen trying to give her mother's phone number to a bystander. She later learned her mother and 17-year-old sister had witnessed the incident, but felt powerless to intervene. Back in the Ice agents' car, Velez said the officer driving appeared furious about how the incident had played out: 'He was screaming in rage.' She overheard him on the phone discussing 'how many bodies they had gotten', she said, and referring to her as an 'alleged US citizen'. Velez and Luis Hipolito, a 23-year-old man later charged as her co-defendant, were taken to a parking structure. Video of Hipolito's arrest later published by the LA Times showed four agents had aggressively detained him by piling on top of him and using pepper spray. As the two waited to be processed, Velez said she saw his face was swollen, he was having trouble seeing, his shirt was bloody and he appeared to be convulsing and hyperventilating. His requests for medical attention were initially denied, she said: 'He was in pain, but they were like: 'It's no big deal, you will get over it.'' Even as he struggled, he tried to comfort her: 'He was making me feel safe.' Eventually, he was taken away in an ambulance, she said. Meanwhile, she saw ambulances going in and out of the federal jail nearby, which frightened her. She said officers later forced her to pose for a photo where several of them stood in a line holding her with their backs to the camera, an unusual mugshot setup that has since become commonplace for DHS press releases and posts: 'They make it seem like we're really bad criminals, the worst of the worst, when we're just regular people.' Velez was placed in the Metropolitan detention center, the downtown federal jail that has become the site of protests. There, other incarcerated women took care of her. Staff did not give her water and she learned from other residents that she had to buy a cup, but having been detained just hours before, she had no money on her account. She also couldn't buy utensils to eat. One woman on her way out donated her cup and spork to Velez. After two nights in jail, she was brought to court on assault charges. In an affidavit filed by the justice department, Joseph Arko, an agent working for a homeland security taskforce investigating 'immigration crimes', said the Ice officers had stopped in downtown to 'question two individuals about whether they were lawfully present' in the US. As one individual fled, one of the officers alleged Velez 'stepp[ed] into his path and extend[ed] one of her arms in an apparent effort to prevent him from apprehending the male', Arko summarized. The officer claimed she was so 'abrupt', 'he could not stop his momentum' and her arm 'struck' him in the face. Velez was stunned to read the allegations: 'I never hit anyone. I've never hurt anybody, ever. Everyone who knows me knows the kind of person I am. I'm quiet, reserved, always doing the right thing, always following rules.' Sixteen days after her arrest, the justice department moved to dismiss the charges against her. Velez's lawyer, Diane Bass, said she had requested body-worn footage and witness statements before the dismissal: 'I never got them. That tells me they did not have the evidence they needed and this was a false and unlawful arrest. It is a shocking and disgusting travesty of justice, and no human, never mind an American citizen, should ever be treated like that.' The justice department, US attorney's office, Ice and the DHS did not respond to detailed inquiries about Velez's case. A spokesperson for the bureau of prisons, which runs the jail, did not respond to questions about her account, saying in an email its mission is to 'operate facilities that are safe, secure, and humane'. The LAPD said in a statement after Velez's arrest that officers initially responded to the area due to 911 calls about a 'possible kidnapping' and that it was 'not involved' in her detention. The department said its role on scene was 'maintaining order', and a spokesperson last week declined to comment further on her case, pointing to an earlier statement saying the LAPD was 'not involved in civil immigration enforcement'. Other detained citizens are still fighting their charges, including Hipolito, whose attorney did not respond to requests for comment. Adrian Martinez, 20, was jailed on 17 June while immigration officers were conducting 'roving patrol duties' in Pico Rivera, a 90% Latino city in south-east LA. On break outside his job at Walmart, he saw border patrol agents moving to detain an older janitor. The agents, records showed, targeted the custodial worker after he started running away from them. Witness footage shows a masked, plainclothes officer with an assault rifle shoving Martinez, who is heard saying the man they are detaining is a 'hard worker'. At least five officers end up pushing Martinez to the ground and grabbing him by the neck as they force him into their car, the footage shows. Essayli, the US attorney, posted Martinez's photo on social media the following day, saying he was arrested for 'punching a border patrol agent in the face'. The footage does not show him punching an officer. Essayli's office did not, however, charge Martinez with assault, but rather 'conspiracy to impede a federal officer'. The justice department complaint included no reference to punching. Still, Greg Bovino, border patrol chief for parts of southern California, falsely claimed on that Martinez 'caught a federal case for assault'. Essayli's office did not respond to inquiries about Martinez's case. 'I just wanted to speak up for that guy, it was not right, it was like they were kidnapping him,' Martinez told the Guardian. 'What they were doing was wrong. They were bothering a poor old man who was just working … I was just using words and they started attacking me.' Martinez was taken to a parking structure by the federal jail where, he said, he was held for hours. Officers would not let him call his mother, he said. 'They were not believing me when I said I was a US citizen.' He said he was most worried about his family not knowing his whereabouts and anxious about his father's car, which he left at work. When officers interrogated him at the parking structure, they tried to get him to admit to assault, he said. 'I never put my hands on anybody. Why is my own government lying saying I tried to assault someone? It's scary.' Martinez's knee, shoulders and back were injured and bruised from the arrest, made worse by sleeping on a metal bed in jail for three days, he added. Weeks after the incident, KCAL News reported that one of the border patrol agents involved in Martinez's arrest, Isaiah Hodgson, had himself been arrested. The LA district attorney said on 7 July that Hodgson, 29, was off-duty and intoxicated at a restaurant when he entered a woman's bathroom and then refused to leave the business when security told him guns were not allowed on the property. He was charged with several crimes, including resisting arrest, felony battery of an officer and exhibiting a firearm in public. Martinez's attorneys said they were still investigating Hodgson's exact involvement in Martinez's arrest. 'I don't wish bad on him and I pray for his family,' Martinez said of the border patrol agent's arrest. 'But it just shows their abuse of power. He felt like he had a right to have his firearm in a restaurant while he's not even on duty.' Jaime Ruiz, a border patrol spokesperson, said the agency does not comment on pending litigation. Hodgson's attorneys did not respond to inquiries. Ciaran McEvoy, a US attorney's office spokesperson, pointed to an post from Essayli defending the 'great work being done by our amazing federal prosecutors'. His office has filed more than 50 criminal complaints since early June against people accused of assaulting or interfering with immigration officers, and nine of those people have since been indicted by grand juries, Essayli wrote. McEvoy declined to provide a full list of the cases. Essayli's post added: 'When there are reactive arrests, like we had during the riots, it's not uncommon for a complaint to be dismissed so that law enforcement can conduct additional investigation and collect more evidence.' The US attorney general, Pam Bondi, defended Essayli in a statement, calling him a 'friend' and 'champion for law and order who has done superlative work to prosecute rioters' in LA. And Tricia McLaughlin, DHS assistant secretary, added in an email: 'Our agents, officers, and prosecutors will continue to work together to keep Americans safe, and we will follow the facts, evidence, and law.' Even though Martinez never faced assault charges, Walmart terminated him after his arrest, citing 'gross misconduct', records show. He has remained out of work and anxious about his future while the charges loom. Walmart declined to comment. He had hoped to get his truck driving license, but now is unsure if he can. Garrett Miller, one of his attorneys, condemned the US attorney and border patrol officials for making false punching allegations about Martinez and never correcting them: 'They used their platforms for political gain, at Adrian's expense, and he lost his job because of it.' Injuries sustained during his arrest forced Martinez to wear a leg brace for weeks after and he still has pain when he walks, he says. Despite the government crackdown, he said he hoped people continue to 'speak out when something is not right'. After her charges were dismissed, Velez felt some relief, but she said she was still riddled with fear that Ice could target her. She was also shaken by images of the vendors and workers who she saw being detained for deportation: 'These were people just heading into work, going about their days. We don't know where they were being taken, and it just broke my heart that they may never see their families again.' Velez has been working remotely since her arrest, terrified of returning to downtown. She does virtual therapy, no longer goes on morning runs and never leaves home by herself: 'I don't feel safe knowing they can randomly attack and take you.'


The Independent
35 minutes ago
- The Independent
Stanford University laying off hundreds due to Trump cuts
Stanford University is set to lay off hundreds of employees, citing 'changes in federal policy' under the Trump administration. The elite California private school laid off 363 employees last week, a university spokesperson told The Independent. The move affected roles across departments, including those working in administration, research, alumni relations and campus operations, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. 'The university is providing support resources as well as layoff benefits to eligible employees,' school officials said in a July 31 statement. 'Nonetheless, these are difficult actions that affect valued colleagues and friends who have made important contributions to Stanford.' The layoffs are the result of 'ongoing economic uncertainty' and 'anticipated changes in federal policy — such as reductions in federal research funding and an increase in the excise tax on investment income,' according to a letter from Stanford Vice President for Human Resources Elizabeth Zacharias reviewed by the Chronicle. President Donald Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' — which he signed into law last month — increased Stanford's endowment tax from 1.4 percent to 21 percent, the Chronicle reports. Stanford's $37.6 billion endowment is among the largest in the country. Stanford also lost a significant amount of federal research funding as agencies like the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation are impacted by ongoing funding freezes, the Chronicle reports. Stanford has also been forced to make a $140 million reduction in its general budget for the upcoming year, according to a June statement from the school's president and provost. The school officials cited 'significant budget consequences from federal policy changes.' 'These changes include reductions in federal research support and an increase in the endowment tax,' the statement reads. The Trump administration has taken aim at higher education this year, and some schools have made deals with the administration to ensure federal funding isn't withheld. For instance, Columbia University in New York City agreed to pay the Trump administration a $200 million settlement last month to prevent funding cuts over claims that the elite school failed to combat antisemitism. Columbia University has not admitted wrongdoing and 'does not agree with the government's conclusion that it violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act,' according to a July 23 statement from the school. 'We are not, however, denying the very serious and painful challenges our institution has faced with antisemitism,' the statement continues. 'For these reasons, we took several important corrective steps in March, many of which are in this agreement, including a new provision for a liaison to the Jewish community, situated in University Life.'


Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Donald Trump accused of being 'like a medieval king' who has turned 'the Oval Office into a reality TV set'
The former UK ambassador to the US has delivered a scathing rebuke of Donald Trump, accusing him of acting like a 'medieval king'. Lord Darroch said the President had turned the 'Oval Office into a reality TV set'. The former diplomat was forced to quit his role in 2019 during Mr Trump's first term after leaked briefings showed him describing the President's government as 'dysfunctional', 'inept' and 'divided'. Speaking to broadcaster Iain Dale at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Lord Darroch defended the letter, which he said was a result of then-prime minister David Cameron urging him to be honest and direct. He told the audience that his comments were borne out by Mr Trump's actions as president. The former ambassador said Mr Trump was ultimately an unpredictable leader as he cited the numerous firings of top officials by the President, the various changes to his tariff policies and the recent move to place nuclear submarines near Russia. 'He's sort of like a medieval king - that sort of capricious decision-making - than he is like a modern politician where consistency is seen as important,' he said. 'He doesn't think that's important at all. He thinks that every day is a fresh day. You're basically battling with media. 'You're battling with your opponents. If it suits you today to reverse something you did last week, just do it. 'If you look at tariffs, that's a perfect example of unpredictability of capriciousness.' Lord Darroch suggested that Mr Trump's style stemmed from his time on the US version of The Apprentice. 'Donald Trump was made by reality TV,' he said, describing him as 'the American version of Alan Sugar'. He added: 'He learned a lot about how to present himself from reality TV. 'I think he's now literally turned the Oval Office into a reality TV set.' During his discussion with Mr Dale, the former diplomat praised the Prime Minister's handling of foreign policy, including his relationship with the US President. He told the broadcaster: 'So far, against a lot of predictions, Keir Starmer has proved himself really quite an adept Trump whisperer. 'He's done some clever things, including phoning Trump up after the assassination attempt - that was a clever thing to do, going to see him to sort of kiss the ring before the election.' The peer said the Labour leader had been better on foreign policy than domestic policy, but warned the PM there were 'not many votes in foreign policy'. Asked about defence, Lord Darroch suggested the UK would not be able to cope with a Russian invasion, although he said the chances of that were low. 'The truth is I don't think we are close,' he said. 'I do think it's less distant than it was five years ago. 'I do think the important point really is that we are woefully underprepared.' Lord Darroch has been outspoken in his criticism of Mr Trump since he was forced to quit his stateside role. Mr Trump had criticised him as as a 'stupid guy' and a 'pompous fool'.