UN Official Condemns Highest Level of Ukrainian Civilian Casualties
The United Nations said Thursday, July 9, that civilian
casualties in Russia’s war against Ukraine climbed to a new high in June 2026,
as a senior official urged “meaningful dialogue and negotiations” to put an end
to the four-plus-year-long war.
“In the past week alone, three massive waves of Russian
aerial strikes targeted Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, further raising the
alarming civilian death toll and widening the destruction,” Rosemary DiCarlo,
UN under-secretary-general for political and peacebuilding affairs, told the
Security Council.
She said the strikes followed a clear pattern, as “they
targeted urban centers with large civilian populations and destroyed or
severely damaged residential buildings, with devastating consequences for the people
living there,” adding, “We condemn these attacks in the strongest terms.”
Citing the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR),
DiCarlo reported that “civilian casualties in Ukraine, killed and injured, were
higher in May than in any other month since the beginning of the conflict.”
“Preliminary figures for June indicate an even higher toll,
with at least 265 people killed and 1,816 injured. This concerning trend is seemingly
continuing into July,” she said.
On the cumulative toll, she said that since Russia’s
full-scale invasion began in February 2022, OHCHR “has verified that at least
16,402 civilians, including 802 children, have been killed in Ukraine,”
cautioning that “actual figures are likely significantly higher.”
DiCarlo said, “There are no military solutions that could
bring about lasting peace,” stressing, “Only inclusive, meaningful dialogue and
negotiations can reverse the current dangerous trajectory.”
Echoing those concerns, Indrika Ratwatte, acting assistant
secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and deputy emergency relief
coordinator at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA), said that “the past week has brought another surge in civilian
casualties and suffering,” with “families with children have been killed in their
homes, civilians injured on their way to work, and cut off from essential
services.”
He said attacks harming aid workers and damaging their
assets “have increased by more than 20% compared with the same period last
year.”
Ratwatte urged Council members “to use their influence to
pursue every practical opportunity to prevent further civilian suffering,”
saying, “Whatever the pace of political efforts, civilians cannot wait. Their
needs are immediate and growing. They need protection and assistance now.”
As a source of unrelenting suffering, death and evil,
Ukrainian Permanent Representative to the United Nations Ambassador Andrii
Melnyk is right in demanding that Russia be expelled from the international
body.
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