YAROVA, UKRAINE – In a horrifying act of brutality that underscores the daily peril of life near the front lines, a Russian aerial bomb has struck a small village in eastern Ukraine, killing at least 21 civilians who were waiting in a queue to collect their pensions. The attack, which left a trail of mangled bodies and debris, has been condemned by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a “brutally savage” act of terror.
The strike occurred on Tuesday in the rural settlement of Yarova, in the eastern Donetsk region, a village just a few kilometers from the front line. According to Ukrainian officials, a Russian guided bomb slammed into the site at the precise moment a Ukrainian postal service van was distributing payments to elderly residents. A grim video shared by President Zelensky on social media showed corpses strewn across the ground, a destroyed minivan, and a scene of unmitigated carnage.
“Directly on people. Ordinary civilians. At the very moment when pensions were being disbursed,” Zelensky wrote online. “A response is needed from the United States. A response is needed from Europe. A response is needed from the G20.”

The victims, predominantly pensioners, were killed in a place that should have been a brief respite from the war’s grind. The attack highlights the immense risk faced by civilians in frontline communities, where the most basic acts of survival—from collecting food to receiving a monthly pension—can become a matter of life or death. An employee of the Ukrainian postal service, Ukrposhta, was also injured in the blast, according to the company’s CEO.
While there was no immediate comment from the Kremlin on the strike, the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office has launched a war crime investigation. The use of a glide bomb, a precision weapon designed to hit targets far behind the front line, suggests that the attack may have been deliberate, further fueling accusations of systematic terrorism against the civilian population.
The devastating strike comes just days after Russia launched its largest aerial assault of the war on Kyiv, hitting the Ukrainian government headquarters for the first time. While that attack targeted a center of power, the bombing of Yarova is a stark and somber reminder that the true victims of this war are not buildings or military installations, but the most vulnerable citizens who have nowhere else to go.
















