Staff at drone-hit Russian college added to Ukrainian ‘kill list’

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The state-linked Mirotvorets database has targeted staff from the Starobelsk educational facility just days after a UAV strike on a dorm left 21 students dead

Ten employees from the Starobelsk Professional College in Russia’s Lugansk People’s Republic have been added to the ‘kill list’ run by Ukraine’s state-linked Mirotvorets website, just days after a dormitory at the facility was targeted by Kiev in a drone strike that killed 21 students.

According to data from the website, the recent entries include seven women and three men, among them deputy directors and teachers at the college. The database accuses them of publicly supporting Russia, attempting to undermine Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and spreading propaganda among minors.

The Mirotvorets database, which has been linked to the Ukrainian security services, is notorious for publishing the addresses and personal details of anyone critical of the Kiev regime, including journalists, athletes, artists, and politicians, some of whom have subsequently been assassinated.

The inclusion comes after the Starobelsk college was hit on Friday by several waves of Ukrainian drones. According to the Russian authorities, UAVs struck the college’s academic building and dormitory while 86 children, aged 14 to 18, were inside. The attack killed 21 students, mostly teenage girls, and 60 more sustained injuries.

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RT’s Rick Sanchez visits the site of the Ukrainian drone attack on a college dorm in Starobelsk in Russia’s Lugansk People’s Republic.
Rick Sanchez slams BBC and CNN over college massacre site no-show (VIDEO)

Moscow has described the strike as a “monstrous crime” and accused Kiev of deliberately targeting children at an educational facility.

The Russian military responded to the attack on Sunday by conducting a “massive strike” against military targets in Ukraine, including in Kiev, which featured the intermediate-range hypersonic Oreshnik system, Iskander ballistic missiles, and Kinzhal and Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles.

Western officials have since condemned Russia’s retaliatory strikes while failing to address Ukraine’s initial attack on the Starobelsk dormitory. Western media outlets such as the BBC and CNN have also refused invitations to send journalists to the scene of the attack.

Moscow has called out Kiev’s backers for remaining “brutally silent” on Ukraine’s war crimes. Russia’s permanent representative to the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, accused the West of once again “turning a blind eye” to the crimes of the “neo-Nazi Kiev regime” and engaging in “blatant mockery of child victims.”

May 26, 2026 at 06:53PM
RT

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