the missile also damage nearby apartment buildings and shops. among the dead were two 14 year old twins yulia and anna aksenchenko. president zelensky said the attack showed russia deserved defeat. arnaud de decker is a journalist who was at the restaurant just before it was hit. he described what he saw. i was in the lounge eating a pizza and drinking a nonalcoholic beer. i paid and left and ten minutes later, i heard a very loud explosion, first one and then moments later a second one, and i immediately understood it was the lounge that was hit. i went to the place and it was an absolute disaster. the restaurant was totally gone, people wounded in the street and rescue workers were trying to help the people from underneath the rubble. it was absolutely a disaster. that was a journalist describing what he saw at the restaurant. our correspondent andrew harding has the latest from the scene in kramatorsk. i m in the centre of kramatorsk where the missiles hit and the bl
dollars later, john durham issues his report. was it everything trump promised it would be? and a florida teacher under investigation for playing a disney movie that happens to include a gay character. chasten buttigieg, the former teacher and husband of pete buttigieg, is my guest tonight. let s go outfront. and good evening, i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, russia s worst day of the war, in fact, it was the worst day for putin and his prized air force in more than 50 years. so here s what happened. ukraine s antiaircraft missiles systems took four down four of putin s fighter jets and helicopters. it reportedly does not appear that the crew of the four aircraft had time to eject. now, the worst day in more than 50 years for putin s air force, ukraine has stopped short for taking responsibility of the attack, only saying tonight that the aircraft ran into some trouble. now, these attacks could be a precursor to the counteroffensive. just today two, more strikes in l
aleksandr lukashenko says the wagner chief flew to the belarus capital minsk, but there s uncertainty now over the wagner leader s exact current location. on that, here s our eastern europe correspondent sarah rainsford. now days later there are indications that the man who was behind that mutiny is not only still free, there are no criminal charges against him but it is possible he might actually be back in russia. yesterday president lukashenko of belarus said he was in that country, certainly we had seen flight tracker data which had shown his flight, his own privatejet, had landed in minsk yesterday morning. but yesterday evening that same plane left belarus and flew towards russia, first moscow and then to mr prigozhin s hometown of saint petersburg. and a second plane which had mirrored the movements of the first for several days was also seen flying to saint petersburg. we haven t heard from mr prigozhin himself for some time now, since monday when he put out a audio recording a
one of its backers, alexander lukashenko of neighboring belarus, here at the victory day parade in moscow last week, is rumored to have been taken ill, later appearing looking uneasy at a wreath-laying ceremony at his capital minsk. an official told cnn he is, quote, absolutely fine. and now new video said to be of lukashenko at work as usual inspecting air defenses, but rumors abound about the health of this aging kremlin-backed leader. meanwhile, a ukrainian official is calling president zelenskyy s european tour a huge success. this the latest leg with the british prime minister at his country residence where attack drones and air defense systems were pledged. i look forward to us discussing what more we can do to support you and your country.
building up its military forces in and around ukraine. including in belarus. they re uncoiling and are now poised to strike. meanwhile, in moscow. you may begin, vladimir putin told army chiefs, and they began. the president oversaw drills by russia s strategic nuclearforces, showing off his country s state of the art missiles. a message, perhaps, to russia s rivals, and not a subtle one, that for now, at least, the kremlin is in no mood to compromise. steve rosenberg, bbc news, minsk. police in the canadian capital, ottawa, have used stun grenades as they continue to remove protesters near the federal