One of two wounded Russian TV journalists in Ukraine says feels better
Journalist said that sometime after eight in the morning a mortar shell hit a poultry factory in the town of Izvarino reportedly wounding four people working there
MOSCOW, July 01. /ITAR-TASS/. One of two Russian television journalists, who were shell-shocked after coming under mortar fire near Izvarino border check point in Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region, feels much better and gave a brief account of the events, the press service of the broadcaster that journalist works for said on Tuesday.
Russian REN-TV television channel’s correspondent Denis Kulaga was shell-shocked and sustained hearing loss after a mortar shell exploded near him and his cameraman Konstantin Yudin, who was also shell-shocked but his condition is yet to be determined.
Kulaga said that sometime after eight in the morning a mortar shell hit a poultry factory in the town of Izvarino reportedly wounding four people working there. He and Yudin rushed to a local hospital and found there the injured people.
“They told us that the poultry farm worked in line with the schedule with many people inside at the moment of the attack and nobody expected the war,” Kulaga said.
“Some time after we recorded an interview with them an explosion went off near us. We were thrown aside and hit by a roaring sound in our ears. Our wounds were treated and cotton-plugs inserted in our ears and then we were sent for further doctor’s examination,” Kulaga said.
REN-TV’s press service earlier reported that Kulaga and Yudin were covering a story on how self-defense forces in the region were tracking down artillery spotters from the pro-Kiev military forces.
“The guys were swept by an explosion wave,” the press service said adding that the blast wave also blew the camera out of Yudin’s hands, smashing the expensive piece of equipment.
Ceasefire in Ukraine
Fierce military attacks of the pro-Kiev forces on the country’s southeastern regions resumed after Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko terminated ceasefire in the embattled regions, primarily in Donetsk and Luhansk.
On June 20 Poroshenko declared a week-long ceasefire in the country’s southeast and on late Friday he announced a three-day extension of the ceasefire. However, there were numerous reports that the truce had been violated.
Three Russian journalists covering the developments in the embattled regions of Ukraine were killed within the past month. The most recent tragic death of a Russian journalist came on Sunday night.
Anatoly Klyan, 68, was among other journalists on a bus with mothers of military conscripts going to a pro-Kiev military unit in the Donetsk Region to demand the off-duty release of their sons, when the vehicle came under gunfire. Klyan, who worked as a cameraman for state-run television broadcaster Channel One, sustained a lethal gun wound in the abdomen and died upon his hospitalization.
Two correspondents from Russian central television and radio broadcasting company VGTRK, special correspondent Igor Kornelyuk and sound engineer Anton Voloshin, were killed near the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk on June 17.
They came under mortar fire near a roadblock of militia as they were filming a TV report about people’s militias helping to evacuate refugees from the combat zone. Journalists bore clearly visible media insignia at the moment of the attack. According to eyewitnesses, a mortar shell exploded near the Russian filming crew. Sound engineer Voloshin died at the scene and Kornelyuk died later at a local hospital.
Hundreds of people have been killed, buildings have been destroyed and tens of thousands have been forced to cross the border from Ukraine to Russia since April as a result of Kiev’s military operation against federalization supporters in Ukraine’s southeast involving armored vehicles, heavy artillery and attack aviation.