Shelling of Donetsk, Russia


On 13 July 2014, mortar shells fired from Ukrainian territory landed in the courtyard of a private home in the border town of Donetsk in the Rostov Oblast of Russia, according to Russian officials. The shelling killed one civilian and injured two others.

Background

began in the neighboring Donetsk and Lugansk regions of Ukraine in February 2014 and eventually escalated into an armed insurgency by April. The Ukrainian government launched counterattacks, and by July 2014, had retaken significant territory from the pro-Russian rebels.
On Friday, 11 July, two days before the shelling, the Ukrainian Armed Forces lost 36–37 of its servicemen when they were killed by Grad missiles. In response, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko announced to his constituents that " every soldier's life, the militants will pay with dozens and hundreds of their own."

Shelling

Up to six mortar shells exploded on Sunday, 13 July, in Donetsk, Russia, a town of 50,000 that shares the same name as the much larger Ukrainian city and is just 1 km away from the Ukraine-Russia border. The mortar shells landed in a courtyard of a private home, killing a 46-year-old man, while injuring two others.
According to local officials, the shells were fired from Ukrainian territory. Russian officials also stated that least seven shells were fired into the Rostov Oblast. Russian officials say the border towns near Ukraine, which Ukraine claims are being used by rebels, had been hit in the past by Ukrainian fire. A local government official said that the shelling happened around 9:20 AM.
According to the daughter of the man who was killed in the shelling, she "woke up in the middle of the night" and heard her younger brother scream, then she ran out of the house, and heard her father scream. After that, she and her brother went to the porch and found her father, who was killed, missing an arm.
Ukraine denied responsibility for the shelling, claiming it was a false flag attack by pro-Russian militants. The Ukrainian National Guard said it was never deployed in the region in which the shelling occurred.

Aftermath

The incident increased tensions between Russia and Ukraine, with Russia vowing a "response". Russia said it would be considering "surgical strikes" that target Ukrainian military positions near the border, but there would not be a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Russia has asked military attaches from eighteen countries including the four other permanent members of the UN Security Council – China, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States – to visit the scene of the shelling.
Military attaches from eleven member-states of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and foreign journalists have inspected the areas that came under fire from Ukraine's territory. Germany's military attache, Brigadier General Reiner Schwalb stated "Russia does not conceal the events. Our task is to understand the situation,".

Response

States