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Ukrainian President Zelensky strongly condemned the massacre of civilians in the secondary area by the Russian military at a UN Security Council meeting, calling it a "horrible war crime" and "like ISIS terrorism."

The U.S. has said it will hold the massacre commander accountable, while China has embraced Russia, saying it "should refrain from hasty accusations."



Correspondent Kim Ki-tae.



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Weapons abandoned by the Russian military are found everywhere in the ruins of the city bucha.



To date, at least 300 civilians are known to have been killed by Russian forces in the Bucha region alone.



In a video address at the UN Security Council meeting, President Zelensky denounced the Russian military by comparing it to the Islamic extremist terrorist group ISIS.



He called for the role of the UN Security Council, calling for the removal of Russia's permanent member of the veto power.




[President Zelensky/Ukraine: Now we need a UN Security Council decision for the sake of peace in Ukraine.]



US Secretary of State Tony Blincoln said, "The second massacre by the Russian army is intentional." It was strongly criticized.”



[Tony Blincoln/Secretary of State: What we saw in the secondary was not the random behavior of the villains.

It is a deliberate military action to kill, torture, rape, and commit atrocities.]



Russia dismissed the allegations of genocide as a lie, and China also surrounded Russia to refrain from hasty accusations, saying that "fact verification comes first." .



The European Commission proposed a ban on imports of Russian coal and began reviewing additional sanctions, in response to this, Russian President Putin suggested the possibility of export restrictions, saying, "We should be cautious about exporting food to non-friendly countries."



European countries, including Spain, Italy and Denmark, expelled 200 Russian diplomats from their countries.