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Six months after the outbreak of the Ukraine war, Russia bombed a train station in a small town in eastern Ukraine, killing 25 people.

Amid growing concerns about the safety of the Zaporiza nuclear power plant, the International Atomic Energy Agency said that there is some progress in negotiations with Russia to dispatch an inspection team.



Correspondent Kwak Sang-eun reports from Paris.



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A father cries in front of the body of his 11-year-old son.



[Children's father killed in Sergii/Russian bombing: The child was in the house, but the bomb flew out of the house.

When I looked through the rubble, the child was lying here.]



On the 24th local time, Russia bombed residential areas and train stations in a small town in eastern Ukraine, killing 25 people, including an 11-year-old boy.



More than fifty people were injured.



Again, Russia did not admit responsibility for the civilian sacrifices.



The Russian Defense Ministry said the Iskander missile hit a military train at the railway station, killing more than 200 Ukrainian reservists heading to the Donbass front and destroying 10 military equipment.



They also attacked air bases in Poltava and Dnipropetrovsk, destroying eight Ukrainian fighters.



Concerns over the Japoriza nuclear power plant are also growing.



Ukraine said it had confirmed that some of its nuclear reactors were disconnected from the Ukrainian power grid.



He was also concerned about the possibility that Russia would carry out unreasonable power grid replacement in order to bring nuclear power to Russian-occupied territories.



The secretary-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency said that some progress has been made in dialogue, saying that negotiations are continuing with Russia for the dispatch of an inspection team as concerns from the international community grow.