Archive April 25, 2025

Death, debris and anger about Trump after Russia’s strike on Kyiv

Kyiv, Ukraine – Serhiy Parkhomenko’s two-storey apartment building stood right next to its twin that was struck and levelled by a Russian missile early on Thursday.

The unbearably red, eardrum-rupturing explosion killed 12, wounded 87, gouged out windows and damaged roofs in dozens of nearby buildings of the tranquil, leafy neighbourhood in northwestern Kyiv.

The shockwave caused Pakhomenko’s steel entrance door to fly through his living room, flattening a cosy armchair he or his wife used to sit in during hundreds of earlier shellings.

Luckily, they were in bed during the 1am [23:00 GMT on Wednesday] strike, the largest in Kyiv since the July 2024 bombing that damaged Ukraine’s largest children’s hospital and killed 34.

The Parkhomenkos hastily grabbed their documents and rushed outside. Serhiy also managed to drag his 68-year-old next-door neighbour out of the debris of his apartment.

“I have been really lucky,” Parkhomenko, 60, a telecommunications expert, told Al Jazeera, standing next to his broken furniture and a flatscreen TV that somehow remained intact.

What most confounds him has been the White House’s inaction over the death and destruction caused by Russia in Ukraine since Donald Trump’s re-election as United States president.

Trump turns a “blind eye” to what Russian President Vladimir Putin does in Ukraine, Parkhomenko insisted.

Serhiy Parkhomenko points to the steel door that flew across his living room after the Thursday morning missile strike [Mansur Mirovalev/Al Jazeera]

The neighbour he had saved was sitting on a bench wrapped in a blanket, his face cut and bruised, and kept repeating: “You won’t frighten us.”

Even though Trump wrote “Vladimir, STOP!” in a social media post on Thursday, US Vice President JD Vance said a day earlier that Washington would refuse to mediate peace talks if Kyiv and Moscow don’t start them within days.

“We’ve shown them the finish line,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Thursday in the Oval Office after news of the strike on Kyiv. “We need both of them to say yes, but what happened last night with those missile strikes should remind everybody of why this war needs to end.”

Close to Parkhomenko was an American who arrived in Kyiv to teach Ukrainian servicemen English and join Dobrobat, a volunteer group that rebuilds houses all over the war-battered nation.

“I feel a moral obligation to come and help,” Tom Satterthwaite, who once led researchers on salmon spawning in Oregon’s dammed rivers, told Al Jazeera while hauling broken bricks and stucco downstairs.

He said the White House had failed to uphold its security guarantees to Kyiv, according to the Budapest Memorandum.

The 1994 deal prohibited Moscow, Washington and London from using military force against Ukraine in return for its abandonment of nuclear weapons.

Kyiv inherited the world’s third-largest nuclear stockpile from the Soviet Union after its 1991 collapse but agreed to transfer it to Russia in return for the security guarantees.

“Ukraine got the shaft on the deal,” Satterthwaite said.

Tom Satterthwaite, a US volunteer from Oregon, helps remove the debris
Tom Satterthwaite, an American volunteer from Oregon, helps remove debris following Russia’s missile strike on Kyiv on Thursday [Mansur Mirovalev/Al Jazeera]

Saved by her glasses

The destruction and debris after the shelling seemed shocking to some foreign volunteers. But to the head of the Dobrobat volunteer group that invites and hosts them, the scene was familiar.

“We got used to it,” Dmytro Ivanov told Al Jazeera as other volunteers ran up and down the stairs in Parkhomenko’s building. “We see it every day.”

Russia’s strike on Ukraine on Thursday involved 70 missiles and 145 explosives-laden drones.

The Kremlin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, claimed that the strike had targeted “military and military-adjacent sites”.

But the destroyed house next door to Parkhomenko was about a kilometre away from the Antonov Serial Production Plant, a century-old aircraft manufacturer that once produced Mriya (Dream), the world’s largest plane. The plant was burned down by Russian troops in February 2022.

But the strike on Thursday did not hit the plant if that was indeed the target. Instead, it damaged a dozen apartment buildings in the area.

The shockwave from the missile damaged nearby cars and buildings-
The shockwave from the missile strike on Thursday damaged nearby cars and buildings in Kyiv [Mansur Mirovalev/Al Jazeera]

Most of the victims were in the building next to Parkhomenko’s, which was almost completely levelled.

One of the survivors was Yelena, a blonde woman in her 40s whose impeccable hairdo, makeup and glasses contrasted with everything around her.

The glasses are what saved her, seconds after the strike when she moved to grab them – and her upstairs neighbour’s gas stove fell on the spot she’d just been standing in.

The blast collapsed the inner walls and ceiling of her first-floor corner apartment, while her husband Viktor saved his upstairs neighbour’s two-year-old girl from the debris.

She and her husband crawled outside to see their car mauled by the shockwave, while natural gas pipes in the building were “bursting like ropes” and neighbours yelled for help, she told Al Jazeera.

They spent hours helping them in the darkness and panic before finding out the girl’s mother had been killed.

Rescue workers look for bodies in the debris of an apartment building destroyed by a Russian missile on early Thursday
Rescue workers continue to search for bodies in the debris of an apartment building in Kyiv, destroyed by a Russian missile on early Thursday [Mansur Mirovalev/Al Jazeera]

‘There are still people down there’

At dawn, once the shock and adrenaline had worn off, Yelena realised her hair was full of broken glass, brick fragments and asbestos dust.

She rushed to her relative’s apartment to clean up and then came back to retrieve whatever was left of her belongings.

“No apartment, no car, no stuff,” she said with a sardonic smile, standing next to a dozen black garbage bags with her belongings and a microwave-sized power bank she’d been using during blackouts caused by Russia’s strikes on energy infrastructure.

Rescue workers kept excavating the debris looking for survivors, while officials registered the residents. Communal workers unfurled and cut pieces of transparent plastic film to replace broken window glass.

“There are still people down there,” Yelena said.

The strike took place on the 99th day of Trump’s second presidency whose boastful pledge to end Europe’s bloodiest conflict since World War II “within 24 hours” has proved futile.

The Kremlin has continued to produce conditions for a ceasefire – and continues the ferocious shelling of Ukrainian cities almost daily.

“They say they hit military sites, but keep striking civilian areas,” Viktor, a 59-year-old survivor whose face and scalp were cut by glass shards, told Al Jazeera as he stood next to his 90-year-old mother.

Gill out of Belfast meet but top Canadian signs up

Images courtesy of Getty

World-class Canadian athlete Gabriela DeBues-Stafford has been added to the Belfast Irish Milers Meet entries despite the pressure of English star Phoebe Gill’s decision to withdraw from the event’s schedule.

Gill, a 17-year-old at the time, set a new record for the under-18 age group by breaking the 45-year-old European under-18 record by clocking one minute 57.86 to claim a runaway 800m victory at the Belfast meeting last year.

The St. Albans runner, who won the UK Olympic trials before making it to the semi-finals of the Paris Games, was scheduled to run the 1500-meter race in Belfast on May 10 but had to miss the Mary Peters Track due to injury.

After having an incredible impact last year, meeting director Eamonn Christie said, “Phoebe has said she intends to be back in Belfast in 2026.”

Gabriela DeBues-Stafford, who won the 3, 000-meter race in her second Olympics, is the most recent addition to the meet despite losing Phoebe. She finished fifth in the 1500-meter race in Tokyo.

Rowland coached DeBues-Stafford.

The Canadian, who is currently being trained in Edinburgh by Mark Rowland, a 1988 Olympic 3, 000m steeplechase medalist, had a shaky 2022 and 2023 campaign. She is now very much on the rebound after missing out on last year’s competition in Paris.

“Gabriela’s 3, 000m personal best is a very quick 8: 33.92, and she wants to hit that pace on May 10,” Christie said. “I’m sorting the pacemakers so she has every chance to do that,” Christie said.

She contacted me to ask if she could reserve a spot after learning about the meeting, and I’m only too happy to accommodate an athlete of this caliber.

Other notable names will compete in Belfast, including British Olympic relay champion Sam Reardon, who also holds a double Olympic medal from Paris.

Callum Dodds, a former world champion, and his fellow Great Britain internationals Daniel Rowden and Tom Randolph will compete in the men’s 800m field, while the 21-year-old will compete over the 400m.

Dodds broke the record for one minute and 45 seconds at the meet for the first time, beating Randolph, who also went under the mark of one minute 45, but Rowden will be the fastest man on personal bests in the 800-meter field thanks to his personal best of 1: 43.95 from 2023.

related subjects

  • Athletics
  • Northern Ireland is a sport

‘Camera loving’ Celebrity Big Brother winner favourite teased by Drag Race star

Danny Beard, a winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race UK, and La Voix, a fellow drag artist, are among the finalists for Celebrity Big Brother, which airs tonight.

(Image: ITV)

Fellow RuPaul’s Drag Race UK star La Voix has said that it’s “fabulous” to see Danny Beard on Celebrity Big Brother. The drag artist teased over the housemate ahead of the final.

Danny, 32, is among the finalists on show, which returned for its second series on ITV two weeks ago. Like the other five remaining housemates, they will be leaving the Big Brother house in tonight’s final, where one of them will follow in the footsteps of David Potts by being crowned the winner.

La Voix, 44, who is actually Christopher Dennis, shared her thoughts about Danny appearing on this year’s season of the reality TV show just a few days ago. Both of them competed in RuPaul’s Drag Race UK, but they also had other seasons of the same show and have performed together in the past.

Danny Beard in a black hat and a white t-shirt sat in the garden of the Big Brother house.
Danny Beard is among the housemates on Celebrity Big Brother(Image: REX/Shutterstock for Big Brother)

La Voix told the Mirror earlier this week: “How fabulous to see one of my Drag Race family in the big house! [Danny] on Celebrity Big Brother is like watching RuPaul meets Argos – fabulous, chaotic, and somehow always shouting over the kettle. I’m not sure if they’re playing the game or redecorating the house in sequins, but I’m here for it.”

Asked if she was surprised that Danny has been a favourite to win ahead of the upcoming final, La Voix teased: “Not at all, darling. It’s Celebrity Big Brother, not Mensa. The louder you shout, the closer you get to the crown – and Danny’s been practically screaming in rhinestones since day one.”

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Some viewers have questioned if Danny is ‘playing up for the cameras,’ though any suggestion of that was dismissed by one of their pals in an interview with us. Asked about the fan reaction and if we’re seeing the real Danny in the Big Brother house, La Voix teased: “They love the camera so much I’m surprised it hasn’t asked for a restraining order.”

La Voix in a black top and white trousers at an event in 2024.
Fellow RuPaul’s Drag Race UK star La Voix spoke to the Mirror about Danny being on the show recently(Image: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)

The drag performer was also asked if Drag Race would have prepared Danny for Celebrity Big Brother. Danny appeared on the BBC show in 2022 and went on to win it, whilst La Voix was herself runner-up two years later.

In response to the question, La Voix responded, “Well confessionals, surprise nominations, and questionable wigs are making a comeback in Big Brother, so it’s known territory. Although we have never seen Danny making breakfast or morning coffee with RuPaul, he must be under pressure due to both his limited budgets for costumes and food.

Danny Beard on Celebrity Big Brother.
The interview was just days ahead of tonight’s final of the ITV reality TV show(Image: REX/Shutterstock for Big Brother)

La Voix – who spoke to us about her own career recently – teased that she would welcome Danny onto her the Show Isn’t Over tour later this year. She said: “If [Danny] came on tour with me, they’d be the official opening act – just enough to get the audience warmed up and mildly entertained before I’d put him on preparing my ridiculous rider of peeling Maltesers.”

Danny is one of the finalists for Celebrity Big Brother’s second season, which wraps up tonight. For the title, they square off against Chesney Hawkes, Chris Hughes, Donna Preston, JoJo Siwa, and Jack P. Shepherd.

Celebrity Big Brother’s final episode airs tonight at 9 p.m. on ITV, STV, ITVX, and STV Player. On ITV2 and ITVX, Late &amp, Live will air at 10:30 p.m.

This story, do you like? Follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and Threads for more latest news and gossip.

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READ MORE: Molly-Mae gets sunkissed makeup look with ‘radiant’ foundation that’s ‘perfect for summer’

Jodie Marsh blasts trolls as she appeals against animal licence refusal

Jodie Marsh defended taking a meerkat to the pub during an appearance at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court, and criticized trolls who attacked her animal sanctuary, Fripps Farm.

Former glamour model Jodie Marsh has defended taking a meerkat to the pub during a court case to appeal against a council’s decision to refuse her application for a wild animal licence to keep lemurs at her animal sanctuary.

The media personality, who trained as a bodybuilder, said online trolls are behind much of the criticism of her animal sanctuary in Lindsell, nine miles north west of Braintree in Essex. The 46-year-old, who owns Fripps Farm, told Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court on Friday: “I’ve wanted an animal sanctuary since I was five years old – this is my life dream.”

Ms Marsh, who appeared in the ITV series Essex Wives in 2002 and went on to feature in several reality shows and magazines, said that “everybody in the public eye has trolls”, adding: “They lash out, they pick on you, as in my case.” She continued: “When I was bodybuilding they trolled me for that, when I was modelling they trolled me for that; now it’s the animals.”

READ MORE: Jodie Marsh’s unrecognisable new look as she forks out £24k a month to run farm

Jodie Marsh outside Chelmsford Magistrates' Court in Essex
Jodie Marsh outside Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court in Essex(Image: PA)

Her Instagram account describes her as a “former model and documentary maker. Now owner of Fripps Farm animal sanctuary.” Uttlesford District Council last year rejected an application for lemurs to be kept at the animal sanctuary, and Ms Marsh is appealing against this decision.

A report that vet Dr. Stephen Philp prepared for the council that posed questions about whether it was appropriate to grant the license was the subject of a series of inquiries from her attorney Paul Oakley. The vet, according to Ms. Marsh, “basing his evidence on my trolls and neighbors.”

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She described as “banter” a comment, made in an interview with Nigel Farage on GB News, that she took a meerkat called Mabel to the pub “four nights per week”. “That was banter, that was me being funny,” she said. “Nigel and I laughed the whole time.”

Jodie Marsh outside Chelmsford Magistrates' Court in Essex
Jodie defended taking a meerkat called Mabel to the pub(Image: PA)

She claimed that she once took the meerkat to a pub to raise money for herself. She continued, “A friend’s pub is a mile from my house, and I would take her there.” It’s a foodie establishment, not a drinking one. In the week, it’s never busy.

She said she would go to the restaurant and have a “bowl of chips or something for my dinner.” She claimed in her defense that “Mabel was in my jumper or in her case the majority of the time when I did take her to the pub.”

She claimed that Mabel, who was “hand-reared from a baby, lives with me in the house as well,” and that “it’s not illegal to take a meerkat in a pub.” When questioned about a different incident, Ms. Marsh responded, “The vet told me to give the llama, and I gave it to her.”

She claimed that she lifted a goose by the neck while filming a video about ducklings “so it wouldn’t attack the baby ducklings” as the goose approached and that the goose was unharmed. She said, “I plopped it (the goose) onto the pond.” I didn’t “throw” or “swim it”

Protesters outside the court today
Protesters outside the court today(Image: PA)

A horse “certainly didn’t bolt” during a photo shoot for a glamour calendar, she claimed. She continued, “The horse wasn’t scared, absolutely not,” adding, “He was only out for about five minutes tops.”

She claimed that the department for environment, food, and rural affairs, who are the only ones who care about animals, was “not overstocked, we have that in writing from Defra [Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs] who are the only people who matter when it comes to animal welfare.” Ms. Marsh responded to a question from Uttlesford District Council, Mark Smith, regarding noise concerns involving lemurs.

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“We’re all set in five acres of land,” she said. She added that her application “didn’t get rejected because of noise – it got rejected because I touched a goose by its neck and took a meerkat to bed with me.” Ms Marsh has previously spoken of how she has helped fund the animal sanctuary through her use of the website OnlyFans.

In 2023, she told BBC Essex that OnlyFans was “amazing” and “paid my staff wages for the first year.” She said: “They all joke and say ‘your boobs pay our wages’.” The case continues.

Copa del Rey final referee breaks down over Real Madrid TV pressure

Before Saturday’s game, Copa del Rey final referee Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea spoke of the pressure Real Madrid TV has been under this season.

Madrid take on Barcelona in the Spanish Cup final in Seville, and this week the team’s television channel released a video in which the official was attacked, as they have done to various referees this year.

In February, Los Blancos claimed that Spanish refereeing was “rigged” and “completely discredited” in an open letter.

It’s completely messed up when a student’s classmates tell him his father’s father is a “thief” and he comes home crying, De Burgos Bengoetxea said at a news conference on Friday.

He continued, becoming empathetic, “It’s what I do, is try to educate my son, to say that his father is honest, above all honest, who can make mistakes, like any sportsperson.”

Although this is incredibly screwed up, I want my son to be proud of his father’s accomplishments and his role in refereeing; it has many values for us. ”

In a Spanish LaLiga game in May 2023, Real Madrid’s head coach Carlo Ancelotti, front left, speaks with referee Ricardo De Burgos Bengoetxea (AP Photo/Alberto Saiz/AP)

The 39-year-old cried out as she drew closer examination to the subject of referee abuse.

Many of our colleagues, not just in professional football but also at the grassroots level, he said, “It’s not right what we are going through.”

Everyone should consider where we want to go, what we want from football and sport, and what we want. ”

Officials could take further action over Real Madrid TV’s broadcasts in the coming weeks, according to Pablo Gonzalez Fuertes, the referee in charge of the final.

Have no doubt that we will need to begin implementing much more drastic measures than we currently do, Gonzalez Fuertes said.

What is happening will not be tolerated for longer. You’ll hear from us soon.