Russia hits another Ukrainian church Read Next Our ambivalent Supreme Court Next article Associated Press By Associated Press
KYIV: Russian shelling on Thursday damaged a landmark church in the city of Kherson that once held the remains of the renowned 18th-century commander who exerted Russian control through the southeastern parts of modern Ukraine and annexed the Crimean Peninsula.
Ukraine's emergency service said four of its workers were wounded in a second round of shelling as they fought the fire that struck St. Catherine's Cathedral. Four other people were wounded in the first shelling attack, which also hit a trolleybus, the general prosecutor's office said.
The shelling followed the severe damage sustained by a beloved Orthodox cathedral in a missile strike last week in the southern city of Odesa and underlined the war's risk to the country's cultural monuments.
The church in Kherson, dating from 1781, is one of the city's most notable buildings. It once was the burial spot for Prince Grigory Potemkin, a favorite of Russian Empress Catherine the Great.
The remains were removed last year while the city was still under Russian occupation. Russian forces withdrew from Kherson last November in the face of a Ukrainian counteroffensive.
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