A young widow has spoken of her crushing distress after her husband of ten days was killed in a “damned” Putin drone strike on a Ukrainian city.
Florist Bohdana Vityaz, 26, revealed her spouse Yaroslav had died in a daytime attack by Russian forceson Dnipro.
“Today my husband was killed,” she said. “He was killed by damned Russia. We had been married for one and a half weeks.” The couple were killed in what Volodymyr Zelensky branded a “brazen” attack “in broad daylight targeting civilian infrastructure”. A total of 31 were injured.
READ MORE: Vladimir Putin can be beaten by Ukraine using one key weapon says top US general
READ MORE: Russia 'testing the water' with sinister WW3 tactics to 'send message to UK'
“My heart is broken,” she said. “Honestly, I don’t know how I will cope with this loss, because we were everything to each other.”
In a message to her slain husband she said: “You were the best person I ever knew. Words cannot express how deeply I love you.”

Grieving Bohdana said she had not had time to reregister to her married name after their wedding. “I didn’t even have time to change my documents before I became a widow,” she said.
The Russian assault comes after Putin has rejected repeated calls by Donald Trump to end the war. The assault on Dnipro involved multiple Iranian-made Shahed drones, intercepted partially by Ukrainian air defences. There was widespread panic as civilians sought shelter in broad daylight.
The attack on Tuesday came the same day as a family of four was wiped out in Sumy region when their home was targeted. A Russian strike killed Alyona Lesnichenko, 26, who was pregnant with twins, along with her husband Oleksandr, 35, and their sons Denys and Yehor, six and four.
You may also like
Festive Fashion 2025 – Stunning Outfit Ideas for Diwali & Navratri
Harry and Meghan lead tributes to 'friend to the planet' Dame Jane Goodall after her death
Sneaker Culture 2025: The Designs Sneakerheads Are Drooling Over
"Telangana govt once again trying to mislead Muslims": BRS leader Dasoju Sravan Kumar
NATO is now 'in the most dangerous situation since the end of WW2'