Sky Security and Defense Correspondent Deborah Haynes are in Odesa south of the Ukrainian coast, reporting on the latest on yesterday's attacks in Chaplyne in eastern Ukraine.

She says that "there have been a series of attacks" by the Russian army around this town, Telegrafi reports.

A Russian rocket strike on a Ukrainian train station has killed 22 people, Ukraine says, on the day marking six months since Moscow's invasion began


Hugo Bachega is in Kyiv for #BBCBreakfasthttps://t.co/agRbCU2W0i pic.twitter.com/tCyTw5wwwG

— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) August 25, 2022

"A rocket hit a house, killing a child, and another attack took place at the train station - where a train was blown up," Haynes said.

On the other hand, the office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has announced that the number of people killed in the attack on the train has reached 25, including two children.

As Ukraine marked 31 years since its independence from Moscow-dominated Soviet rule, officials said at least 22 people died and dozens were wounded when Russian rocket strikes hit the small eastern town of Chaplyne and set a passenger train on fire https://t. co/vHqJU49nRf pic.twitter.com/3u30lRzM1T

— Reuters (@Reuters) August 25, 2022

Meanwhile, the number of wounded is over 30, which makes it one of the worst attacks of the Russian army in recent weeks.

Even according to security experts, this war is showing no signs of ending anytime soon.

/Telegraph/