2025-04-14
28 分钟This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
I'm Paul Moss and in the early hours of Monday the 14th of April, these are our main stories.
More than 30 people have been killed in a Russian missile strike on the Ukrainian city of Sumi,
prompting outrage from Western leaders.
An Israeli airstrike has destroyed parts of Gaza City's last fully functioning hospital.
Israel says its forces were aiming at a Hamas command and control centre.
The paramilitary rapid support forces in Sudan say they've taken control of a refugee camp in the Darfur region after days of heavy shelling.
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The chorus of condemnation is still pouring in.
The killing of Ukrainian civilians is hardly new.
Russia's rockets have been launched into towns and cities across the country.
But the death toll of 34 in the city of Sumi makes this the deadliest attack so far this year.
The horror perhaps aggravated by the fact that victims were on their way to Palm Sunday church services.
The US special envoy to Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, said that Russian forces had now crossed any line of decency.
The Czech Foreign Minister, Jan Lipavsky, said Russia was led by murderers.
Of course, words can feel rather impotent in the face of so much suffering.
Indeed, Ukraine has again and again said what it needs is not just sympathy,