Who set fire to a Ukrainian house in occupied Mariupol


Yesterday in temporarily occupied Mariupol, the Ukrainian House Palace of Culture, formerly the Metallurgov Culture Centre, caught fire
The fire was reported in the telegram channel "Mariupol.Resistance". They also posted photos and video:
Again, for the second time during the Russian occupation of Mariupol, the Ukrainian House/DK Metallurgov is burning.
The Ukrainian House in occupied Mariupol was set on fire by teenagers from the resistance, the adviser to the city mayor, Andriushchenko, has said. He also added that they are already safe.
The teenagers are 16-18 years old. It is very bad that in Mariupol it is easy to find explosives, any shell, grenade. These are not isolated cases. This demonstrates how the Mariupol residents waiting for de-occupation have their patience torn and they go for such pranks and active actions," the official told Radio Liberty.
He also said that the occupation authorities are already looking for the arsonists, but they are already in a safe place, they will not be found because all security measures have been taken:
We found them much faster. As of today, we can say this with absolute certainty, because together with our resistance, we have already taken the necessary measures to keep people safe. The only thing is that the detention of other Mariupol residents may continue. These "suffer" the occupation authorities, just random detentions of anyone to report, - added Andryushchenko.
The consequences of the fire, the official demonstrated in his Telegram channel, commenting:
It's good that at least they came at all. In their own cities, more often than not, they don't put out fires at all.
- There were explosions in Luhansk and Mariupol
- Medical collapse in Mariupol: people have been waiting for a doctor since 5am and trying to buy a place in the queue
- Russians prepare to evacuate Mariupol - CNS
- Occupier kills 12-year-old girl near Mariupol: body found 30km from home
- Occupiers in Mariupol start vetting children, looking for partisans

Oleg Kotov writes about the war in Ukraine and how it is changing the world.











