According to the regional police on August 15, among the injured is a child.
On August 14, the Donetsk region police recorded 2,303 enemy strikes on the front line and residential areas.
Fourteen settlements came under fire: the cities of Dobropillia, Kostiantynivka, Lyman, Sloviansk; the villages of Drobysheve, Zarichne, Novoselivka, Sviatohorivka, Andriivka, Bilokuzmynivka, Verivka, Dobropillia, Zolotyi Kolodiaz, Oleksandrivka.
Ninety-eight civilian objects were damaged, including 71 residential houses.
In Kostiantynivka, the russians struck with a KAB-250 bomb and four FPV drones – killing a civilian in a car, damaging 12 private houses and 4 cars.
In Verivka of the Bilozersk community, the enemy dropped two KAB-250 bombs – one person was killed, two were injured, including a girl born in 2014. Four private houses, an educational institution, and a car were damaged.
In the city of Dobropillia, a bombing injured one person and damaged a private house. In Zolotyi Kolodiaz, a russian FPV drone injured a civilian.
One person was injured in Sloviansk, with 30 private houses damaged. In Zarichne, two civilians were wounded.
Andriivka was attacked by nine Geran-2 UAVs, which damaged a municipal enterprise, non-residential premises, and an infrastructure facility. In Bilokuzmynivka, a private house was damaged by an FPV drone.
Lyman was hit by russian troops with a Smerch MLRS, damaging a private house. In Novoselivka of the Lyman community, five private houses and eight outbuildings were damaged. Oleksandrivka of the Lyman community came under artillery fire – 15 private houses and seven outbuildings were damaged.
In the village of Dobropillia, three Geran-2 UAV strikes damaged two apartment buildings.
In Sviatohorivka, an enemy bomb damaged a car.
In addition, today after midnight, the occupiers attacked Bilozerske with drones, damaging two apartment buildings, and Sviatohorivka – damaging non-residential premises and cars.
In Samarske of the Kramatorsk district, russia launched 13 Geran-2 UAVs – a store was damaged.
