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International humanitarian law prohibits strikes on objects that do not have a c...

The blow to Lviv in the Russian Federation was tried to justify the "military goal", but international law is relentless - ISW

International humanitarian law prohibits strikes on objects that do not have a clear military purpose or purpose. Babies that are non -release are also forbidden to military and civilian facilities. In the Russian information space, they tried to justify the shelling of Ukraine on September 4, as they were inflicted on military facilities. However, in international law, even blows to military objects do not justify non -selective concomitant harm to civilians or civilians.

This was reported in the summary of the Institute of War Study of September 4. International humanitarian law prohibits strikes on civilian objects (defined as objects that do not have a clear military purpose or purpose). Among other things, it is forbidden to strike both military and civilian objects. On the eve of September 4, Russian troops fired at civilian infrastructure in Lviv and Kryvyi Rih during another combined blow using medium -sized drones and missiles.

The Air Force of Ukraine reported that the Russian troops launched: the Ukrainian forces were knocked down by four X-101 missiles, three Iskander-K missiles, 22 Shahheda drones; Six more "Shahaned" did not reach their goals, probably due to the suppression of Ukrainian remedies of the EW. One "Shahaned" was in the airspace of Belarus. Russian rockets struck civilian objects in Kryvyi Rih and Lviv, injuring and killing civilians.