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New details of explosion at Warsaw police station, damage caused by Russians to Mykolaiv: last night's highlights

The head of the Polish police reported the explosion of gifts from Ukraine: the explosion damaged three floors of the building; the Russians caused more than €850 million of damage to Mykolaiv. Here's what you may have missed from the previous night.

New details of explosion at police station in Warsaw

Polish police chief Jaroslaw Szymczyk confirmed the information about the explosion of a hand-held anti-tank grenade launcher, which was presented to him by Ukrainian officials. Szymczyk was supposed to receive used "scrap metal", but the grenade launcher went off, damaging rooms on three floors of the police department.

Szymczyk said that he received two anti-tank grenade launchers (presumably RGW-90) in Ukraine, which the Ukrainians claimed were used and safe.

Damages in Mykolaiv

According to preliminary estimates, due to the actions of the Russian occupiers, Mykolaiv suffered losses of €852 million, said Mayor Oleksandr Senkevich during the presentation of the report on the assessment of losses and key needs of Mykolaiv on December 17.

Verification of damage is carried out within the framework of the project "Russia will pay" project of the Kyiv School of Economics.

Suspension of TV channels' licenses in Moldova

Moldova suspended the licenses of six Russian-language TV channels, which, in particular, spread disinformation about the events in the country and the Russo-Ukrainian war.

In other news:

  • 5,000 "Points of Invincibility" are currently functioning in Ukraine, while the government is working to triple the number of such points;
  • in Kharkiv Oblast, in Izyum district, law enforcement officers charged a man who voluntarily implemented Russian curricula at school during the Russian occupation;
  • The National Council of Austria, the lower house of the country's parliament, adopted a resolution "On the prevention of hunger and scarcity as a weapon of war against the civilian population", which condemned the Holodomor of 1932-33 as a "terrible crime".