Three Russian guided aerial bombs hit central Sloviansk on 10 March. One struck a residential apartment building. Four people were killed — a mother and her 11-year-old child among them — and 16 were wounded 1. Six residential buildings were damaged 2.
The day before, Russian aircraft dropped 264 guided aerial bombs across Ukraine. Sloviansk and its twin city Kramatorsk anchor Ukraine's eastern defence in Donetsk Oblast . Two days earlier, a Russian airstrike on Kramatorsk killed one person and damaged nearly 40 houses . On 7 March, a cruise missile collapsed an entire entrance section of a five-storey building in Kharkiv, killing ten . The bombardment of Ukrainian urban centres is not episodic. It is daily, and it is accelerating.
Guided aerial bombs — Soviet-era munitions retrofitted with UMPK glide kits — allow Russian aircraft to strike from 40–70 km, beyond the effective envelope of most Ukrainian short- and medium-range air defences. The volume outpaces what Ukraine's limited F-16 fleet and ground-based systems can intercept. The strikes concentrate on urban centres within the four oblasts Russia demands Ukraine cede as ceasefire preconditions . Each bomb that hits an apartment building in Sloviansk reduces the habitable territory that future negotiators will argue over.
