Ukraine civilian casualties: UN says June was the deadliest month in four years
The UN verified 265 civilians killed and 1,816 injured in Ukraine in June — the worst combined toll since the first months of Russia's 2022 invasion.
Russian strikes killed at least 265 civilians in Ukraine in June and injured 1,816 — the worst combined toll since the first months of the full-scale invasion in 2022. The figures come from the UN’s human rights office (OHCHR) and were presented to the Security Council this week.
The trend is what worries New York most: May had already been the deadliest month in four years, June surpassed it, and the UN’s political affairs chief, Rosemary DiCarlo, warned that July could be worse still. Intensifying drone and missile attacks on cities far from the front line have stretched the map of risk well beyond the country’s east.
How many civilians have died in the war in Ukraine?
Since February 2022, OHCHR has verified at least 16,402 civilians killed, including 802 children, and more than 48,000 injured — stressing, as always, that the real figures will be higher, because verification is impossible in occupied areas. The full reports are published by the UN human rights monitoring mission in Ukraine.
The picture darkens a summer in which the pressure on Ukrainian civilians has become the centre of the diplomatic conversation — in the same week the OSCE accused Russia of indoctrinating and militarising 1.6 million Ukrainian children in occupied territory. Four and a half years in, this war is not getting cheaper for the people who don’t fight it — it is getting more expensive.
Image: UNSOM Somalia / Wikimedia Commons (CC0)