Moscow and Kyiv have each blamed the other for the attack, with Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov claiming on Thursday that it had been "absolutely proven" that Ukraine was responsible for the deaths of its own soldiers.
While Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenksy did not comment on the Russian accusations directly, he did react furiously to an Amnesty International report that accused the Ukrainian military of violating international law in its use of residential buildings, schools, and hospitals in its ground war against invading Russian troops.
Zelensky accused Amnesty of victim blaming in his Thursday evening video address, adding that anyone doing such a thing "cannot but realize that it helps the terrorists."
Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov was just strident in his condemnation of the report, writing on Facebook that any attempt "to question the right of Ukrainians to resist genocide, to protect their families and homes" was a "perversion."
As Kyiv continued to lobby the West for more weapons to fight off the Russian invasion, North Macedonia returned four Russian Sukhoi Su-25 fighter jets it had acquired from Ukraine in 2001 to Kyiv, according to reports. The country also donated some of its Soviet-built T-72 tanks in a show of solidarity with Zelensky's government.