Prime Minister of Denmark Mette Frederiksen and Prime Minister of Spain Pedro Sánchez visited Kyiv and Borodyanka.
“Shocked to see the horror and atrocities of Putin's war on the streets of Borodyanka. We will not leave Ukraine on its own,” Sánchez tweeted.
Conmovido al comprobar en las calles de Borodyanka el horror y las atrocidades de la guerra de Putin.
— Pedro Sánchez (@sanchezcastejon) April 21, 2022
No dejaremos solo al pueblo ucraniano. pic.twitter.com/OfEIa9oOTC
PM Frederiksen and @sanchezcastejon arrived in Kyiv to meet with President @ZelenskyyUa to deliver concrete support to #Ukraine.
— Statsministeriet (@Statsmin) April 21, 2022
Will discuss #Russia’s war of aggression & accountability efforts, as well as further support to 🇺🇦 #StandWithUkraine #dkpol https://t.co/DhpYrLiERW
Sánchez and Frederiksen met with the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the capital.
“Thank you for being with Ukrainians in such a difficult time,” he said.
On April 20, President of the European Council Charles Michel visited Borodyanka, and before that the presidents of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia did the same.
Yesterday two more mass graves of civilians killed by the russian military were discovered in the village. The exact number of people killed in Borodyanka is not yet known, as work on clearing the rubble continues.
The enemy invaded Borodyanka on February 27 and remained there until April 1. According to Oleksiy Chernyshov, the Minister for Communities and Territories Development, two-thirds of the apartment buildings there were damaged or destroyed. Eight apartment buildings are being dismantled - they cannot be restored.