A barista in a Kiev cafe continued to make coffee despite the damage to the building from a Russian missile.
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The girl explained to reporters that she decided to work because it was distracting.
In this cafe on March 25, the day of the next rocket attack on Kyiv by Russian war criminals, a window was broken by a blast wave. But barista Maria continued making coffee for visitors. He says work is distracting.
It’s horrible. Very scary. The main thing is that everyone is alive. And we make coffee and work. Let’s hold on. “Everything will be fine,” she told BBC-Ukraine about the morning ballistic attack on Kyiv.
Anastasia is a second year student. At the time of the morning explosion in Kyiv, she was in a dormitory located in one of the academy buildings.
I heard an alarm on the phone. We started getting dressed, and literally a minute or two later we heard an explosion. “We ran for cover and saw that smoke was already coming from the academy,” the girl said in a comment to Public.
As a result of a missile strike, the building of the State Academy of Decorative and Applied Arts and Design in the center of Kyiv was damaged.
The gym, congress hall and exhibition center were completely destroyed, the management of the establishment said. The windows of the educational institution’s dormitory were broken. One of them cracked in Alina’s laboratory assistant’s room.
The first thing I heard was an air raid warning. And literally a few seconds later the first explosion was heard. A few seconds later – a second explosion. I quickly ran out of the room and only then saw that there was smoke and destruction everywhere,” Alina told Public.
In addition to the educational institution, residential buildings nearby were also damaged. The shock wave knocked out windows and doors there.
The number of victims in the capital increased to 10 people, among the injured was a 16-year-old girl.
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.