- Amorim uncomfortable with fans' serenade at Man Utd
- Romania heads for presidential run-off after top court greenlights first round
- Turkey could benefit from rebel offensive in Syria: experts
- 18 convicted in biggest UK drugs trial
- Biden's pardon for son angers rivals - and allies
- Liverpool players prepared to 'go to war' for each other: Van Dijk
- LPGA commissioner Marcoux Samaan to step down in January
- Georgia PM vows 'no negotiations' amid mass pro-EU protests
- Suspect freed from custody over suicide capsule death in Switzerland
- Venezuela's 'Pearl of the Caribbean' loses its luster
- Paris stocks wobble, euro falls on France budget standoff
- Italy to host Davis Cup Final 8 from 2025
- Fiorentina's Bove 'alert' in hospital after collapse: club
- Zelensky presses Scholz for 'fundamental' support against Russia
- Tens of thousands strike at Volkswagen's Germany plants
- Rugby players on trial in France over rape charges
- Greens, far-right among big losers in Irish vote
- Brain stimulation can help injured people walk: study
- French PM faces ouster as opposition vows no-confidence vote
- Stellantis says goodbye to 'performance psychopath' CEO
- Hezbollah claims first attack on Israeli position since truce
- Turin start for 2025 Vuelta a Espana
- New Leicester boss Van Nistelrooy 'astonished' by offers after Man Utd spell
- US unveils fresh export curbs targeting China's chip sector
- Paris stocks waver, euro falls on France budget standoff
- Deadlock in Romania as Russia-haunted presidential vote looms
- French PM at risk in hostile parliament vote
- Kompany hoping for Kane return before end of year
- I'm the taxman!: New docs reveal legal woes behind Beatles split
- Three things we learned at the Qatar Grand Prix
- Canal blast sparks new stand-off between Kosovo and Serbia
- Mbappe takes PSG wage dispute to French league committee
- From China woes to EV troubles, VW faces rocky road
- 'End in sight' to talks on pandemic treaty, says WHO chief
- Third death as Storm Bora batters Greece
- Stampede kills at least 56 at Guinea football match
- Syria's Assad says rebel advance a bid to 'redraw' regional map
- Paris stocks, euro fall on France budget standoff
- Thousands strike at Volkswagen's Germany plants
- Ireland in 'good shape' despite uncertainty over post-Sexton era, says MacNeill
- Germany's Scholz pledges aid on surprise visit to Ukraine
- Philippine groups file impeachment bid against VP Duterte
- Najib says bribery, power abuse charges 'politically motivated'
- 'Future of planet' at stake at ICJ hearings: Vanuatu
- Syria, Russia conduct deadly strikes to push back rebel advance
- German FM urges China to stop backing Russia, work for Ukraine peace
- Alpine call up Doohan to replace Ocon for Abu Dhabi GP
- Elton John unable to watch own musical due to 'lost eyesight'
- Delivery firm Glovo riders in Spain to become employees
- Georgia pro-EU protesters 'standing firm', president says
Strike flattens street far from frontline in Ukraine's east
Yelena Gruzdeva and her children were asleep in a small Ukrainian town far from the frontline when an explosion blew off their roof, the family escaping uninjured "by a miracle".
"Everything in the house has been chopped up by shrapnel," said Gruzdeva on Wednesday as she cleared debris from their small blue-painted house on the outskirts of Dobropillia.
Located in the Donetsk region, the town lies around 150 kilometres (90 miles) from the epicentre of the fighting between Ukrainian and Russian forces.
"It was because we were lying in bed -- if we'd been walking around, (the shrapnel) would have ripped through us all," said this 45-year-old housewife.
"There was a crack and everything started crumbling."
In the early hours of Tuesday morning, a single strike slammed into the street just off the main road into the city, completely flattening a house and killing one man.
Dobropillia had previously suffered only a few strikes during the course of the war, unlike ravaged cities further north such as Lysychansk and Severodonetsk.
But on Tuesday, there were at least three strikes in one day, locals said, suggesting Russia may see the town as a hub for Ukrainian forces and a target for the future.
The strike left a huge crater with the explosive wave ripping off roofs and blowing out windows in houses further along the street, although many residents of the town had already left.
In a thick cloud of dust, the family ran out and hid in the cellar, fearing further strikes, she said.
"We kept calm. We did have an idea that something like this could happen," said Gruzdeva, whose family has been lent another house to live in by "kind people".
- Three strikes in one day -
The man killed at the first house on the street was simply looking after it for the absent owners, locals said.
A Ukrainian flag still flew on a fence post next to the pile of debris.
A man smoking a cigarette as he worked on a shattered roof shouted down: "They hit us and we just laugh!"
Vitaliy Popelishko, another home owner looking at the huge hole in the facade of his house, said it was not reparable as "all the walls have cracked and it will need to be demolished".
Escaping with a scratch on his forehead, the 33-year-old coal mine employee looked pale and shocked and said his father, who was also inside at the time, was distressed.
"Here during the whole time, there have been 10 strikes. Now there were three strikes just yesterday. That means they are in a position where they can shell us," Popelishko said.
"Why do they shell peaceful houses -- who was stationed here? There aren't any military, no-one."
The explosion smashed windows in an automotive depot at the end of the street that has a large hangar which may have been the intended target, although AFP journalists saw no military vehicles inside.
"I don't know what you can call this? It's mediaeval," said Sergiy Semenets, a volunteer in the local territorial defence force who was later joined at the scene by a vehicle carrying humanitarian aid.
Things had been "going along quietly" in the town up to now, he said.
"They want to destroy Ukraine."
C.Kovalenko--BTB