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Catholic charity says staff, family killed in Mariupol

Two Ukrainian Caritas staff and five of their relatives have been killed in Mariupol, the Catholic charity said Tuesday, adding they likely died a month ago.
“The tragic attack probably took place on March 15, when a tank fired shots at the building of the Caritas center in Mariupol, killing the two staff members and five of their relatives,” it said in a statement.
A report on the Vatican's news portal, Vatican News, said the tank was Russian, citing unnamed “local Caritas sources.”
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Russian troops have been battling for weeks to take control of strategically located Mariupol, ahead of an anticipated massive onslaught across eastern Ukraine, as defending forces try desperately to hold them back.
Difficulties in communicating with those inside the besieged city have meant details of civilian casualties have been scarce and hard to verify.
Caritas said it was not able to definitively say what had happened, but it believed the two female staff members “and their family took refuge in the center during the shelling.”
“This dramatic news leaves the Caritas family horrified and shocked,” said Aloysius John, secretary general of Caritas Internationalis, slamming “the indiscriminate massacre of civilians.”
Russia is believed to be trying to connect occupied Crimea with Moscow-backed separatist territories Donetsk and Lugansk in Donbas, and has laid siege to Mariupol, once home to more than 400,000 people.
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