The killing of Liza Dmitrieva, who had Down’s syndrome , as she was walked in a pushchair through a crowded square was reported around the globe, becoming a poignant symbol of the heavy civilian cost of Russia’s invasion.
Wearing a crown of white flowers, Liza was buried yesterday, as an Orthodox priest burst into tears and told weeping relatives that “evil cannot win”.
Liza’s grandmother Larysa Dmitrieva caressed the child as she lay in an open coffin with teddy bears in Vinnytsia’s 18th-century Transfiguration Cathedral. “Look, my flower! Look how many people came to you,” Larysa said.
Liza’s father, Artem Dmytriev, stood silent, with tears flowing down his face.
The funeral took place as footage emerged of the girl’s badly wounded mother, Iryna, clearly distraught and speaking to a local television channel after regaining consciousness.
Lying in a hospital bed, a video of her daughter visible on her phone, she told reporters: “The world doesn’t care. It sees what is happening but it does not protect us. How many times have we asked to close the sky? And the world just looks at how Ukraine is being murdered. Our children are being murdered, our soldiers and our people.
This story is from the July 18, 2022 edition of The Guardian.
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This story is from the July 18, 2022 edition of The Guardian.
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