Â鶹ԼÅÄ

Newspaper headlines: 'Putin's inhumanity' as Ukrainian civilians killed

  • Published
A view of a school destroyed as a result of fight not far from the centre of Ukrainian city of KharkivImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Ukraine's second city, Kharkiv, is under attack from Russian forces

A photograph of a paramedic trying to help a dying six-year-old girl who was hit by a shell in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol is on the front of many of the papers.

A desperate woman - who is thought to be her mother - waits helplessly by the ambulance. "Show this to Putin" and , as they quote the doctor who was unable to save the girl's life.

as a "tragic symbol" of the children trapped in Ukraine, as the Russian president orders attacks on civilians.

Vladimir Putin thinks he is a "tough guy", but he is actually a "coward" who "kills little girls in slippers and unicorn pyjamas". has the simple headline, "Monstrous".

features a large photograph of Polina - a 10-year-old who was killed with her parents when her family's car came under attack in Kyiv.

The paper says at least 16 children have been killed in the war so far. It asks: "How many children must die, Putin?"

"Putin bombs civilians" is the stark headline , as it reports that dozens of people have been killed and hundreds wounded in rocket strikes by Russian forces.

Russia's widespread use of weapons such as multiple rocket launchers in Ukraine's second city, Kharkiv, suggests that the Kremlin is prepared to resort to more desperate methods, having failed to land a "knockout blow" in the first days of the war.

on the fears of Western allies that the "frustrated" Russian president could turn to more "indiscriminate fire". an unnamed Western official, who is concerned that such action would lead to an increase in civilian casualties.

Elsewhere, that SAS veterans are joining Ukraine's fight against the Russian invasion - in an operation being financed by an unnamed European country, via a private firm. The paper says a dozen veterans are already there and another dozen are heading out this week.

Britons are "signing up in droves", with builders, brickies, and a 60-year-old former Army reservist among those heading to Ukraine's embassy in London to volunteer.

, Whitehall officials are scrambling to determine the government's policy, after Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she supported British people going to Ukraine.

The Times says her comments contradicted official travel advice and raised questions about whether those who go to fight could be charged with terrorism offences on their return.

, Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, who chairs the Commons Defence Committee, says the details of the "atrocities" committed in Ukraine must not be lost in the "fog of war".

He says war crimes have already been committed and an independent agency should be funded and empowered to gather all the potential evidence for legal action to be taken at the International Court of Justice.

what it calls the "sheer barbarity" of President Putin with the generosity of its readers. Its appeal to help Ukrainian refugees has exceeded £1m in two days.