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Bombardeo ruso en Ucrania deja 34 muertos y desata condenas globales de Estados Unidos y Europa

Un bombardeo ruso causó este domingo la muerte de al menos 34 personas, incluidos dos niños, y dejó 117 heridos en el centro de Sumi, ciudad del noreste ucraniano, en un ataque que provocó fuertes condenas de Estados Unidos y la Unión Europea.
“Creo que fue terrible. Y me dijeron que ellos cometieron un error. Sin embargo, creo que es algo horrible. Creo que toda la guerra es algo horrible”, expresó el presidente estadounidense Donald Trump desde el avión presidencial Air Force One.
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El ataque, ejecutado con misiles balísticos durante el Domingo de Ramos, en plena afluencia de personas, se convirtió en el más mortífero en meses en Ucrania, invadida por Rusia desde febrero de 2022.
También se produjo dos días después de la visita a Rusia de un emisario estadounidense, en el marco de la reanudación de los contactos bilaterales tras el regreso de Trump a la Casa Blanca.
“Rusia golpeó el centro de la ciudad con misiles balísticos. Justo cuando había mucha gente en la calle”, informaron los rescatistas ucranianos en redes sociales.
Según el último parte difundido a las 18H00 (15H00 GMT) por el servicio de emergencias ucraniano, se registraron 34 muertos, incluidos dos menores de edad, y 117 heridos, entre ellos 15 nenes.
El centro de la ciudad de Sumi, destruido tras un mortal ataque de misiles rusos. (Foto: AP).
Las autoridades locales difundieron imágenes de cuerpos tendidos en las calles, vehículos en llamas y civiles heridos corriendo para refugiarse. Además, decretaron tres días de luto oficial.
“Un día en que la gente va a la iglesia: Domingo de Ramos (…). Sólo los malnacidos pueden hacer esto”, reaccionó el presidente Volodimir Zelenski, en un mensaje publicado en Telegram.
“Sin una presión realmente fuerte, sin un apoyo adecuado a Ucrania, Rusia continuará llevando a cabo esta guerra”, advirtió, acusando a su par ruso, Vladimir Putin, de haber “ignorado la propuesta estadounidense de un alto el fuego total e incondicional”.
En una entrevista posterior con la televisión estadounidense CBS, Zelenski instó a Trump a visitar Ucrania “antes de cualquier tipo de negociación” para que vea con sus propios ojos “lo que hizo” Putin con su guerra.
Cuerpos de ucranianos muertos en el suelo tras un ataque de misiles rusos (Foto: Servicio de prensa del Comisario del Parlamento Ucraniano para los Derechos Humanos/AP).
Desde Bruselas, la jefa de la diplomacia europea, Kaja Kallas, calificó el bombardeo como “un ejemplo horrible de la intensificación de los ataques de Rusia mientras Ucrania aceptó una tregua”.
El secretario general de la ONU, Antonio Guterres, se mostró “profundamente alarmado y conmocionado” por el ataque.
El primer ministro británico, Keir Starmer, escribió en X que este ataque es “un recordatorio brutal del continuo baño de sangre perpetrado por Putin”.
El presidente francés, Emmanuel Macron, pidió “medidas fuertes” para imponer una tregua a Moscú, mientras que el líder conservador alemán, Friedrich Merz, sostuvo que fue “un acto pérfido (…) y un crimen de guerra grave”.
El ataque tuvo lugar tras el encuentro en San Petersburgo entre Putin y Steve Witkoff, emisario estadounidense que visitó Moscú como parte de las gestiones diplomáticas de Washington. Aunque Estados Unidos propuso en marzo una tregua de 30 días, Putin no se mostró convencido y la propuesta no se concretó.
Según Kiev y sus aliados, Rusia estaría alargando deliberadamente las negociaciones con el objetivo de ganar tiempo y aprovechar su superioridad militar en el frente.
La presión rusa no ha cedido en las últimas semanas. A inicios de abril, un ataque en Krivói Rog dejó 18 muertos, incluidos nueve niños, un hecho que conmocionó al país entero.
Sumi, ubicada cerca de la frontera rusa, ha sufrido una creciente presión militar desde que Moscú logró hacer retroceder a las fuerzas ucranianas en la región de Kursk. Aunque hasta ahora se había mantenido al margen de los combates más intensos del sur (Donetsk), las autoridades ucranianas alertan desde hace semanas sobre la posibilidad de una ofensiva rusa en la zona.
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El jueves pasado, Rusia reivindicó la toma de un pueblo en la región de Sumi, un avance poco frecuente en esta parte del noreste, de donde sus tropas se habían replegado en la primavera de 2022.
El comandante en jefe de las fuerzas armadas ucranianas, Oleksandr Sirski, aseguró el miércoles que las tropas rusas habían comenzado “hace algunos días” ofensivas en Sumi y en la vecina región de Járkov, también en el noreste del país.
bombardeo, Rusia, Ucrania
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Federal judge extends ban on Trump’s order targeting Harvard international students

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A federal judge in Boston agreed Monday to extend a temporary restraining order blocking President Donald Trump’s attempt to block international students from entering the U.S. to study at Harvard.
The update is a near-term win for the nation’s oldest university in its months-long fight with the Trump administration.
Lawyers for Harvard had urged U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs on Monday to extend two restraining orders that blocked the Trump administration from revoking its credentials under the Student and Exchange Visitor Program, or SEVP, and which temporarily blocked a proclamation Trump signed earlier this month that barred foreign nationals from traveling to the U.S. if they planned to study or research at Harvard.
«The proclamation is a plain violation of the First Amendment,» Ian Gershengorn, a lawyer for Harvard, told Judge Burroughs in court on Monday in seeking a preliminary injunction, a more lasting form of court-ordered relief.
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Banners on the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library at the Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts on Tuesday, May 27, 2025. (Sophie Park/Bloomberg)
Burroughs extended the temporary restraining order through June 23, noting that she needed more time to formally rule on the request for injunctive relief.
«We’ll kick out an opinion as soon as we can,» she told the court Monday afternoon, shortly before proceedings wrapped for the day.
At issue is a push to revoke Harvard’s credentials under its SEVP program, announced by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem in May; and a separate proclamation signed by Trump in June, seeking to block foreign nationals from entering the U.S. if they were planning to study or conduct research at Harvard.
Both actions were temporarily blocked by Burroughs. Now, lawyers for the school are pushing for a more permanent form of relief known as a preliminary injunction.
In the interim, lawyers for Harvard said that the Trump administration’s actions have injected «unnecessary uncertainty for Harvard and its students, who may yet again have their status as lawfully present nonimmigrants in the United States abruptly and categorically rescinded.»
Harvard argued that the Trump administration’s actions would violate the Administrative Procedure Act, the First Amendment, and the Fifth Amendment – injecting «continued chaos and lasting damage on Harvard for no compelling reason,» they said in a filing.
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White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller speaks to reporters outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington, D.C. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Trump officials have accused Harvard University of «fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus,» according to a statement earlier this year, and for failing to account for «known illegal activity» on its campus.
Lawyers for Harvard told Burroughs in court on Monday that these actions have already injected uncertainty into the lives of their international students.
They noted that some foreign students were incorrectly denied visas after indicating their plans to study at Harvard, while at least four other students were wrongfully detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials earlier this month upon arriving in the U.S. at Boston’s Logan International Airport.
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Harvard President Alan Garber acknowledges an extended round of applause during Harvard University’s commencement ceremonies, Thursday, May 29, 2025, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Harvard is also fighting to retain its SEVP accreditation. The program is run by the Department of Homeland Security and allows universities to sponsor international students for U.S. visas for the duration of their enrollment at a public university.
If it loses that status, experts previously told Fox News, thousands of international students currently enrolled at Harvard will have a narrow window to either transfer to another U.S. university, or risk losing their student visas within 180 days.
Lawyers for Harvard previously told Burroughs that ending their SEVP certification would affect roughly 7,000 international students at Harvard – or some 27% of its total student body.
Monday’s hearing was the latest in a string of legal dust-ups that have pitted Harvard against the Trump administration – or vice versa – in Trump’s second White House term.
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Cambridge, MA – May 23: Hundreds of graduates walked out of the 2024 Commencement in Harvard Yard to call attention to the plight of Palestinians. (Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Since Trump took office in January, the administration has already frozen more than $2 billion in grants and contracts awarded to the university, and is proposing to end its tax-exempt status, among other things.
The administration is also targeting Harvard with investigations led by six separate federal agencies.
Combined, these actions have created a wide degree of uncertainty at Harvard.
Legal experts noted the court is wading into largely uncharted territory.
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Asked how it might play out, many scholars pointed to a lack of precedent and offered no clear answer.
«As with many things that Trump does, the answer is unclear, because it hasn’t been done before,» Josh Blackman, a law professor at South Texas College of Law, said last month. «No president has tried to do this before, so I don’t think there’s a clear precedent on the answer.»
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Israel activates ‘Barak Magen’ aerial defenses for system’s first ever interception

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Israel activated a new aerial defense system – dubbed «Barak Magen,» meaning «lightning shield» – for the first time on Sunday night, saying it intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian drones.
The Israeli Navy intercepted eight Iranian drones using the «Barak Magen» and its long-range air defense (LRAD) interceptor, which were launched from an Israeli navy Sa’ar 6 missile ship, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement.
John Hannah, senior fellow at The Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA) and the co-author of a report published earlier this month on Israel’s defense against two massive Iranian missile attacks in 2024, told Fox News Digital on Monday that the air defense system «significantly enhances» the air and missile defense architecture of Israel’s navy.
«The Barak Magen is simply another arrow in the expanding quiver of Israel’s highly sophisticated and increasingly diverse multi-tiered missile defense architecture – which was already, by leaps and bounds, the most advanced and experienced air defense system fielded by any country in the world,» Hannah said.
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The «Barak Magen» interceptors were launched from an Israeli navy Sa’ar 6 missile ship. (Israel Defense Forces)
The system can intercept a «wide range of threats,» according to the IDF, including unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), cruise missiles, high-trajectory threats and shore-to-sea missiles.
Hannah said the system not only provides force protection for the Israeli fleet but also gives long-distance protection to Israel’s expanding oil and gas infrastructure in the eastern Mediterranean, along with critical infrastructure and population centers located along Israel’s coastline.
«It allows Israel to conduct interceptions at significant distances from the Israeli homeland, both out in the eastern Mediterranean and the Red Sea, and thereby adds critically important strategic depth when defending Israel’s tiny geographic area,» he said.
The IDF said that the Israeli Navy’s missile ship flotilla has intercepted about 25 UAVs that posed a threat to Israel since the conflict with Iran escalated.
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Israel and Iran traded missile strikes for the fourth day on Monday, with Iran firing a new wave of strikes that killed at least eight people and wounded dozens more.

An Israeli attack on the Shahran oil depot on June 15, 2025, in Tehran, Iran. (Stringer/Getty Images)
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Meanwhile, the Israeli military claimed it had achieved air superiority above Tehran, warning about 330,000 people in a central part of the Iranian capital to evacuate ahead of new strikes.
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