This morning we reported a two-year-old girl had been killed in the shelling of Dnipro, Ukraine.
The circumstances of her death have now been revealed by its governor Serhiy Lysak.
Lisa, who he described as cheerful, was at home with her mother when Russian artillery struck the garden of their house.
When her father returned from work to find them under the rubble, he "screamed wildly", the governor said.
"It is difficult to imagine what the girl's father felt," said Mr Lysak.
His wife was rescued from the ruins and taken to intensive care, but his daughter died at the scene.
"Generation after generation will hate the aggressor for everything he has done. We will not forgive," the governor said.
Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk has visited the scene, where 22 people were injured, alongside humanitarian organisations, he added
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny is spending his 47th birthday in a concrete cell with hardly any natural light, barred from talking to any of his loved ones.
He is more likely to be forced to listen to patriotic songs and speeches by Vladimir Putin in his 2-by-3-meter isolation cell.
The critic of the president is serving a nine-year term in a penal colony east of Moscow on charges widely seen as trumped up. He is on trial facing further charges which could add decades to his sentence.
Mr Navalny is Russia's most famous political prisoner, but there are a growing number of them serving time in similarly harsh conditions.
Memorial, Russia's oldest human rights organization, counted 558 political prisoners as of April — more than three times the 183 listed five years ago.
Pro-democracy group leader Andrei Pivovarov, 41, is in isolation at Penal Colony Seven, as part of a four-year sentence for "undesirable" organisation.
Alexei Gorinov, 61, a member of a Moscow municipal council who criticised the war, is serving seven years in Penal Colony Two for "spreading false information".
Artist and musician Sasha Skochilenko, 32, has been detained for a year while on trial on suspicion of spreading false information by replacing supermarket price tags with antiwar slogans; and faces up to 10 years if convicted