According to recent reports, a UN humanitarian aid convoy was attacked by Russian forces in the Kherson region of Ukraine on October 14, 2025.1 The attack, which involved drones and artillery, targeted four trucks clearly marked with UN insignia.2 While no human casualties were reported, one truck was completely burned and another was severely damaged.3 Ukrainian officials have condemned the attack, calling it a deliberate strike on a humanitarian mission.4
This is not the first time a humanitarian or civilian convoy has been struck during the conflict. In September 2022, a missile strike on a civilian convoy in Zaporizhzhia, which was preparing to deliver supplies and pick up relatives, killed at least 30 people, including children.5 Ukrainian authorities accused Russia of a “deliberate war crime,” while a Russian-installed official in the region blamed Ukrainian forces.
The United Nations has a history of condemning such attacks. In a separate incident in 2016 in Syria, a UN aid convoy was attacked from the air.6 The UN Secretary-General at the time, Ban Ki-moon, denounced the attack as a “sickening, savage and apparently deliberate” act, and UN officials stated that deliberately targeting humanitarians would constitute a war crime.7 While the UN initially said it was not in a position to determine if it was an airstrike, US officials later stated that Russian planes had dropped bombs on the convoy. Russia denied the accusations.