Red Cross says its warehouse in Mariupol was damaged
A warehouse belonging to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was shelled in Ukraine's besieged port city of Mariupol.
A satellite image shows the damage to the building, which bears a large white sign with a red cross on the roof.
"We can confirm that an image being circulated online shows damage to the ICRC warehouse in Mariupol," the ICRC said in a statement Wednesday. "We do not have a team on the ground there, so have no other information on potential casualties or the extent of the damage."
The Geneva-based humanitarian organization said it had distributed all supplies from the Mariupol warehouse earlier in March, including medical supplies to hospitals and relief supplies to people living in shelters. No ICRC staff have been at the warehouse since March 15 and it was unclear how the building has been used since, according to the organization.

The ICRC noted the "massive humanitarian needs" in Mariupol, but said it has been "unable to bring in more supplies due to the intensity of the fighting and the absence of a functional agreement between the parties to allow for the safe passage of humanitarian assistance."
"Under international humanitarian law, objects used for humanitarian relief operations must be respected and protected at all times," the ICRC said. "We are concerned that even a building with a red cross on it can be seriously damaged. Civilian infrastructure, hospitals and medical personnel cannot be targeted."
"But what we are most outraged by is the overall humanitarian situation in Mariupol and the relentless suffering inflicted on civilians living there," the organization added. "People are trapped with no safe way out of the city, and they are running out of the very basics needed for their survival. This must change."







