Novyi Korotych post office attack was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 28 November 2023 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure (2022–present). The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here. |
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On 20 July 2023, it was proposed that this article be moved from 2022–2023 Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure to Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure (2022–present). The result of the discussion was moved. |
I bumped into that source but cannot integrate it a the moment.
The article says, "The series of explosions led to a significant increase in gamma radiation levels, suggesting the release of depleted uranium dust into the air which could pose severe risk to public health". However, the source is an Indian website that itself does not cite any of its information. Pretty much only Indian and some Russian POV articles cites talk about this, it was also heavily promoted by known disinfirmation accounts back when it happened.
If we look at the actual "spike", it happened two days before the strike and was statistically insignificant.
Krystos ( talk) 20:47, 20 July 2023 (UTC)
"The series of explosions led to a significant increase in gamma radiation levels, suggesting the release of depleted uranium dust into the air which could pose severe risk to public health. [1]", Elinruby ( talk) 04:22, 5 December 2023 (UTC)
References
Do we even need the date range in the title? There aren’t any title conflicts with other articles that I know of HappyWith ( talk) 02:07, 13 September 2023 (UTC)
"Some articles do not need a year for disambiguation when, in historic perspective, the event is easily described without it. As this is a judgement call, please discuss it with other editors if there is disagreement."I would hope this is not a recurring event so we would not need to have the date in the title, I feel as it is not needed, especially as eventually it will need to be updated with the end date if it is kept. Dobblestein talk 23:38, 13 December 2023 (UTC)
there has been multiple waves of that have caused causalities since November 2022 Monochromemelo1 ( talk) 07:06, 30 December 2023 (UTC)
So far, 29 December 2023 Russian strikes on Ukraine is the only strikes wave of dozens to have its own article. I think we should keep it all in one single article. We've previously merged such articles into here, see the redirects this article has [1]. I have a sense that users will be more than okay with breaking this consistency this time for some reason but I still think this discussion should take place. Super Dromaeosaurus ( talk) 11:10, 31 December 2023 (UTC)
I can understand keeping the 29 December article as it was the biggest such attack so far in the war and it also caused a political crisis. But why do we now also have an article for 2 January 2024 Russian strikes on Ukraine? We are almost two years into the war and over one year into these kinds of attacks and I see no reason now to start suddenly giving each attack its own individual article. The 2 January one did not break any records and its article is pretty short. We can easily merge it into Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure (2022–present)#January 2024. Super Dromaeosaurus ( talk) 11:32, 3 January 2024 (UTC)