The lawn shows about as much damage as if that chunk of metal was just thrown off the back of a truck. It didn't hit that spot at any significant speed.
It looks like an old Soviet era SS-21 (tochka-u) that probably had a 9N123K cluster munition warhead. The 9N123K warhead uses a low yeild explosive to airburst at about 2000 meters so the payload of 50 cluster munitions are spread out as they impact over the target area. That would be why the missile body lands nearby, mostly intact.
Having said that even the force of the explosion of a conventional HE warhead could also throw it's missile body away from the impact location so it would land nearby but I think you would probably expect to see more damage to it.
What's left of the missile shows the characteristic grid fins of the Tochka, which Iskander missiles don't have. https://de.catbox.moe/vb8pqa.jpg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9K720_Iskander
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OTR-21_Tochka
Also, how does a missile that kills 30 people is just sitting there on a perfectly green lawn without visible destruction?
It's a missile, not a grenade.
A missile has a warhead and that is what explodes.
The lawn shows about as much damage as if that chunk of metal was just thrown off the back of a truck. It didn't hit that spot at any significant speed.
It looks like an old Soviet era SS-21 (tochka-u) that probably had a 9N123K cluster munition warhead. The 9N123K warhead uses a low yeild explosive to airburst at about 2000 meters so the payload of 50 cluster munitions are spread out as they impact over the target area. That would be why the missile body lands nearby, mostly intact.
Having said that even the force of the explosion of a conventional HE warhead could also throw it's missile body away from the impact location so it would land nearby but I think you would probably expect to see more damage to it.