Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Russian missile strikes in eastern Ukraine rip through buildings, kill 2 and bury families in rubble – Yahoo News

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Russian missiles tore through apartment buildings in eastern Ukraines Donetsk region, local officials said Thursday, killing at least two people and burying families under rubble as the Kremlins forces continued to pound the fiercely contested area with long-range weapons.

Russian military units simultaneously launched six S-300 missiles toward the Donetsk region during the night, according to Ukrainian Internal Affairs Minister Ihor Klymenko. Another two were fired separately in the same area, the Ukrainian air force said.

The simultaneous missile strikes hit three Donetsk cities Pokrovsk, Novohrodivka and Myrnohrad, Klymenko said. The cities lie 25-40 kilometers (15-25 miles) from the front line.

The battlefield has seen few major changes in recent months. A Ukrainian counteroffensive that started in June dented deep Russian defenses in some areas but has failed to change the complexion of the 22-month war.

Moscow has held firm in most of the areas it occupies while using the long-range weapons to inflict damage on Ukraine, including civilian areas.

Emergency workers pulled the body of a 62-year-old man from the wreckage of a destroyed multi-story building in Novohrodivka. Another death was reported in the same city by Ukraines Emergency Service. Four more people may be under the rubble, including a child, authorities said.

In Pokrovsk, the strikes destroyed a multi-story building, nine houses, a police office and cars. Emergency crews helped rescue a man with a 6-month-old baby, covered in blood, in his hands, officials said.

The head of the city administration, Serhii Dobriak, said it was fourth time Pokrovsk came under attack in the past month.

They are striking the city center, the houses, he said. They are just destroying the civilian population.

He urged people to evacuate because the intensity of strikes is increasing.

All three of the targeted cities are close to Avdiivka, a city where a fierce battle has taken place in recent months.

Avdiivka is a gateway to parts of the Donetsk region still under Ukrainian control.

Ukrainian officials said recently that Russian forces have ramped up attacks in eastern Ukraine in an attempt to gain ground near Avdiivka and around Bakhmut, another key front-line city.

In southern Ukraine, Russian forces shelled residential areas in the Kherson region, damaging critical infrastructure and a school, the office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said. One person was killed, the office said.

Ambulance paramedics came under fire in the village of Kindiika, where a doctor was wounded on Wednesday evening, according to the president's office. In Darivka, another Kherson region village, four people were injured as 10 houses, a hospital and a kindergarten were damaged during the night, the office said.

Zelenskyy on Thursday visited troops in Kupiansk, an area of fighting in the northeastern Kharkiv region.

I know that every day you are losing your close people, your war buddies, he told soldiers, according to a video posted on his Telegram channel. You should know that everyone is aware that this is the highest price. Thats why I ask you to take care of yourselves.

It was the Ukrainian leader's second straight day of touring battle areas across the country. On Wednesday he visited cities in southern Ukraine.

He has frequently made such visits during the war as he tries to keep up morale.

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Russian missile strikes in eastern Ukraine rip through buildings, kill 2 and bury families in rubble - Yahoo News

Ukraine’s president visits troops on northeastern frontline – Reuters

[1/4]Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy listens to Commander of the Ground Forces colonel general Oleksandr Syrskyi as he visits a position of Ukrainian servicemen in the town of Kupiansk, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv region, Ukraine November 30, 2023. Ukrainian Presidential Press... Acquire Licensing Rights Read more

KYIV, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has visited troops near the Kupiansk sector of the frontline in the country's northeast, he announced on social media on Thursday.

Zelenskiy posted a video of him visiting a command post in the area alongside one of Ukraine's top generals. The president thanked the troops for their sacrifices.

"I know you lose comrades and those close to you every day. Everyone understands that this is the highest price," he told the assembled soldiers.

Ukrainian troops have been weathering Russian assaults on the Kupiansk front over the last several months, as Moscow seeks to push back in a sector where it was routed in a lightning counteroffensive more than a year ago.

Moscow has made some small, incremental gains in the area since September, but the front lines have not moved significantly.

Reporting by Max Hunder and Yuliia Dysa, editing by Alex Richardson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Ukraine's president visits troops on northeastern frontline - Reuters

Reuters: Delivery of GLSDB long-range weapons by US to Ukraine pushed to 2024 – Kyiv Independent

Ukraine will likely receive its first large batch of the U.S.-pledged Ground Launched Small Diameter Bomb (GLSDB) long-range weapons, adapted to strike at a range of 160 kilometers, in early 2024, Reuters reported on Nov. 30, citing the Pentagon and sources familiar with the matter.

GLSDB can be used by the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) and has roughly twice the range compared to the munitions currently used by Ukraine, potentially strengthening Kyiv's long-strike abilities.

The delivery of the GPS-guided rocket-propelled bombs was announced in February, with initial estimates putting their time of arrival to Ukraine in late 2023.

Because the Pentagon's contract with Boeing to begin the production was signed only in March, the manufacturer is expected to provide GLSDB to the U.S. in December, according to Reuters.

This will be followed by months of testing before it can be shipped to Ukraine.

The modern weapons system co-developed by Boeing and Swedish Saab defense company is currently not in operation by the U.S.

Russia claimed that it had shot down a GLSDB bomb in March, but a U.S. official told Reuters that none of these weapons had been delivered to Ukraine so far.

GLSDB would augment Ukraine's long-range arsenal for strikes against Russia's rear. Washington delivered a limited amount of Army Tactical Missiles Systems (ATACMS), most likely of the variation with a range of 160 kilometers, to Ukraine in October.

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Reuters: Delivery of GLSDB long-range weapons by US to Ukraine pushed to 2024 - Kyiv Independent

Ukraine takes out five high-ranking Russian officers in precision strike in occupied Kherson Oblast – Yahoo News

Five high-ranking Russian army officials were killed during a meeting in the Nov. 28 strike on a building in the temporarily occupied village of Yuvileine, Kherson Oblast, Ukraines National Resistance Center reported on Telegram.

"Yesterday, a building where the meeting of the occupiers was held was attacked," the NRC wrote, citing local residents and the underground movement.

Read also: Russian-occupied Dzhankoy rocked by explosion, occupiers claim it was a Ukrainian Hrim-2 missile

Residents of occupied Tokmak, Zaporizhzhya Oblast, reported a strike on a building seized by Russian invasion forces after there were explosions in the city center, the Mayor of Russian-occupied Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, said on Telegram on Nov. 28.

"The exact number of liquidated occupiers is being clarified," he wrote.

Read also: Russian forces forced to relocate amidst Kherson setbacks General Staff

Dozens of Russian soldiers and singer Polina Menshikh were killed and about a hundred others injured in the Nov, 21 Ukrainian shelling of a building in the village of Kumachove, where the invaders had gathered in the concert hall to celebrate Russian Artillery Day.

A Ukrainian soldier with the call sign "Madyar" described the attack as retaliation for the Russian missile strike on the 128th Separate Mountain Assault Brigade during an awards ceremony in honor of the Day of Missile Troops and Artillery in a frontline village in Zaporizhzhya Oblast.

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Ukraine takes out five high-ranking Russian officers in precision strike in occupied Kherson Oblast - Yahoo News

Truck chaos on Polish border signals tensions over integrating Ukraine into EU – POLITICO Europe

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WARSAW The first thing a Ukrainian would notice entering Poland last year was volunteer groups welcoming exhausted refugees with warm food, clothing, offers of rooms and buses to transport them for free to cities across Poland.

Now, the first thing Ukrainians notice is an immense line of trucks waiting to cross the Dorohusk border checkpoint thanks to a blockade by Polish truckers that began on November 6.

More than 3,000 trucks are now stuck at four border crossings; waiting times are as long as three weeks and at least one driver has died while trapped. Protesters are camped out in tents dusted with snow, warming themselves by fires in open barrels, while drivers, dressed in hi-viz vests, stand by their trucks, many of them smoking and looking on at the flashing blue lights of police cars monitoring the situation.

Drivers are forced to wait in an open field with no proper food supplies and no proper restrooms, Ukraines Deputy Infrastructure Minister Serhiy Derkach told POLITICO. He added the government is preparing to evacuate hundreds of trapped drivers.

For Kyiv's relations with Europe, the border blockade is a major crisis, and gives a bitter foretaste of the impending challenges of integrating Ukraine, with its huge farming sector and cheap but well-educated workers, into the EU's common market.

Cross-border trade flows are imperative to keep Ukraine's economy ticking over in a time of war, but Polish truckers see Ukrainian drivers as low-cost rivals who are undercutting their business. They've been joined by Polish farmers, outraged that Ukrainian grain imports are hurting them by cratering domestic prices.

It's not just Kyiv that's angry.

The European Commission issued a blistering criticism on Wednesday of Warsaw's complete lack of involvement," in ending the crisis.

"The Polish authorities are the ones who are supposed to enforce the law at that border," Transport Commissioner Adina Vlean said in Brussels. "While I support the right of people to protest, the entire EU not to mention Ukraine, a country currently at war cannot be taken hostage by blocking our external borders. Its as simple as that."

Vlean warned that if Poland doesn't act, the Commission could hit Warsaw with an infringement for "not respecting the rules or not applying the law."

But Poland is having a difficult time reacting thanks to the political uncertainty unleashed by last month's parliamentary election.

Infrastructure Minister Andrzej Adamczyk wrote an appeal on Monday to his Ukrainian counterpart, calling on Kyiv to meet truckers' demands. What the Polish drivers want is for the EU to roll back the favorable treatment it granted Ukrainian hauliers after the war broke out allowing them to take loads from Ukraine to anywhere in the bloc with almost no formalities; the same rule applies to EU companies taking goods to Ukraine.

Adamczyk wants Vlean to study the possibility of reinstating international transport permits for Ukrainian hauliers, and Poland plans to raise the issue at the December 4 Transport Council.

But Monday was Adamczyk's last day on the job. He was replaced as infrastructure minister by Alvin Gajadhur in a Cabinet that is only expected to last for two weeks before a new opposition-led government headed by former PM Donald Tusk takes office.

Tusk denounced the government's inability to resolve the issue.

"Since they pretend to have formed a real government, they could pretend to deal with real problems," he said on Tuesday.

Instability in Warsaw is opening the door to activists from Polands far-right Confederation party.

Ukrainians used to carry out 160,000 trucking operations before the war. This year to date its been nearly 1 million, said Rafa Mekler, owner of a trucking company from Midzyrzec Podlaski in eastern Poland.

But Mekler isnt simply a rank-and-file trucker. He's also a Confederation politician who has been heavily involved in organizing the border protests. His Facebook page is rife with criticism of Ukraine, and his party is Poland's most skeptical of the alliance with Kyiv.

In one of the posts, Mekler likened Ukraine to a spoiled brat.

We are fighting for our transport [business], not against Ukraine. But Ukraine has dug its heels in and wont budge an inch, giving us this emotional rhetoric about the war and how we are blocking medicines from going through, Mekler said.

Even though the Polish protesters claim they are letting essential and military cargoes pass, Derkach said that's very difficult in practice as he saw trucks carrying fuel and humanitarian aid shipments unable to break through the logjam.

They let some 30 trucks a day pass the border. How can we even say they have the right to do it? What is this, a siege of a war-torn country? said Oleksiy Davydenko, owner of a Ukrainian medical supply chain called Medtechnika.

Poland's new Agriculture Minister Anna Gembickasaid allegations that humanitarian and military is being held up were "not true."

She blamed the problems on the border on Russia's invasion and on the "irresponsible" policy of the EU "which does not see the problems of Poland and [other] border countries." She added she wants to meet with Economy Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis to explain the Polish viewpoint.

Kyiv says two Ukrainian drivers have died while waiting; Polish police say one has.

So far the Ukrainian government isn't backing down on its demand that the EU stick to the deal last year that its drivers should be allowed in.

One of the central bugbears for the Poles is that Ukraine uses an electronic tagging system for all trucks queuing up at border crossings. The Poles want their empty trucks exempted from that queuing scheme so they can pass through border controls more quickly.

We offered [Polish truckers] to open more checkpoints and create special road lines for the empty Polish trucks. But they do not want to register in an electronic queue system like everyone else. It would be unfair to other countries if we offer a special treatment, Derkach said.

We also cant return to the permits system as we lost all our other borders for our export, Derkach added, complaining that the Polish truckers were unwilling to talk. They didnt want to listen to that we have to keep the economy running during the war. Some of them said they already helped enough and now they had to feed their families. So they just stood up and left the negotiations.

The importance of Ukraine's border with Poland surged after Russia's invasion last year, which cut off the country's easy access its Black Sea ports.

Initially, Poland welcomed millions of refugees, led the way in supplying weapons to Ukraine and backed its speedy admission to the EU.

But as the costs of those policies rose, so did political tensions.

Poland, along with Hungary and Slovakia, closed its market to Ukrainian grain imports, despite an EU-Ukraine trade deal and in violation of the rules of the European Union's single market.

Now it's the turn of Polish truck drivers. Slovak and Hungarian truckers are threatening similar protests. Ironically, Central European hauliers are making similar grievances to West European trucking firms which complained bitterly about being undercut when those countries joined the EU.

The truckers have been joined by farmers, who on Monday launched a 24-hour blockade of the Medyka border crossing in southeastern Poland.

Ukrainians are biting the hand we have extended to them," farm protest organizer Roman Kondrw told the Polish Press Agency.

The protests have cost Ukraine's economy more than 400 million, Volodymyr Balin, vice president of the Association of International Motor Carriers, said at a briefing in Kyiv.

I think our mistake was to rely on Poland so much. We moved our businesses, we pay taxes logistics fees we used to pay in Ukraine to Poland now. We thought we had our backs covered, Medtechnikas Davydenko said.Maybe if we were a bit more cautious, we would not be dependent on Poland so much..

Veronika Melkozerova reported from Kyiv.

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Truck chaos on Polish border signals tensions over integrating Ukraine into EU - POLITICO Europe