Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine’s Armed Forces confirm strike on Russian air defence in Crimea at night – Yahoo News

The Armed Forces of Ukraine have confirmed that they successfully attacked the strategic target of Russian air defence in the west of occupied Crimea at night.

Source: Directorate of Strategic Communications of the Office of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (StratCom) on Telegram

Quote: "The Armed Forces of Ukraine successfully hit a strategic target of the air defence system on the west coast of temporarily occupied Crimea on the night of 29-30 October."

Background:

The Russian occupying authorities in Crimea claimed that the Russian Black Sea Fleet repelled a drone attack overnight. There were explosions in the city of Sevastopol. The Russians blocked the Crimean Bridge for an hour in the morning.

Russian opposition media reported that 17 Russian Defence Ministry servicemen were wounded in an attack on an air defence missile regiment in occupied Crimea overnight. It was claimed that the attack was on a base near the village of Olenivka in western Crimea.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainian Navy urged people to wait for official announcements on this matter.

In August, the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine reported that a Triumph system had been destroyed near the village of Olenivka.

lenivka

Screenshot: google maps

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Ukraine's Armed Forces confirm strike on Russian air defence in Crimea at night - Yahoo News

Putin blames pogroms in Dagestan on influence of Ukraine and "Western special services" – Yahoo News

At a meeting focused on the antisemitic rally in Dagestan, Russian dictator Vladimir Putin said that Ukraine and the "agents of Western special services" influenced the unrest in Makhachkala on 29 October.

Source: Russian state-owned news agency TASS

Quote: "The events in Makhachkala last night were tampered with, including through social media. Not least from the territory of Ukraine with the hands of agents of Western special services."

Details: In addition, Putin accused the United States of "trying to weaken Russia from within due to lack of achievement on the battlefield."

Background:

On Sunday, 29 October, anti-Semitic protesters broke into the airport in Makhachkala (Dagestan, Russia) and tried to board a jet that had arrived from Tel Aviv, looking specifically for Jewish people.

The Prime Minister's Office and the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed hope that Russian law enforcement agencies would ensure the safety of all Israeli citizens and Jews.

After the video of the storming of the Makhachkala airport in search of Jews appeared online, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that Russian antisemitism and hatred of other nations were systemic and deep-rooted.

NATO said that the riots at Makhachkala airport in Russias Dagestan were not beneficial to the Kremlin, even though they were the result of Russian propaganda inciting hatred.

Sergei Melikov, Head of Dagestan, condemned the unrest involving the search for Jews at the Makhachkala airport, adding that the incitement to it originated in Ukraine. Gulagu.net, a Russian anti-corruption, anti-torture human rights organisation and website, reported that Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) will point to a "Ukrainian trail" in antisemitic pogroms in Dagestan.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine pointed out that the antisemitic rally in Dagestan is the result of the methodical work of Russian state propaganda aimed at cultivating hatred of other peoples in their citizens.

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Putin blames pogroms in Dagestan on influence of Ukraine and "Western special services" - Yahoo News

Zelensky Says Future of War in Ukraine Hinges on U.S. Presidential Election – The New York Times

Law enforcement agents in Russia have detained two Americans in separate incidents in recent weeks one a Russian-born English teacher who was a vocal supporter of the jailed opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny, and a second man who Russian authorities said was caught trying to smuggle his young son out of the country.

Details of the two cases emerged earlier this week in Russian news media reports as well as in a statement from Russias Investigative Committee, the countrys main investigation agency. A State Department spokesman on Friday confirmed both arrests but declined to provide further details.

Ilya A. Startsev, 37, the English teacher, was among several people arrested in various cities in Russia on Wednesday and accused of donating money to Navalnys Anti-Corruption Foundation, which has been banned, according to OVD-Info, a rights group that reports on repression in Russia, as well as other Russian media outlets.

The foundation, known by its Russian initials F.B.K., has regularly embarrassed senior Russian officials, including President Vladimir V. Putin, by exposing vast holdings they have accumulated while in office, far beyond what their government paychecks would allow.

The other American was arrested after arriving in Russia on July 27 and accused of trying to kidnap his 4-year-old son, a Russian citizen, and to spirit him across the border into Poland, according to a statement released on Thursday by the Investigative Committee, which did not name the man.

Regarding the teacher, the Russian government disbanded the Anti-Corruption Foundation in Russia in 2021 by declaring it an extremist organization, sending the groups main investigators fleeing into exile, where they continue to work. Various Navalny supporters have faced criminal charges in Russia as the Kremlin has ratcheted up repressive measures, especially those trying to silence critics of its war in Ukraine.

A conviction for financing an extremist organization carries an eight-year jail sentence.

Mr. Startsev was born in Russia but moved to the United States as a child after his mother married an American, according to an interview he gave a few years ago as well as accounts in the Russian press. After moving to the Chicago area, he attended high school and Northern Illinois University, according to his online biography.

He moved back to Russia to pursue a teaching career. At the time of his arrest, he was teaching English for a Moscow company called the American Club of Education, which offers both online and in-person courses. He had also taught at a private school in Oryol, a provincial city more than 220 miles southwest of Moscow. He was jailed there on Thursday, a day after being detained in Moscow, Russian news media reports said.

There have been several recent cases of Americans being arrested on unlikely spying charges in Russia. Evan Gershkovich, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, is incarcerated in Moscow facing trial, and Paul Whelan, 53, a former Marine, is serving a 16-year sentence. Last December, Brittney Griner, an American basketball star imprisoned in Russia on drug charges, was released after nearly 10 months of captivity in a prisoner swap for Viktor Bout, a convicted Russian arms dealer known as the Merchant of Death, who is now running for office.

On social media, Mr. Startsev made no secret of his staunch support for Mr. Navalny, who survived what is widely considered an attempt by government agents to kill him with poison, and has since been jailed in a Russian penal colony on various charges that have extended his sentence to at least 19 years.

In his last writing on VKontakte, the Russian equivalent of Facebook, Mr. Startsev lauded Mr. Navalnys aims, and supported his vision of a free, happy and uncorrupt future for Russia, he wrote, with virtuous politicians being a key to this.

He had also posted a picture of himself on VKontakte, holding up a poster of what appears to be an opposition rally in May 2018. The dense, hand-lettered poster called for fighting corruption, poverty and inequality; restoring free elections; giving the opposition access to the media; releasing political prisoners; ending government control of the internet; and allowing the freedom of assembly.

In his 2019 interview, Mr. Startsev said he had used his time in the United States to improve his credentials in order to get a better job back in Russia. Asked about life in the United States, he said, The food there has a different taste; the air is cleaner; the roads are better.

He had learned a lot, Mr. Startsev said, but he wanted to apply it in Russia: I want to help Russia become a great and beautiful country.

In the other case, the Russian authorities are accusing the man of trying to take his son to live outside Russia without obtaining consent from the childs mother, the office of the Investigative Committee in Kaliningrad said in the statement released on its Telegram channel. A criminal investigation has been started but no charges filed yet pending the man being questioned further, the statement said.

After arriving in Russia on July 27, the American met his son, who is a Russian citizen, the committee said. The boy lived in Kaliningrad, which borders the Baltic Sea and is Russias farthest point west. Under the pretext of spending time together, the man drove the boy in a car to a town near the Polish border and was detained while trying to cross it by walking through a swampy, wooded area, the statement said.

At the time of the incident, a court in Kaliningrad had been weighing where the boy should live, the statement said.

Milana Mazaeva contributed reporting.

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Zelensky Says Future of War in Ukraine Hinges on U.S. Presidential Election - The New York Times

Russia-Ukraine war news: G-20 begins with Ukraine on agenda … – The Washington Post

Updated September 9, 2023 at 1:03 p.m. EDT|Published September 9, 2023 at 1:23 a.m. EDT

Romania found new drone fragments on its territory near the Ukrainian border, the Defense Ministry said Saturday, describing the pieces as similar to those used by the Russian army. Earlier this week, drone parts were recovered from the same area.

The discovery Saturday indicated an absolutely unacceptable violation of the sovereign airspace of Romania, a NATO ally, President Klaus Iohannis said in a statement. He said he spoke with NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, who called the strikes destabilizing and said he welcomes the U.S. decision to deploy more F-16s for NATO air policing.

At a Group of 20 economic summit in New Delhi, world leaders adopted a declaration that avoided openly condemning Russia for the war in Ukraine. But the document, which included language agreed on by all members, including the United States and Russia, also urged states to refrain from the threat or use of force to seek territorial acquisition.

Heres the latest on the war and its impact across the globe.

In an interview with CNN, Zelensky said there is no possibility of compromising with Putin to end the war. He said that he is willing to talk to the people who are ready to compromise but that Putin was not one of them. When you want to have a compromise or a dialogue with somebody, you cannot do it with a liar, Zelensky said.

Putin vowed Russia would continue to systematically build up bilateral communications in all directions with North Korea. The Kremlin published a letter from Putin to his counterpart Kim Jong Un on Saturday to mark the founding 75 years ago of the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea. Kim plans to visit Putin later this month, probably in the Russian port city of Vladivostok, to discuss possible weapons deals to bolster Russias fighting force in Ukraine, The Post previously reported.

Zelensky adviser Mykhailo Podolyak criticized SpaceX owner Elon Musk for cutting off Starlink satellite internet services to Ukrainian submarine drones last year. The drones were launching an attack on a Russian fleet based in Crimea. Musk has defended his decision, saying he did not want SpaceX to be explicitly complicit in a major act of war and conflict escalation.

In Ukraine, more than 800 educational facilities have been damaged or destroyed due to the war, the United Nations human rights office in the country said Saturday. During war, schools should be a sanctuary for children, the group said. Yet in Ukraine, far too often they have come under shelling and attacks by missiles, loitering munitions and airstrikes in the wake of Russias large-scale attack. It added that schools in the regions of Kherson, Kharkiv and Mykolaiv had been especially damaged.

Japans Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi arrived in Kyiv on Saturday, where he will meet with his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba, the Japanese Foreign Ministry said. Hayashi is expected to reaffirm Tokyos support for Kyiv in the war against Russia while several Japanese business executives will accompany him to discuss Ukraines reconstruction, it added.

The CIA has published a video aimed at recruiting disaffected Russian officials. The video, titled Why I made contact with the CIA: For myself, shows a Russian government official walking through what appears to be the snowy streets of a Russian city before entering a secured facility, and appears aimed to entice recruits.

Cuba has arrested 17 people for allegedly recruiting Cubans to fight for Russia in Ukraine, the Associated Press reported. A Cuban prosecutor told local media that the suspects could face sentences of up to 30 years or life in prison, or even the death penalty. Cuba is not part of the war in Ukraine, Cubas Foreign Ministry said in a news release, according to the AP.

Ukrainian troops rely on Starlink services for virtually any task requiring digital communication, The Washington Post reported. From communicating with loved ones back home to directing drones against enemy positions, Ukrainian troops are heavily dependent on the 42,000 Starlink terminals in Ukraine.

A Russian missile strike hit Zelenskys hometown of Kryvyi Rih. The Friday attack left at least one person dead and more than 70 injured, Ukrainian officials said. The strike destroyed a police administration building.

Ukraine froze the assets of Ihor Kolomoisky, a tycoon facing graft allegations who is already under indictment and sanctions in the United States over accusations of bank fraud. Ukraines anti-graft office said it had frozen shares in more than 300 companies under his control, along with real estate and vehicles, amounting to a value of more than $80 million.

War in Ukraine halted adoptions. Now some orphans are stuck in limbo: After Ukrainian officials paused international adoptions until the wars end, about 200 American families seeking to adopt children from the war-torn country find themselves stuck, David L. Stern reports. Ukraine says adoptions will resume three months after the end of martial law.

Pavlo Shulha, the Ukrainian head of Kidsave, a U.S.-based international charity helping place orphans with families, said the childrens distress is being compounded since the main trauma is abandonment. By delaying their adoptions, authorities are repeating this trauma, he added.

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Russia-Ukraine war news: G-20 begins with Ukraine on agenda ... - The Washington Post

Russia’s Sham Elections in Ukraine’s Sovereign Territory – United … – Department of State

The Russian Federation is in the process of conducting sham elections in occupied areas of Ukraine. These so-called elections are taking place nearly one year after the Kremlin staged sham referenda and purported to annex Ukraines Kherson, Zaporizhzhya, Donetsk, and Luhansk oblasts, and over nine years after Russia purported to annex Ukraines Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol. The Kremlin hopes these pre-determined, fabricated results will strengthen Russias illegitimate claims to the parts of Ukraine it occupies, but this is nothing more than a propaganda exercise.

Russias actions demonstrate its blatant disregard for UN Charter principles like respect for state sovereignty and territorial integrity, which underpin global security and stability. The United States will never recognize the Russian Federations claims to any of Ukraines sovereign territory, and we remind any individuals who may support Russias sham elections in Ukraine, including by acting as so-called international observers, that they may be subject to sanctions and visa restrictions.

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Russia's Sham Elections in Ukraine's Sovereign Territory - United ... - Department of State