Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

They wont invade, will they? Fears rise in Russian city that Ukraine war could cross border – The Guardian

The war has become impossible to ignore in Belgorod, southern Russia, just miles from the border with Ukraine. Russian soldiers retreating from the Ukrainian counterattack now roam the streets. Air defences boom out overhead several times a day. The city is once again filled with refugees. And, at the border, Russian and Ukrainian soldiers stand within sight of each other.

Three Russian soldiers from Ossetia are wandering the unfamiliar streets past the grand Transfiguration Cathedral late one evening. They seem unsteady on their feet, perhaps drunk or tired. And theyre looking for a place to eat.

Since February, they say, they have fought in Ukraine as part of the invasion force. They were stationed in the village of Velyki Prokhody, just north of Kharkiv, when the urgent signal came to flee back to Russia last week.

What can we say? An order is an order. We didnt have a choice, says one wearing a hat emblazoned with a Z, a tactical symbol adopted as a patriotic emblem of war support in Russia.

As the Russian front in Kharkiv has collapsed and Ukrainians who have chosen the Russian side have fled for the border, a dark thought has crossed the minds of ordinary people here: that the war may cross into Russia.

Asked where they are headed next, the soldiers say they dont know. But its likely, they think, they will be sent back south to defend the border.

The following day, some 400 National Guard troops are reinforcing positions held by the Russian border guards. Even there, an activist who was present said, soldiers were soul-searching among themselves. Within eyeshot are Ukrainian troops on the other side in a tense standoff.

How the fuck did this happen? one border guard said to another, two people who were there recall.

In Belgorod, the signals of war and tension are on display, even if most people believe the conflict is unlikely to spill over. Oleg, a restaurateur originally from Ukraine wears a shirt emblazoned with the phrase Born in Kharkiv, and has bought plywood boards in case he needs to cover his restaurants windows.

His business partner, Denis, has built a bomb shelter in his backyard and evacuated his grandmother from a Russian-held town in east Ukraine now on the frontline of the conflict.

Denis says he hopes that tensions will recede. But they are also taking precautions. Nobody expects it to come here, says Oleg. But we have to be ready.

In Belgorods central market, soldiers are stocking up for the winter, signalling that Russias war may stretch for the coming months or even longer.

Where are the balaclavas? one yells out, rummaging through one of several stalls selling camouflage hats, jackets, thermal underwear and other cold-weather equipment.

Every day, dozens of the boys come, there are so many of them now [since the counteroffensive], says Marina, who sells camouflage items in the market. Everyone has these glum faces. It is more tense now.

I see them buying these things, and I wonder why they dont already have [them], she also says, adding that the troops are buying basic food and cooking implements that she expected would be supplied by the army.

An elderly woman in the market cries on one of their shoulders. Please, please help us, she sobs emotionally. Men walk up to clap the soldiers on the back. Overhead, an explosion is audible. Air defences, one man murmurs.

You feel [the war] here in a way you dont feel it in other cities, says Andrei Borzikh, a bankruptcy lawyer who has been crowdfunding thermal rifle scopes and other equipment for the Russian army. He carries a helmet and a bulletproof vest in his car. You hear it.

Ukraine has not given any indication that it intends to cross the border or do more than retake territory occupied by Russia. But the very idea of the Kremlins quick, victorious war boomeranging back across the border into Russia speaks to the realities of the defeat suffered by its forces in recent days.

Some miscalculations were made in any case maybe they were tactical, maybe they were strategic, says Borzikh. The fact that Russia thought it had come there for ever was clear.

Like other boosters of the Russian army, he says that the recent defeats should be attributed to western support for Ukraine. Russia is now in a conflict with a third of the world community, he says.

On a recent weekday, a security officer in blue fatigues holds a Kalashnikov rifle outside the red-brick Lycee No 9 on the central Narodny Bulvar. An hour earlier, reports had emerged that the city was holding planned evacuations of local schools and major shopping centres, apparently in case of shelling or bomb threats.

The governor of Belgorod region, Vyacheslav Gladkov, reissued an order on Monday requiring local authorities to check their bomb shelters. Schools near the border have been temporarily closed. Online videos show volunteers cutting down trees to build fortifications in the forested areas south of the city.

People here now understand that the war is not going well. In a series of interviews, locals describe feeling shock in the early days of the war, followed by a rise in patriotic sentiment accompanied by pro-war symbols such as the popular Z plastered on cars and buildings.

Now many of those have disappeared as Belgorod settles in for a long conflict that has come far closer than they ever expected.

As in many Russian cities, there is barely any anti-war activism. Ilya Kostyukov, 19, an opposition activist and founder of the Belgorod Anti-War Committee, says he focuses on encouraging people who oppose the conflict to speak up, and that trying to convince supporters of the war to change their minds is pointless.

Asked about direct consequences of the war for people in Belgorod, he points to the arrival of refugees and a recent blackout caused by an explosion hitting a nearby power station.

Soldiers had also been growing rowdy at the karaoke cafe where he works behind the bar. Fights break out regularly, he says. One group of soldiers refused to pay their bill and then pulled a pistol on a bouncer.

But largely, he says, apathy reigns in Belgorod. For us, it feels like no one cares until it touches them personally. Until someone brings a coffin to your home, nobody cares.

Some families are split by the border. Irina, a travel agent, lives with her daughter in their native Belgorod. But her ex-husband and father of her child lives in Kharkiv.

Our child is split between two countries, she says in a tense voice. Absolutely equally. No matter what happens.

Two weeks ago, she says, her ex-husband told her that he had been called up into army service by Ukraine. He was ready to serve because he felt it was his patriotic duty. She is terrified hell be killed.

I lost my mind a bit and said some really unpleasant things, she says of their most recent conversation. Anything can happen. I wanted to save the father of my child.

He is a citizen of Ukraine and he is fulfilling his duty for his country and trying to fulfil his duty to his family.

In the evenings, Yulia Nemchinova, a volunteer who delivers aid to people recently arrived in Belgorod from Ukraine, goes to a small shipping container in the industrial sector that she calls the warehouse. Inside, there are crackers and biscuits, nappies, tampons, tea and coffee and dozens of other products that wont spoil in the heat or cold.

On her phone, she has a spread- sheet of nearly 1,200 entries from families who have arrived, requesting basic goods. She estimates that 6,000 people are in need. One apartment alone had nearly two dozen people in it, she says. Belgorod is overflowing.

Nearly 85% of recent arrivals from Ukraine want to stay close to the border, she says. This had led many to decline going into government refugee camps along the border that would later see them sent further into Russia.

There is a sense, even among Putin supporters, that Russia is losing hearts and minds in Ukraine.

At a centre for aid distribution, Ukrainians with openly pro-Kremlin views ask why they havent been warned about the counteroffensive or received more aid from the government after arriving in Russia.

We feel homeless and like nobody needs us, says one woman with pro-Russian views who fled occupied Kupiansk, a town that was recently retaken by the Ukrainian army.

As promised to all those fleeing the war into Russia, she received 10,000 roubles (143) from the government. We got our 10,000 roubles, but my house was there, and Ive thrown everything away and become homeless, she says.

One Russia-based activist who regularly travelled into occupied Ukrainian territory in order to evacuate people says he was stunned by the lack of investment in infrastructure there. He recalls the feeling of witnessing an apocalypse while standing at an empty crossroads in Kupiansk.

He brought 3.5 tonnes of food and medicine to an orphanage where children had stayed behind. In other places, they simply travelled through small villages to bring food and medicine to local people, often elderly, who had stayed behind.

In Vovchansk, he says, there was no light or electricity for several months. I think thats one of the failures of the Russian army that they didnt bring enough benefits. So people welcomed the arrival of Ukrainian troops, he says.

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They wont invade, will they? Fears rise in Russian city that Ukraine war could cross border - The Guardian

West wavers on Ukraine proposals to seize Russian assets as reparations – The Guardian

Ukraine is facing a battle to persuade its western allies, including the UK, to back its proposal for any peace settlement with Moscow to include multibillion reparations by Russia, in part using seized Russian state and oligarch assets.

Ukraine is lobbying the UN general assembly to adopt a resolution that will become the basis for the creation of an international compensation mechanism that could lead to the seizure of as much as $300bn (260bn) of Russian state assets overseas.

The US Department of Justice said in June the US and its allies have frozen $30bn of Russian elite assets and $300bn of Russian central bank assets held overseas.

Ukraines deputy justice minister, Iryna Mudra, was in London last week to discuss the issue with the Foreign Office after lobbying the Council of Europes council of ministers in Strasbourg alongside Olena Zelenska, the wife of the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

A former banker, Mudra has been at the helm of the detailed legal and political discussions on reparations, holding talks in Germany, Paris and Brussels and with the US treasury assistant secretary, Elizabeth Rosenberg.

At the end of the last meeting in Strasbourg the Council of Europe ministers backed the principle of reparations, but issued a lukewarm statement about Ukraines specific proposals, saying it noted with interest the Ukrainian proposals to establish a comprehensive international compensation mechanism, including, as a first step, an international register of damage. The US treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, has said reparations would be unlawful under current US law.

But Ukraine has become increasingly ambitious that any definition of a military victory must include Russian agreement to reparations, a demand that Moscow would resist and complicate any peace negotiations. The issue is separate to establishing a legal mechanism to hold Russian leaders to account for war crimes.

Those close to the talks on reparations in London came away with an impression that British enthusiasm in principle for the plan is being weighed against the potential legal and property rights issues involved.

It is argued that if Russian central bank assets are appropriated, as opposed simply to being frozen as at present, any western assets held overseas could also become prey to seizure.

State property is protected abroad under the doctrine of state immunity, a principle endorsed in UN articles in 2011, which provides a foreign state with immunity from the jurisdiction of domestic courts, at least in respect of non-commercial activities.

In May, in conjunction with Columbia law school, Ukraine set up an International Claims and Reparations Project including the British barrister Alison Macdonald, the former state department legal adviser Jeremy Sharpe and two Columbia professors, Lori Damrosch and Patrick Pearsall.

They claim there is precedent for seizure of Russian state assets historically, pointing to compensation claims made against Iraq after the invasion of Kuwait, compensation paid by Iran to the US over the embassy hostage crisis, and the recent US seizure of Afghan central bank assets.

Ukraine accepts that at present Russian state assets overseas enjoy sovereign immunity, but believes this can be changed through national legislation, as has occurred in Canada. It says a second process is required to seize assets of Russian companies or oligarchs.

Yellens claim that the US does not have the current legal authority to seize Russian assets is partly because the US is not engaged in armed hostilities with Russia, and the US does not contest Russias lawful ownership of the assets.

Others say the US could deploy the Trading with Enemy Act or the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Reparations have been backed in a joint statement issued by the finance ministers of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia. Liz Truss as foreign secretary expressed support for the idea in principle, but has not repeated the proposal recently.

UK and European sanctions legislation allows states to freeze assets of the Russian central bank and some oligarchs, but does not provide for the permanent seizure, let alone their unilateral transfer to a fund to rebuild Ukraine.

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West wavers on Ukraine proposals to seize Russian assets as reparations - The Guardian

400 000 doses of Comirnaty vaccine delivered to Ukraine under COVAX – World Health Organization

Kyiv, 19 September 2022

On 18 September, 400 000 doses of the Comirnaty mRNA vaccine against COVID-19 developed by Pfizer/BioNTech were delivered to Ukraine under the framework of the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) Facility. The vaccines will be distributed throughout 23 regions in the country by the Ministry of Health of Ukraine.

Together with our international partners, we continue to deliver vaccines against COVID-19 to Ukraine. With the approach of the autumn/winter period, it is especially important to protect yourself from COVID-19, because as the experience of past years shows, the incidence increases sharply at this time, said Dr Ihor Kuzin, Deputy Minister of Health and Chief State Sanitary Doctor of Ukraine.

Vaccination is an important priority during humanitarian emergencies, and one of UNICEF's key areas of work aimed at the protection and well-being of children and their parents. UNICEF will continue to help Ukraine provide access to immunization and adhere to a cold chain for vaccines, emphasized Mr Murat Sahin, United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) Representative in Ukraine.

Dr Jarno Habicht, WHO Representative in Ukraine, explained, WHO continues to support Ukraines health system through the delivery of vaccines via the COVAX Facility and has trained over 30 000 health workers on the safe and effective use of COVID-19 vaccines, including on the use of the Comirnaty Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

Dr Habicht added, WHO urges everybody, especially the elderly, people with chronic diseases and those belonging to at-risk groups, to get their primary vaccine series and boosters against COVID-19 and to protect themselves and others as we enter the autumn/winter period.

The Comirnaty vaccine from Pfizer/BioNTech contains messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) molecules that encode the spike protein found on the surface of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. After the vaccine is administered, this mRNA enters the cells of the body and provides them with a kind of instruction on how to create this protein. The immune system recognizes that the protein does not belong to the person and produces antibodies against it. This is how the body learns to protect itself in the case of an encounter with a real SARS-CoV-2 virus.

The vaccine is approved for emergency use by WHO. In Ukraine, the Comirnaty vaccine from Pfizer/BioNTech was registered for use on 22 February 2021.

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and since the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine by the Russian Federation, Ukraine has received COVID-19 vaccines for free through COVAX. COVAX is an international initiative that promotes access to effective and safe vaccines against COVID-19 for all countries. Deliveries on behalf of the initiative will continue to protect as many people as possible in Ukraine from the coronavirus disease.

All adults and children over the age of 12 can be vaccinated against COVID-19 in Ukraine. A booster dose can be taken by all people over the age of 18. The second booster dose of COVID-19 vaccine is available for all people over 60 years old in Ukraine, as well as to those aged 1859 with underlying medical conditions that increase the risk of a severe course of COVID-19.

The European Union, the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (Gavi), UNICEF, the United Kingdom, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and WHO all continue to support Ukraine on COVID-19 vaccination. Future deliveries will ensure that as many people as possible receive protection.

The Comirnaty vaccine delivery was made possible thanks to financial support from USAID.

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400 000 doses of Comirnaty vaccine delivered to Ukraine under COVAX - World Health Organization

Exclusive: As war began, Putin rejected a Ukraine peace deal recommended by aide – Reuters

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PARIS, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Vladimir Putin's chief envoy on Ukraine told the Russian leader as the war began that he had struck a provisional deal with Kyiv that would satisfy Russia's demand that Ukraine stay out of NATO, but Putin rejected it and pressed ahead with his military campaign, according to three people close to the Russian leadership.

The Ukrainian-born envoy, Dmitry Kozak, told Putin that he believed the deal he had hammered out removed the need for Russia to pursue a large-scale occupation of Ukraine, according to these sources. Kozak's recommendation to Putin to adopt the deal is being reported by Reuters for the first time.

Putin had repeatedly asserted prior to the war that NATO and its military infrastructure were creeping closer to Russia's borders by accepting new members from eastern Europe, and that the alliance was now preparing to bring Ukraine into its orbit too. Putin publicly said that represented an existential threat to Russia, forcing him to react.

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But, despite earlier backing the negotiations, Putin made it clear when presented with Kozak's deal that the concessions negotiated by his aide did not go far enough and that he had expanded his objectives to include annexing swathes of Ukrainian territory, the sources said. The upshot: the deal was dropped.

Asked about Reuters findings, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "That has absolutely no relation to reality. No such thing ever happened. It is absolutely incorrect information."

Kozak did not respond to requests for comment sent via the Kremlin.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the Ukrainian president, said Russia had used the negotiations as a smokescreen to prepare for its invasion, but he did not respond to questions about the substance of the talks nor confirm that a preliminary deal was reached. "Today, we clearly understand that the Russian side has never been interested in a peaceful settlement," Podolyak said.

Two of the three sources said a push to get the deal finalized occurred immediately after Russia's Feb. 24 invasion. Within days, Kozak believed he had Ukraine's agreement to the main terms Russia had been seeking and recommended to Putin that he sign an agreement, the sources said.

"After Feb. 24, Kozak was given carte blanche: they gave him the green light; he got the deal. He brought it back and they told him to clear off. Everything was cancelled. Putin simply changed the plan as he went along," said one of the sources close to the Russian leadership.

The third source - who was told about the events by people who were briefed on the discussions between Kozak and Putin - differed on the timing, saying Kozak had proposed the deal to Putin, and had it rejected, just before the invasion. The sources all requested anonymity to share sensitive internal information.

Moscow's offensive in Ukraine is the largest military campaign in Europe since World War II. It prompted sweeping economic sanctions against Russia and military support for Ukraine from Washington and its Western allies.

Even if Putin had acquiesced to Kozak's plan, it remains uncertain if the war would have ended. Reuters was unable to verify independently that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy or senior officials in his government were committed to the deal.

Kozak, who is 63, has been a loyal lieutenant to Putin since working with him in the 1990s in the St. Petersburg mayor's office.

Kozak was well-placed to negotiate a peace deal because since 2020 Putin had tasked him with conducting talks with Ukrainian counterparts about the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, which has been controlled by Russian-backed separatists following an uprising in 2014. After leading the Russian delegation in talks with Ukrainian officials in Berlin on Feb. 10 brokered by France and Germany Kozak told a late-night news conference that the latest round of those negotiations had ended without a breakthrough.

Kozak also was one of those present when, three days before the invasion, Putin gathered his military and security chiefs and key aides in the Kremlin's Yekaterinsky hall for a meeting of Russia's Security Council.

State television cameras recorded part of the meeting, where Putin laid out plans to give formal recognition to separatist entities in eastern Ukraine.

Once the cameras were ushered out of the vast room with its neo-classical columns and domed ceiling, Kozak spoke out against Russia taking any steps to escalate the situation with Ukraine, said two of the three people close to the Russian leadership, as well as a third person who learned about what happened from people who took part in the meeting.

Another individual interviewed by Reuters, who helped in the post-invasion talks, said discussions fell apart in early March when Ukrainian officials understood Putin was committed to pressing ahead with the large-scale invasion.

Six months on from the start of the war, Kozak remains in his post as Kremlin deputy chief of staff. But he is no longer handling the Ukraine dossier, according to six of the sources who spoke to Reuters.

"From what I can see, Kozak is nowhere to be seen," said one of the six, a source close to the separatist leadership in eastern Ukraine.

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Editing by Daniel Flynn

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Exclusive: As war began, Putin rejected a Ukraine peace deal recommended by aide - Reuters

Russia-Ukraine war live news: Putin warns attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure could be ramped up latest updates – The Guardian

Russia may not have reserves to withstand counter-offensive in Luhansk

Russia is likely to stubbornly defend the Luhansk oblast in eastern Ukraines Donbas region amid Kyivs counteroffensive, but it is unclear if Moscows forces have sufficient reserves or adequate morale to withstand another concerted Ukrainian assault, the UK ministry of defence says.

Its latest intelligence briefing says:

Any substantial loss of territory in Luhansk will unambiguously undermine Russias strategy.

The assessment comes after Ukrainian forces recently recaptured more than 6,000 sq km of territory including the city of Izium, long regarded as the gateway to the Donbas.

Updated at 03.38EDT

Key events

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An honour guard fired a three-gun salute toward cloudy skies as friends and comrades-in-arms gathered in Kyiv to bid farewell to a Russian woman who was killed while fighting on Ukraines side in the war with her native country, Associated Press reports.

Olga Simonova, 34, was remembered for her courage and kindness at a funeral in the Ukrainian capital on Friday.

Simonovas coffin was draped in the blue-and-yellow Ukrainian flag, with a cuddly toy lion on top. Her nom de guerre was Simba, like the main character in the Disney cartoon The Lion King.

Born in the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, Simonova, said she started feeling uncomfortable about her native country after reading about Russias war in Chechnya and its actions in Ukraines eastern Donbas region and Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.

Filled with doubts that she would ever be able to raise the flag of my country, my homeland again, Simonova travelled to Ukraine to join the conflict in the Donbas on the Ukrainian side, first as a volunteer fighter, then a paramedic and ultimately as an enlisted member of the armed forces.

Friends and colleagues said Simonova, who was unmarried and had no children, had recently redeployed from the east to the southern Kherson region, where Ukraine has launched a counteroffensive against Russian forces.

They said she died on September 13, after her vehicle hit a land mine.

The governor of Kharkiv oblast, Oleh Synyehubov, has said an 11-year-old girl was killed in a Russian rocket attack in the city of Chuhuiv, in the eastern Ukrainian region.

Synyehubov said the rockets also caused damage to critical infrastructure, the private sector, an enterprise, and a gas station.

He said on Telegram:

An innocent child died from Russian terror.

Unfortunately, the 11-year-old girl, who was hospitalised in Chuguyev, died from her injuries.

Another woman was injured after the attacks on Chuguiev; the condition of the victim is average.

The report could not be independently verified.

Updated at 09.30EDT

Ukrainian forces have continued to cross the key Oskil River in the Kharkiv region as they try to press on in a counteroffensive targeting Russian-occupied territory, according to the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War.

The institute said in todays report that satellite imagery it examined suggested that Ukrainian forces have crossed over to the east bank of the Oskil in Kupiansk, placing artillery there.

The river, which flows south from Russia into Ukraine, had been a natural break in the newly emerged frontlines since Ukraine launched its push about a week ago, reports Associated Press.

The institute said:

Russian forces are likely too weak to prevent further Ukrainian advances along the entire Oskil River if Ukrainian forces choose to resume offensive operations.

Updated at 09.18EDT

President Zelenskiys senior adviser, Mykhailo Podolyak, has responded to reports that Mexico will present a peace plan for Ukraine to the United Nations general assembly next week.

Directing his tweet at Mexican president, Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador, Podolyak said:

Peacemakers who use war as a topic for their own PR are causing only surprise. @lopezobrador_, is your plan to keep millions under occupation, increase the number of mass burials and give Russia time to renew reserves before the next offensive? Then your plan is a plan.

Agence France-Presse reports that the proposal to be put forward by Mexico is for Pope Francis, the UN secretary general, Antnio Guterres, and the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, to form a dialogue and peace committee.

Updated at 08.48EDT

Russias defence ministry today said that its forces have launched strikes on several parts of Ukraine.

It also accused Kyiv of carrying out shelling near the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Reuters reports.

Russian forces conducted their strikes in the Kherson, Mykolaiv, Kharkiv and Donetsk regions, according to the ministry.

It said that Ukrainian forces had carried out an unsuccessful offensive near Pravdyne in Kherson.

The radiation situation at Zaporizhzhia, Europes biggest nuclear power plant, remains normal, according to the ministry.

It said two incidents of Ukrainian shelling were recorded near the plant on Saturday.

A spokesperson for Ukraines foreign ministry denied that Ukrainian forces had carried out shelling near the facility.

Both Russia and Ukraine have repeatedly accused each other of shelling the nuclear power plant.

The UN International Atomic Energy Agency passed a resolution on Thursday demanding that Russia end its occupation of the plant.

Updated at 07.17EDT

Pavlo Kyrylenko, the governor of Ukraines eastern Donetsk region, has reported today that two civilians were killed on Friday after Russian shelling in the cities of Bakhmut and Sviatohirsk.

In an update on the operational situation, Kyrylenklo added that overnight in the region passed relatively calmly and there was only isolated shelling on the front line.

On the Telegram, he said:

On September 16, the Russians killed 2 civilians of Donetsk region: in Sviatohirsk and Bakhmut. Another 11 people were injured.

Currently, it is impossible to establish the exact number of victims in Mariupol and Volnovas.

It was not possible to independently verify the report.

Our report on US president, Joe Bidens, first meeting with the family members of Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan:

Joe Biden, met with family members of WNBA star Brittney Griner and another American detained in Russia, Paul Whelan, on Friday, the first face-to-face encounter that the president has had with the relatives.

In a statement after the meetings, which were held separately, White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said Biden stressed to the families his continued commitment to working through all available avenues to bring Brittney and Paul home safely.

He asked after the well-being of Elizabeth and Cherelle and their respective families during this painful time, Jean-Pierre said. The president appreciated the opportunity to learn more about Brittney and Paul from those who love them most, and acknowledged that every minute they are being held is a minute too long.

Read more: Joe Biden meets with families of Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan

Updated at 06.27EDT

It is just after 1pm in Kyiv. This is what you might have missed:

Russia is likely to stubbornly defend the Luhansk oblast in eastern Ukraines Donbas region amid Kyivs counteroffensive, but it is unclear if Moscows forces have sufficient reserves or adequate morale to withstand another concerted Ukrainian assault, the UK Ministry of Defence says. Its latest intelligence briefing says: Any substantial loss of territory in Luhansk will unambiguously undermine Russias strategy. The assessment comes after Ukrainian forces recently recaptured more than 6,000 sq km of territory including the city of Izium, long regarded as the gateway to the Donbas.

Vladimir Putin has vowed to continue his attack on Ukraine despite Kyivs latest counteroffensive and warned that Moscow could ramp up its strikes on the countrys vital infrastructure if Ukrainian forces target facilities in Russia. Associated Press reported that the Russian president said the liberation of Ukraines entire eastern Donbas region remained Russias main military goal and that he saw no need to revise it. Speaking to reporters on Friday after attending a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, Putin said: We arent in a rush.

Joe Biden has warned Vladimir Putin not to use chemical or tactical nuclear weapons in the war with Ukraine. The US president was asked in an interview with CBS News what he would say to Putin if he was considering using the weapons. Biden said: Dont. Dont. Dont. You will change the face of war unlike anything since World War II.

Ukraines foreign minister has renewed criticism of Germany for failing to send tanks to help fight Russian forces, saying the new weapons pledged by Berlin were not what we need most. Berlin announced on Thursday it would send Kyiv more multiple rocket launchers and Dingo armoured troop-carriers as Ukraines troops carry out a counteroffensive against Moscows forces. But Agence France-Presse reported the foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, as saying Germanys decisions were a mystery and that there was a weapon wall in Berlin that the chancellor, Olaf Scholz, had to tear down.

Mexico will present a peace plan for Ukraine to the United Nations general assembly next week, president Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador says. Agence France-Presse reports that the proposal is for Pope Francis, the UN secretary general, Antnio Guterres, and the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, to form a dialogue and peace committee.

United Nations member states have voted to make an exception to allow Volodymyr Zelenskiy to address next weeks general assembly by video, despite Russian opposition. Of the 193 member states, 101 voted on Friday in favour of allowing the Ukrainian president to present a pre-recorded statement instead of in-person as usually required. Seven members voted against the proposal, including Russia. Nineteen states abstained.

Virtually all the exhumed bodies in Izium had signs of violent death, Ukraines regional administration chief said of the mass burial site discovered after Kyivs forces recaptured the east Ukrainian town. Exhumers had uncovered several bodies with their hands tied behind their backs, and one with a rope around his neck, Oleg Synegubov, head of Kharkiv regional administration, said on Friday. Among the bodies that were exhumed today, 99% showed signs of violent death, he said on social media.

The European Union was deeply shocked at the mass graves discovered by Ukrainian officials in Izium, said the blocs foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell. We condemn these atrocities in the strongest possible terms. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, also condemned what he described as the atrocities committed in Izium, joining growing outrage in western countries over the burial site.

Ukrainian armed forces have hit four areas held by Russian troops, according to the general staff of the Ukrainian armed forces. The military also targeted an unloading station, it said, in turn preventing Russian forces from deploying additional reserves.

Russia has accused Ukraine of carrying out targeted strikes in the cities of Kherson and Luhansk against top local officials who have been collaborating with Moscow. At least five Himars missiles crashed into the central administration building in Kherson, which Russian troops have occupied since March after arriving from Crimea. Video from the scene showed smoke pouring out of the complex. In the eastern city of Luhansk, a pro-Russian prosecutor died with his deputy when their office was blown up. The cause of the explosion was not immediately clear. President Volodymyr Zelenskiys senior adviser, Mikhailo Podolyak, said Ukraine was not behind the blast.

Further south, the Russian-backed separatist authority in Berdiansk also blamed Kyiv for the double murder of a deputy head of the military civil administration and his wife, who headed the citys territorial election commission for the referendum.

In the southern oblast of Zaporizhzhia there were also reports on Friday of a powerful explosion in the Russian-occupied Melitopol, said Ivan Fedorov, mayor of Melitopol. I hope the Russian fascists have suffered losses, among their personnel and equipment, he said. Awaiting good news from the armed forces of Ukraine.

The United States department of defence has announced it is providing an additional $600m in military assistance to Ukraine to meet the countrys critical security and defence needs. In total, the Biden administration has committed about $15.8bn in security aid to Ukraine $15.1bn since the beginning of Russias invasion in February.

Switzerland on Friday aligned itself with the European Union in suspending a 2009 agreement easing rules for Russian citizens to enter the country. The suspension of the agreement does not mean a general visa freeze for Russians but rather they will need to use the ordinary visa procedure to enter Switzerland, the countrys federal council said in a statement. The EU took a similar step earlier, suspending a visa facilitation deal with Russia but stopping short of a wider visa ban in response to Moscows invasion of Ukraine.

Updated at 06.23EDT

Ukraines ministry of defence has given its latest update on Russias total combat losses since the war started in February this year.

The figures show that Vladimir Putins military forces have lost 54,250 troops, 2,202 tanks, and 4,701 armoured combat vehicles.

Ukrainian forces have also downed 251 military jets, 216 helicopters and 911 drones.

The figures could not be independently verified.

Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the leader of the democratic opposition in Belarus, writes for us that she lost a rigged election in Belarus only the west can help us win freedom from Russia:

Peat bogs span almost 15% of my home country of Belarus. But, in recent times, citizens have grown wary of these dense, acidic wetlands.

Their decaying vegetative matter is a valuable source of fuel and, after decades of being gradually drained and stripped away, the drying marshes that remain pose a significant fire risk. Smouldering underground fires can burn for months unseen before bursting out into the open and wreaking devastation.

Much like these underground peat fires that grow shielded from view, democracy in Belarus is currently burning and President Alexander Lukashenkos corrupt, despotic regime is the decaying marshland, tinder-dry and ripe for destruction.

Read more here: I lost a rigged election in Belarus only the west can help us win freedom from Russia

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