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War in Ukraine: latest developments – news.yahoo.com

Here are the latest developments in the war in Ukraine:

The Ukrainian navy says that work has resumed at three Black Sea ports designated under a deal with Russia to resume cereals' exports that have been blocked by Russia's invasion.

At talks in Turkey last week, Kyiv and Moscow agreed a mechanism to allow blocked Ukrainian grain to be exported across the Black Sea from the ports of Odessa, Chernomorsk and Pivdennyi.

Kyiv has said it hopes to begin sending out the first of millions of tonnes of grain "this week" despite a missile strike by Russia last week on the port in Odessa.

Russia and Ukraine are major exporters of agricultural products, but Moscow's invasion has severely disrupted Ukrainian wheat exports as the fighting damaged harvests and left ports blocked and mined.

As part of the deal, a coordination centre involving Ukrainian and Russian representatives was opened Wednesday in Istanbul to monitor the safe passage of ships along the agreed routes.

Ukrainian forces hit a key Russian-held bridge overnight during a counter-offensive to retake the occupied southern city of Kherson, representatives from both sides say.

The Russian army has used the Antonivskiy bridge over the Dnipro River as a key resupply route into Kherson, which fell to Russian forces in the early days of the invasion.

Kyiv has vowed a major counter-offensive to retake the region next to the Crimea peninsula, with the help of advanced missile systems supplied by the West.

Ukrainian lawmaker Andriy Kostin is appointed the country's new prosecutor general, a week after President Volodymyr Zelensky fired Kostin's predecessor and the head of the country's security agency, citing widespread collusion with Russia among their staff.

The prosecutor general's office said that 299 lawmakers of Ukraine's parliament -- the Rada -- backed Kostin's nomination.

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Zelensky says he hopes Kostin will help achieve "fair punishment for every Russian war criminal."

The European Court of Justice in Luxembourg upholds a broadcast ban imposed on Russian news channel RT France.

Consistently accused of churning out Russian state propaganda, RT has been blocked in most Western countries since President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine in February.

The Kremlin has hit back by curtailing the work of some Western media outlets in Russia.

Russian lawmakers have also passed draconian laws restricting free speech, under which criticism of the war and occupation can lead to lengthy prison sentences.

Russian energy giant Gazprom has carried out its promise to drastically cut gas deliveries to Europe through the Nord Stream pipeline to about 20 percent of its capacity from 40 percent, German authorities say.

The Russian state-run company announced Monday that it would slash supply to 33 million cubic metres a day -- half the amount it has been delivering since service resumed last week after 10 days of maintenance work.

EU states have accused Russia of squeezing supplies in retaliation for Western sanctions over Moscow's war in Ukraine.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov blames EU sanctions for the limited supply.

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War in Ukraine: latest developments - news.yahoo.com

Pope’s views on Ukraine war worry some in Canada – POLITICO

Edmonton is now home to about 12 percent of an estimated 1.36 million people of Ukrainian descent who live in Canada, according to the most recently available federal data. Thats more than any other metropolitan area.

Pope Francis visit to Canada is his first to a country with a significant Ukrainian population since the war began in February. The Ukrainian Canadian Congress (UCC), however, did not request an audience with the pope.

We think this visit has one focus. Yes, whats happening in Ukraine is front of mind for us, but reconciliation is also very important, said Broda, the UCCs Edmonton chapter president, adding that the group is trying to build relationships with Indigenous groups and work on our part of reconciliation.

The popes visit to Canada has been dubbed an apology tour by some. He traveled to a community south of Edmonton on Monday to deliver a historic apology to Indigenous survivors of residential schools run by the Catholic Church for more than a century from the 1880s until the 1990s. The schools were meant to wipe out Indigenous languages, traditions and customs a system derided as cultural genocide by a high-profile Truth and Reconciliation Commission report in 2015.

If the circumstances surrounding the papal visit were different, Broda said his organization definitely would request an audience with Francis.

The pope has repeatedly offered words of compassion to Ukrainians victimized by Russias invasion. In a June interview with Jesuit magazine La Civilt Cattolica, he decried the brutality and ferocity of Russian troops, and celebrated the heroism of the Ukrainian people.

Ukrainian refugees board a plane before flying to Canada, from Frederic Chopin Airport in Warsaw, Poland on July 4, 2022.|Michal Dyjuk/AP Photo

But the pontiff also turned heads with a suggestion that the invasion was perhaps somehow either provoked or not prevented a possible nod to Russian claims that NATOs aggressive posture in the region forced President Vladimir Putins hand.

The Pope hasnt spoken that much about (the war), but what he has said is disheartening, said Broda, one of thousands of Greek-Ukrainian Catholics in Canada.

There have been other papal missteps along the way.

In April, the Vaticans Way of the Cross procession through Romes Colosseum on Good Friday angered many Ukrainian Catholics. The ceremony featured a Russian and a Ukrainian woman holding the cross together in the spirit of peace and reconciliation.

Broda said the spirit of that event was a nice sentiment on the surface, but it implied that the Russian people werent themselves fanning the flames of war.

As easy as it is to say its all Vladimir Putins fault, Putin didnt rape women and children in Bucha and Mariupol, he said. A lot of those atrocities that came to light after the Russians withdrew were not committed by Vladimir Putin. They were committed by your average Russian soldier.

Broda recalled a massive pro-war rally at a Moscow stadium in March that attracted 200,000 people and various shows of support for Putins invasion in European nations with a large Russian diaspora.

Those are people who live in the West and have access to all the information in the world, and they still choose to support the war, he said.

In the same interview with La Civilt Cattolica, Francis attempted to add nuance to his views.

Someone may say to me at this point: but you are pro-Putin! No, I am not, he said. It would be simplistic and wrong to say such a thing. I am simply against reducing complexity to the distinction between good guys and bad guys, without reasoning about roots and interests, which are very complex.

The pope told Reuters in June that he hoped to visit both Moscow and Kyiv in an effort to bring a resolution to the war. He said only that those trips would follow his time in Canada.

The first thing is to go to Russia to try to help in some way, but I would like to go to both capitals, he said.

Given the chance to speak directly to the pope, Broda said the UCC would ask him to pick a side.

I would hope that His Holiness would hear the concerns of Canadian Catholics and take a more clear and unequivocal position in support of Ukraine, he said. I dont think the lines between good and bad have been quite so clear in a really long time.

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Pope's views on Ukraine war worry some in Canada - POLITICO

Explainer: Blood, treasure and chaos: the cost of Russia’s war in Ukraine – Reuters

A rescuer walks among debris at a site of a residential area destroyed by a Russian military strike, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in the town of Toretsk, Donetsk region, Ukraine July 27, 2022. Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine/Handout via REUTERS

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LONDON, July 28 (Reuters) - Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine has left tens of thousands of dead, displaced millions and sown economic strife across the world.

Following are the main impacts of the war:

Since Feb. 24, 5,237 civilians have been recorded as killed and 7,035 as injured, though the actual casualties are much higher, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said on July 25. https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2022/07/ukraine-civilian-casualty-update-25-july-2022

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Most of the those killed or injured were the victims of explosive weapons such as artillery, missile and air strikes, the OHCHR said.

Neither Russia nor Ukraine have given details on the military deaths in the conflict.

U.S. intelligence estimates that some 15,000 Russian soldiers have been killed so far in Ukraine and three times that wounded - equal to the total Soviet death toll during Moscow's occupation of Afghanistan in 1979-1989.

Ukrainian military losses are also significant but probably a little less than Russia's, U.S. intelligence believes, CIA Director William Burns said this month.

The conflict in eastern Ukraine began in 2014 after a pro-Russian president was toppled in Ukraine's Maidan Revolution and Russia annexed Crimea, with Russian-backed forces fighting Ukraine's armed forces.

About 14,000 people were killed there between 2014 and 2022, according to OHCHR, including 3,106 civilians. https://ukraine.un.org/sites/default/files/2022-02/Conflict-related%20civilian%20casualties%20as%20of%2031%20December%202021%20%28rev%2027%20January%202022%29%20corr%20EN_0.pdf

*MISERY

Since Feb. 24, one third of Ukrainians - which has a population of more than 41 million - has been forced from their homes, the largest current human displacement crisis in the world, according to the United Nations RefugAe agency.

There are currently more than 6.16 million refugees from Ukraine recorded across Europe, with the biggest numbers in Poland, Russia and Germany, according to the agency's data.

https://www.unhcr.org/ua/en/internally-displaced-persons

* UKRAINE

Besides the human losses, Ukraine has lost control of around 22% of its land to Russia since the 2014 anexation of Crimea, according to Reuters calculations.

It has lost a swathe of coastline, its economy has been crippled and some cities have been turned into wastelands by Russian shelling. Ukraine's economy will contract by 45% in 2022, according to the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. read more

The true dollar cost to Ukraine is unclear. Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said this month that the total rebuild after the war would cost approximately $750 billion. It may be much more.

It is unclear how much Ukraine has spent on fighting.

The war has been expensive for Russia too - though Russia does not disclose the costs, which are state secrets.

Besides the military costs, the West has tried to punish Russia by imposing severe sanctions - the biggest shock to Russia's economy since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

Russia's central bank now forecasts $1.8 trillion economy will contract by 4%-6% in 2022, less than the 8%-10% contraction it forecast in April. read more

Still the impact on Russia's economy is severe - and not yet fully clear. It has been excluded from Western financial markets, most of its oligarchs are sanctioned, and it is experiencing problems sourcing some items such as microchips.

Russia last month defaulted on its foreign bonds for the first time since the calamitous months following the 1917 Bolshevik revolution. read more

The invasion and Western sanctions on Russia led to steep rises in the prices of fertiliser, wheat, metals and energy, feeding into both a brewing food crisis and an inflationary wave that is crashing through the global economy.

Russia is the world's second largest oil exporter after Saudi Arabia and the world's biggest exporter of natural gas, wheat, nitrogen fertiliser and palladium. Shortly after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, international oil prices spiked to their highest levels since the records of 2008.

Attempts to reduce reliance on Russian oil, gas and oil products - or even to cap their prices - have exacerbated what is already the most severe energy crunch since the Arab oil embargo in the 1970s.

After Russia cut flows through the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline to Germany, prices for wholesale gas soared in Europe.

A complete cut off would tip the euro area into a recession, with sharp contractions in both Germany and Italy, according to Goldman Sachs.

The International Monetary Fund now forecasts the world's economy will grow 3.2% this year, down from 6.1% last year, and significantly lower than its April forecast of 3.6%, its January forecast of 4.4% and its October forecast of 4.9%. read more

Under a "plausible" alternative scenario that includes a complete cut-off of Russian gas supplies to Europe by year-end and a further 30% drop in Russian oil exports, the IMF said global growth would slow to 2.6% in 2022 and 2% in 2023, with growth virtually zero in Europe and the United States next year.

Global growth has fallen below 2% only five times since 1970 IMF Chief Economist Pierre-Olivier Gourincha said - recessions in 1973, 1981 and 1982, 2009 and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.

The United States is forecast to grow 2.3% in 2022 and 1.0% for 2023. The Fund deeply cut China's 2022 GDP growth forecast to 3.3% from 4.4% in April.

Since the outbreak of war, the European Commission has downgraded GDP growth projections for the 27-nation bloc to 2.7% this year and 1.5% in 2023 from 4.0% and 2.8% respectively, from what was expected before the Russian invasion on Feb 24th.

The United States has provided about $7.6 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since Feb. 24 including stinger anti-aircraft systems, Javelin anti-armour systems, 155mm Howitzers and chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear protective equipment. https://media.defense.gov/2022/Jul/22/2003040788/-1/-1/1/FACT-SHEET-ON-US-SECURITY-ASSISTANCE-TO-UKRAINE.PDF

The next biggest donor to Ukraine is Britain, which has provided 2.3 billion pounds ($2.8 billion) in military support. The European Union has agreed 2.5 billion euros in security assistance to Ukraine. read more

($1 = 0.8308 pounds)

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Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, Editing by Angus MacSwan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Explainer: Blood, treasure and chaos: the cost of Russia's war in Ukraine - Reuters

Crops Stored Everywhere: Ukraines Harvest Piles Up – The New York Times

A small army of combine harvesters rolled across an endless farm field on a recent afternoon in western Ukraine, kicking dust clouds into the blue sky as the machines gathered in a sea of golden wheat. Mountains of soy and corn will be reaped in coming weeks. It will all add to a 20-million-ton backlog of grain that has been trapped in Ukraine during Russias grinding war.

Under a breakthrough deal brokered last week by the United Nations and Turkey, Moscows blockade of Ukraines grain shipments through the Black Sea would be lifted. If all goes to plan, a vessel loaded with grain will sail from a Ukrainian port in coming days, releasing harvests from a major breadbasket to a hungry world.

But despite fanfare in Brussels and Washington, the accord is being greeted cautiously in the fields of Ukraine. Farmers who have lived for months under the risk of Russian missile attacks and economic uncertainty are skeptical that a deal will hold.

The roar of the combines on these fields is a familiar racket this time of year, but much of the harvest will go straight into storage.

The opening of the Black Sea ports is not by itself the magic answer, said Georg von Nolcken, chief executive of Continental Farmers Group, a large agro-business with vast tracts around western Ukraine. Its definitely a step forward, but we cant assume that the deal will bring Ukraine back to where it was before the war, he said.

The blockage has ignited wild price swings for crops and the cost of transporting them. Storage is running out for the latest harvests, leaving many scrambling for makeshift solutions.

A missile strike on Saturday that hit Odesa, Ukraines biggest Black Sea port, jolted confidence in the deal and risked undermining the effort before the agreement could even be put into action.

No one believes Russia wont attack again, said Vasyl Levko, the director of grain storage at MHP, one of Ukraines largest agricultural produce companies.

There is political will from Ukraines allies: The White House welcomed the accord, as did the United Nations and international aid organizations, which have warned of potential famine and political unrest the longer Ukraines grain remains blocked.

Freeing the grain for shipment is expected to ease a growing hunger crisis brought on by Russias aggression not so much because Ukrainian grain may be shipped to desperate countries faster, but because more supplies can help bring down prices, which spiked after the war but have been falling recently. Its quite positive, said Nikolay Gorbachov, head of the Ukrainian Grain Association. Its possible to find the way.

Yet even when reopened, the Black Sea ports are expected to operate at just about half of their prewar capacity, experts say, covering only a portion of the more than 20 million tons of backlogged grain. Ships will steer through a path cleared of Ukrainian mines used to prevent Russian ships from entering, and endure inspections in Turkey to ensure they dont carry weapons back into Ukraine.

And it is uncertain that enough ships will venture back. Shipping companies that once operated in the Black Sea have taken on other cargo routes. Insurers are wary of covering vessels in a conflict zone, and without insurance, no one will ship.

In the meantime, Ukraines farmers are grappling with vast amounts of trapped grain from last years harvests. Before the war, new crops moved in and out of grain elevators from harvest to export like clockwork. But Russias Black Sea blockage created a massive pileup.

An additional estimated 40 million tons of wheat, rapeseed, barley, soy, corn and sunflower seeds is expected to be harvested in the coming months. Storage facilities not destroyed by Russian shelling are filling up, and room is growing scarce for the freshly reaped crops.

At an MHP grain processing center one hour east of Lviv, a truck filled with freshly harvested rapeseed tiny, shiny and black dumped its load into a sifter on a recent day. The seed was moved into a dryer and then funneled into a towering silo that still had some room available. A nearby silo didnt: It was filled with soybeans stuck there from the previous harvest.

A bigger worry was what to do with the current winter-planted wheat harvest, said Mr. Levko, whose company uses the grain to make feed for chicken farms it owns in Ukraine, as well as grain for export. With his silos at the Lviv site near capacity, the wheat will have to be stuffed into long plastic sheaths for temporary storage.

The company was scrambling to buy more sheaths, he said, but Russian rockets destroyed the sole Ukrainian factory that makes them, and European manufacturers are swamped with orders and cant keep up, Mr. Levko said.

July 29, 2022, 12:56 a.m. ET

After the wheat comes the corn harvest. That will have to be piled onto the ground and covered with a tarp to protect it from thousands of crows and pigeons that hover nearby like black clouds, as well from as the autumn rains, which can create rot, Mr. Levko added.

The crops will have to be stored everywhere, he said, sweeping his arm over a vast field. He added that even if the deal to unblock the Black Sea worked, it could take months for Odesas shipping capacity to help ease the grain pileup.

In the meantime, farmers are trying to expand an alternative labyrinth of transport routes that they have forged across Europe since the outbreak of the war.

Before Russias blockade, Ukraine exported up to seven million tons of grain a month, mostly on ships that can carry large loads. Since then, Ukraine has been able to get out only around two million tons per month, via a hastily cobbled patchwork of overland and river routes.

Continental Farmers Group used to export harvests through the Black Sea, Mr. von Nolcken said. Deliveries by ship could arrive in the Middle East and North Africa in as little as six days.

But the blockade forced the company to put some of its grain on a circuitous path that involves making a giant counterclockwise circle around Europe on trucks, trains, barges and ships via Poland, the North Sea and the English Channel, through the Strait of Gibraltar and back down to the Mediterranean, an odyssey that can take up to 18 days.

With so many exporters competing to get grain out of Ukraine, the cost of transporting it has ballooned to about $130 to $230 a ton from about $35 before the war, with eastern regions near Russian-occupied zones facing the sharpest price hikes, Mr. von Nolcken added. At the same time, grain prices within Ukraine have plunged by around two-thirds because the blockade left farmers holding too much grain, threatening the livelihood of many.

European countries have been working furiously to solve one of the biggest challenges: transporting grain by rail. Previously, Ukraines 38,000 grain cars carried crops mostly to Black Sea ports, but they run on Soviet-era tracks that dont match Europes. So rail shipments heading elsewhere must now be transferred to other trains once they reach the border.

The biggest opportunity for scaling up exports is with trucks. Roman Slaston, the head of Ukraines main agricultural lobby, said his group was aiming to get out 40,000 tons of grain per day by truck. By June, trucks were getting out 10,000 tons per day.

But that still relieves only a part of Ukraines backlog. And with so much added traffic on the road, border crossings are jammed. It now takes four days instead of four hours, before the war for grain trucks to cross from Ukraine to Poland, said Mr. Levko of MFP. Getting over the Serbian border takes 10 days instead of two. The European Union is trying to ease backups with fast-track border permits.

The question is, how long is the situation going to continue? Mr. von Nolcken said. On Feb. 24, everybody assumed this would be a one-week exercise. Over 150 days later, we are talking about opening ports again, with reservations.

But a harsh reality is still facing Ukraine. Despite the war, it has been a hefty harvest so far this year.

We are building up a tsunami of grain, producing more than we can export, Mr. von Nolcken added. We will still be sitting on crops that wont get out.

Erika Solomon contributed reporting from Lviv, Ukraine.

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Crops Stored Everywhere: Ukraines Harvest Piles Up - The New York Times

Russia says it wants to end Ukraine’s `unacceptable regime’ – The Associated Press

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Russias top diplomat said Moscows overarching goal in Ukraine is to free its people from its unacceptable regime, expressing the Kremlins war aims in some of the bluntest terms yet as its forces pummel the country with artillery barrages and airstrikes.

The remark from Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov comes amid Ukraines efforts to resume grain exports from its Black Sea ports something that would help ease global food shortages under a new deal tested by a Russian strike on Odesa over the weekend.

We are determined to help the people of eastern Ukraine to liberate themselves from the burden of this absolutely unacceptable regime, Lavrov said at an Arab League summit in Cairo late Sunday, referring to Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskyys government.

Apparently suggesting that Moscows war aims extend beyond Ukraines industrial Donbas region in the east, Lavrov said: We will certainly help the Ukrainian people to get rid of the regime, which is absolutely anti-people and anti-historical.

Lavrovs comments followed his warning last week that Russia plans to retain control over broader areas beyond eastern Ukraine, including the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions in the south, and will make more gains elsewhere.

His remarks contrasted with the Kremlins line early in the war, when it repeatedly emphasized that Russia wasnt seeking to overthrow Zelenskyys government, even as Moscows troops closed in on Kyiv. Russia later retreated from around the capital and turned its attention to capturing the Donbas. The war is now in its sixth month.

Last week, Russia and Ukraine signed agreements aimed at clearing the way for the shipment of millions of tons of desperately needed Ukrainian grain, as well as the export of Russian grain and fertilizer.

Ukraines deputy infrastructure minister, Yury Vaskov, said the first shipment of grain is planned for this week.

While Russia faced accusations that the weekend attack on the port of Odesa amounted to reneging on the deal, Moscow insisted the strike would not affect grain deliveries.

During a visit to the Republic of Congo on Monday, Lavrov repeated the Russian claim that the attack targeted a Ukrainian naval vessel and a depot containing Western-supplied anti-ship missiles. He said the grain agreements do not prevent Russia from attacking military targets.

In other developments:

Russias gas giant Gazprom said it would further reduce the flow of natural gas through a major pipeline to Europe to 20% of capacity, citing equipment repairs. The move heightened fears that Russia is trying to pressure and divide Europe over its support for Ukraine at a time when countries are trying to build up their supplies of gas for the winter.

Zelenskyy accused Moscow of gas blackmail, saying, All this is done by Russia deliberately to make it as difficult as possible for Europeans to prepare for winter.

Ukraines presidential office said Monday at least two civilians were killed and 10 wounded in Russian shelling over the preceding 24 hours. In the Kharkiv region, workers searched for people believed trapped under the rubble after 12 rockets hit the town of Chuhuiv before dawn, damaging a cultural center, school and other infrastructure, authorities said.

Kharkiv Gov. Oleh Sinyehubov said: It looks like a deadly lottery when no one knows where the next strike will come.

Ukraine charged two former cabinet ministers with high treason over their role in extending Moscows lease on a navy base in Crimea in 2010. Prosecutors said Oleksandr Lavrynovych and Kostyantyn Hryshchenko conspired with then-President Viktor Yanukovych to rush a treaty through parliament granting Moscow a 25-year extension, leaving Crimea vulnerable to Russian aggression.

Russia said it thwarted an attempt by Ukrainian intelligence to bribe Russian military pilots to turn their planes over to Ukraine. In a video released by Russias main security agency, a man purported to be a Ukrainian intelligence officer offered a pilot $2 million to surrender his plane during a mission over Ukraine. The Russian claims couldnt be independently verified.

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Russia says it wants to end Ukraine's `unacceptable regime' - The Associated Press