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New photos show heartbreaking destruction in Bakhmut, Ukraine – New York Post

More photos emerged Thursday showing the destruction left by the Russian bombardment this week in Bakhmut just before the Ukrainian city was hit again by rockets.

Bakhmut, a city in the northern part of Donetsk province, was home to over 70,000 Ukrainians before the war began.

Now, as Russian forces double down on their efforts to take the eastern Donbas region made up of the Donetsk and Luhansk provinces the war has come to Bakhmut in the form of artillery strikes.

Images circulating Thursday show rescue workers trying to pull wounded Ukrainians from the rubble of a hotel struck Wednesday when Russian forces fired on the city.

Donetsks governor, Pavlo Kyrylenko, said on Telegram Thursday that the city had been hit again by Russian rockets, leaving at least three dead.

Bakhmut is again under Russian fire today the Russians shelled the city four times, he wrote.

At least three dead and three wounded are already known, Kyrylenko continued. Six apartment buildings and six private houses were damaged.

Kyrylenko accused the Russians of using cluster munitions in their bombardment of the city.

Meanwhile, as the fight for the Donbas raged on, Russian troops were confirmed to have taken the coal-fired powerplant of Vuhlehirsk, less than 40 miles from Bakhmut.

Ukrainian presidential advisor Oleksiy Arestovych said the capture of the plant gave Russian forces a tiny tactical advantage as they appeared to restart their flagging offensive in the east.

Ukrainian and Russian forces were set to clash in the south, as Kyiv confirmed a large counteroffensive operation was underway to retake the Kherson region in the Ukrainian south.

Ukrainian defense officials acknowledged that a large Russian force was gearing up to meet them, in what Arestovych called a massive redeployment of Russian forces in the South.

With Post wires

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New photos show heartbreaking destruction in Bakhmut, Ukraine - New York Post

This Ukrainian volunteer medic saves lives wearing bright red lipstick and high heels – ABC News

All over the Donetsk region, close to the front lines of Russia's war in Ukraine, Nataliia Voronkova turns up at Ukrainian field positions and hospitals wearing high heels.

A colleague bought her running shoes, but Ms Voronkova gave them away.

A helmet and a protective vest aren't part of her uniform either, as she distributes first-aid kits and other equipment to Ukrainian soldiers and paramedics.

She is a civilian, the founder of a medical non-profit group, and looking like one is something no one can take from her, even in a combat zone.

"I am myself, and I will never give up my heels for anything," Ms Voronkova said of the red strappy sandals, beige pumps and other elegant footwear she typically pairs with full skirts and midi dresses as she makes her dangerous rounds to secret military bases and mobile medical units.

The former adviser to the Ukrainian Defence Ministry with graduate degrees in banking and finance is a familiar sight to officers and troops in eastern Ukraine.

For eight years after Moscow seized Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula in 2014, Ms Voronkova dedicated her life to providing tactical medical training and equipment for Ukrainian forces fighting pro-Russia separatists.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine in late February has created exponentially more need for her organisation, Volunteers Hundred Dobrovolia, and new challenges.

Working on their own, Ms Voronkova and her assistant, Yevhen Veselov, drive a van filled with donated supplies everything from night vision goggles and battlefield basics like tourniquets and medical staplers to the advancedequipment needed for brain surgery swiftly through checkpoints, irrespective of curfews.

Servicemen recognise Ms Voronkova and with one look, let them through.

The smell of her sweet cherry cigarillos fills the air when she gets out of her van to smoke one with her manicured red nails.

Although she manages 20 people and lives in Kyiv, Ms Voronkova has been in eastern Ukraine since the Russians focused their attention there in April, and she insists on delivering first-aid kits to the front line herself.

"A woman is like the neck of the head. She moves everything," she said.

Ms Voronkova grew up loving medicine, but her family did not want her to pursue it.

They were bankers and thought she should take the same career path. The separatist conflict that started in 2014 persuaded her to study combat medicine, and she eventually received certification as an instructor.

From 2015 until Russia invaded Ukraine, the Ukrainian Defence Ministry tasked her with finding solutions to problems encountered by army units in the Donbas.

Now, she uses her own teaching techniques to help the units protect themselves and their comrades in battle.

"I still remind my mother that when I was in 10th grade, I had a box filled with (over-the-counter) pills, and all my friends at school knew I had medicine for everything," she said.

"Unfortunately, I could not pursue my dream. But today I am implementing it by giving aid."

Martial law has swelled the ranks of Ukraine's defenders, but many of the people who have joined the military during the war entering its sixth month do not have combat experience or the supplies they need.

"It feels like 2014. We need first-aid kits and uniforms for the territorial defence. I think it was created with hardly any time to allocate a budget for them. Therefore, they need support from volunteers," Ms Voronkova says.

As she brought boxes of scalpels, electro-coagulation devices, emergency catheters and other supplies to a hospital in the city of Kurakhove, the roar of outgoing rockets and incoming shelling did not make her flinch.

In her tactical medical class, Ms Voronkova commands a room filled with soldiers, paramedics, and technicians spanning a range of ages.

She grabs their attention with her loud voice, humour and experience. Air raid sirens blasted as she taught a class in Dobropillia, but she went on with her lesson in an underground bomb shelter.

The training she provides has become more crucial during the long battle for Ukraine's Donbas region, where Russian forces have both carried out relentless air strikes and shelling but also engaged in street-by-street fighting as they try to seize control of villages, cities and towns.

Ms Voronkova thinks the opportunity for Ukraine's government to work out a peaceful solution with Moscow has long passed and "at the moment, the price of victory is our lives."

During her travels around Donetsk, in Bakhmut, Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Toretsk and other places Russia hopes to capture, she meets and gives advice to everyone from high-ranking officers to paramedics. The male officers listen, and the young medics open up to her about their experiences.

Ms Voronkova stands for hours, patiently listening and giving guidance.

"Every evening when I go to sleep, I ask myself, 'What good thing have I done today?'" she said.

"I want people to understand that they come into this world not only to eat, drink, and have fun every day, but to do something good. No day should be wasted."

AP

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This Ukrainian volunteer medic saves lives wearing bright red lipstick and high heels - ABC News

Inflation in Ukraine Adds to the Wars Hardship – The New York Times

LVIV, Ukraine At his compact stall in Lvivs main outdoor food market, Ihor Korpii arranged jars of blueberries that he and his wife had picked from a nearby forest into an attractive display. Fragrant dill and fresh peas harvested from their garden lay in neat piles on a table.

A schoolteacher surviving on modest pay, Mr. Korpii peddles produce during summers to supplement his familys income. But this year, he has had to raise prices by over 10 percent to make up for a surge in fuel and fertilizer costs brought on by Russias invasion. Now, buyers are scarce, and sales have slumped by more than half.

War has driven up the cost of almost everything, and people are buying much, much less, Mr. Korpii said, pointing with weather-beaten hands to a heap of unsold carrots. Everyone, including us, is tightening their belts, he added. Theyre trying to save money because they dont know what the future will bring.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine, food, energy and commodity prices have climbed around the world, worsening global inflation and inflicting financial hardship on millions of vulnerable people.

Few countries are feeling the bite as much as Ukraine itself, where Russias deadly campaign of attrition is piling economic havoc atop a devastating humanitarian toll.

Prices here have jumped more than 21 percent from a year ago, one of the highest rates on the continent, as Russian attacks on critical infrastructure and Russian occupation of major industrial and agriculture-producing regions in the southeast sow chaos in supply chains. Fuel prices are up 90 percent from a year ago, while food costs have surged over 35 percent, according to the National Bank of Ukraine.

While international institutions have provided nearly $13 billion in financing for Ukraine, the support is going only so far: The central bank has devalued the hryvnia, the countrys currency, by 25 percent against the U.S. dollar to head off a financial crisis a move that will make many goods even more costly.

That is hardly welcome news for businesses like CSAD-Yavoriv, a family-run trucking company that transports commercial goods, as well as vital grain and humanitarian supplies, in Ukraine and across European borders.

Trucks have become critical for transport after Russia blocked Ukrainian ports and bombed train tracks. The price of fuel has tripled since the invasion in February, in part because Russia also destroyed numerous Ukrainian fuel depots, said Marichka Ustymenko, the companys deputy director.

Filling a trucks fuel tank now costs around 850 euros (about $870), up from 300 before the war, Ms. Ustymenko said, and manufacturers are passing that increased shipping cost onto products from diapers to furniture. Import prices have likewise surged because of the devalued national currency, squeezing Ukrainians who are struggling to get by.

The cost of products is so high, but peoples salaries have stayed the same, Ms. Ustymenko said. Humanitarian aid shipped into Ukraine on her companys trucks poured in at the start of the war, helping to offset some of the pain. But that has slowed to a trickle, she added.

Not everyone is hard hit. At the Citadel, an upscale hilltop hotel in Lviv, the parking lot was filled with Mercedes-Benzes and other luxury cars owned by wealthy Ukrainians on a recent day. People working in the countrys thriving tech sector also have abundant work.

But for older people with fixed pensions and millions of Ukrainians who have been displaced or whose salaries or jobs have been cut, finances are being squeezed.

Lviv, a UNESCO world heritage site that was a major draw for tourists before the war, has been spared heavy Russian attacks, attracting a flood of internally displaced Ukrainians. Rents have shot up in cities considered to be safe, while the price of furniture and electronics has jumped as Ukrainians who fled the country start to return.

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

The war has most noticeably pushed up food prices. A so-called Borscht index, which measures the cost of ingredients used to make Ukraines national dish, was up 43 percent in June from a year ago. Russian occupation of rich agricultural regions has delayed harvests of beets the key ingredient in borscht and other vegetables, nearly tripling the cost of some produce.

On a cobbled street in Lvivs historic heart, Borsch, a cafe once packed with moneyed European visitors, is struggling to manage. After Russia invaded, the cafes owners poured money into making 300 free servings of borscht a day for Lvivs soldiers, said Yuliya Levytsko, a manager.

Today, many patrons are displaced Ukrainians on a budget, so the cafe has raised prices for the garnet-colored soup by much less than it costs to make it.

Ms. Levytsko said her own family had cut back to basics.

Her home grocery bill takes up about three-quarters of her modest monthly salary, up from just over half before the war. The gas bill for her husbands car has jumped nearly 30 percent. Both are looking for a second job, and Ms. Levytsko now records every penny they spend.

We dont know what our situation will be tomorrow, Ms. Levytsko said, adding that many Ukrainians were saving to brace for what they fear could be a hard winter, with fuel and food prices rising even more.

Back at the outdoor food market, butchers stood behind refrigerated cases heaped with meat, waiting for customers. Prices for beef, pork, chicken and dairy, sourced from farms in western Ukraine that have remained largely untouched by Russian strikes, had risen only modestly. Even so, business was slow.

Prices for these products arent higher, but people are cutting back sharply, said Lesia, a meat seller at the market for 20 years, who, like many older Ukrainians, was reluctant to give her full name for fear of drawing attention. Still, we cant give up, she said. After all the things Russias done to us, we will never give up.

Stalls that used to be run by vegetable and meat producers from Kharkiv and Kherson lay dark, shuttered after their owners were driven out of business by Russias invasion.

Yoroslava Ilhytska, a cheese seller, gazed at the once-bustling counters of her missing neighbors, bare save for an old weighing scale gathering dust. They were bombed out, she said. They lost all their goods and a factory, so they had to close.

Pungent spices, dark chocolates and dried figs perfumed the air from brimming plastic bins nearby. Such delicacies, imported from Turkey, Chile and Azerbaijan, were less sought after and more costly because of the war, said Oksana, a stall keeper who would give only her first name.

Dried dates used to be imported directly from Turkey through the Black Sea, reaching her stall in days. With Russias blockade of the Black Sea ports, the dates now take more than a week to move overland through Europe before crossing into western Ukraine, and cost up to a third more.

You can see the impact: Only two people have bought anything in the last half an hour, Oksana said, surveying the near-empty walkways between the stalls. People can live without my products: They are not a first necessity. Cabbage, cucumbers, dairy those are, she said.

The war has impacted us catastrophically, added Oksana, who said she spent much of her time looking for ways to keep her spirits up. Her face brightened as she described finding joy in making scented homemade soaps, perfumed with flowers and spices. But the rising price of oils and other raw materials had limited her hobby.

Her smile dissolved into a steely gaze. We are all struggling, Oksana said. If we only could, we would tear the enemy to pieces with our bare hands.

But as long as there is even one Ukrainian left standing, she continued, they will never win.

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Inflation in Ukraine Adds to the Wars Hardship - The New York Times

War in Ukraine has changed the equation between the West and Saudis MBS – FRANCE 24 English

Issued on: 28/07/2022 - 19:20

French President Emmanuel Macron will host Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) on Thursday for a working dinner and talks at the Elyse Palace. The meetingcomes as Western nations, including France, seek to diversify their oil suppliesamidthe war in Ukraine and revive a nuclear deal with Iran. Macron has indicated that he intends to raise the subject of human rights with MBSamid criticism from rightsgroups over the visit.

Paris is the second stop of MBS first European Union visitsince the 2018 murder of prominent Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggiin the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul. It is seen as the latest attempt byWestern powersto rehabilitate Saudi Arabia's de facto leader, who US intelligence concluded had "approved" the operation to "capture or kill" Khashoggi,and revitalise their relations with the oil-producing country.

France and other EU countries have been set on diversifying their energy sourcessince Russia invaded Ukraineon February 24, and as Russian energy giant Gazpromhas slashed gas deliveries to Europe. Macron, along withUSPresident Joe Biden,wants Saudi Arabia, the worlds largest oil exporter, to boost production and stabilise prices.

French opposition figures and human rights groups have criticised Macrons decision to host MBS. Amnesty International Secretary GeneralAgnes Callamard tweeted ahead of the crown prince's visit that "the rehabilitation of the murderous prince will be justified in France as in the United States by arguments of realpolitik. But it's actually bargaining that predominates, let's face it".

A senior aide toMacron saidThursday on condition of anonymitythat "the president will raise the issue of human rights as he does on each occasion with Mohammed bin Salman. He will talk about it in a general way, but will also take the chance to raise individual cases."

The official added that the two leaderswill also discuss oil production and the Iran nuclear deal.

Fatima Abo Alasrar, a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute, spoke with FRANCE 24 about the controversy surrounding MBS visit to Paris.

FRANCE 24: Why this trip, why this rehabilitation, what has changed?

Fatima Abo Alasrar: This trip comes at a very critical time, as the war in Ukraine has really changed the political and economic equation. France, among other European countries, is trying to find other alternative sources of energy and also trying to raise the oil production and to this effect, weve seen a lot of changes in the region. Weve seen President Bidens recent visit to Saudi Arabia during which he indirectly requested an increase in oil production in order to stabilise the energy resources and basically back off from getting oil sources from Russia. So, it's in a moment of need, a greater need that the West seems to be realigning and reaching out to other Gulf countries in order to solidify their own interests at home.

This is clearly a victory for MBS. What does this say about accountability on the world stage?

Its a very complicated question. There has been accountability to some extent, there has been pursuit and I think France and other European countries pretty much know exactly who theyre dealing with. The problem is we see double standards everywhere, if we want to care about human rights, we have to care about it everywhere but certain exceptions are being made. There are exceptions that are being made for China, there are exceptions being made for Russia, even the United States is not fully immune. There are human rights abuses in, whether it's Guantanamo Bay, whether it's in immigration issues that were seeing or even racial issues that were seeing in the United States, for example. So, human rights has to be dealt with but we also have to find a way to influence positively in this important category and part of this has to come from being able to talk to adversaries in some ways. But the Saudi kingdom is not necessarily an adversary as it has a historic relationship with Europe and the United States and a positive relationship on that level.

I think its fair to say that MBS has beenostracised by the international community to some extent for the past four years. He is now obviously desparate to bolster Saudi Arabias regional power, especially when it comes to Iran. He wants to make his point of view very clear to the rest of the world.

MBS is really trying to build relationships with the West but at the same time, the Saudis are taking more or less reconciliatory tones towards Iran. Theyre trying to say that theyre willing to work with whatever they can have because Iran is really having an influence in the region, in the Gulf, through its militias, that fact cannot be denied. And the Saudis have really failed to deal with the threat of these militias, from a military perspective, so I think that they are seeking a diplomatic solution alongside other Western countries, as they know the threat is not really going away. But at the same time, they are trying to realign with other Western countries to say that Iran should not be getting a carte blanche.

France has been pushing for a nuclear deal. Do you think MBS is going to hear that message?

I dont think the Saudis will favour a nuclear deal with Iran, given Irans hostile attitude and refusal to deal with the [International Atomic Energy Agency]. So theres several factors. The Saudis are really concerned, theyre not going to push for it but if the Iran deal is to happen, if it is to take place, then the Saudis and Gulf countries need to be somewhat consulted and seen as a partner in this process, rather than an entity that is imposed on. Therefore, the West has to somewhat change its views and realise that theres a lot at stake: the stability of the Saudi kingdom, Israel, Yemen, there are so many countries that are being affected. [Western countriesmust ask themselves] how can we really approach this relationship from a partnership perspective rather than simply saying, heres the deal: Do you accept it or do you reject it?

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War in Ukraine has changed the equation between the West and Saudis MBS - FRANCE 24 English

155 days on, it is clear Russia will fail in Ukraine: UK statement to the OSCE – GOV.UK

Thank you, Mr Chair. I want to begin by reflecting on events since 24 February, when Russia invaded its sovereign and democratic neighbour. Since then, Russia has pursued barbaric tactics, once thought consigned to history. Indifferent to International Law, desperate and cowardly, the Russian government has relentlessly targeted civilians and civilian infrastructure. 155 days ago, Ukrainian cities were bustling, prosperous centres. 155 days ago, 20 million now displaced Ukrainian people were living undisturbed in their own homes. 155 days ago, 4-year-old Liza, 7-year-old Maxim, 8-year-old Kirill and 350 other Ukrainian children had their whole lives ahead of them.

But on 24 February, the Russian government did not know that they would come to regret testing the mettle of Ukraine and its partners. President Putin sought to bring Ukraine to its knees, but encountered a country that refused to yield. As Russian forces retreated, defeated, from Kyiv, President Putin must have realised how grossly he underestimated the Ukrainian peoples bravery and determination. 155 days on it is clear that President Putin cannot and will not subjugate Ukraine. 155 days on, the UK and our allies remain steadfast in our commitment to Ukraine and the defence of its sovereignty.

Mr Chair, as Ukraine continues to pay a devastating price for its freedom, the impacts of Russias invasion are also felt globally. Before 24 February, Ukraine was one of the largest exporters of grains and vegetable oils, feeding hundreds of millions worldwide. Because of President Putins actions, some of the worlds poorest and most vulnerable people are at risk of starvation. If Russias aggression continues, the World Food Programme estimates that up to 47 million more people could face acute food insecurity this year. The UN Secretary General has warned that the war is threatening to unleash an unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution, leaving social and economic chaos in its wake. The scale of the suffering is truly horrific.

President Putin cannot be allowed to hold the worlds food supply to ransom in order to escape the sanctions that are weakening his war machine. We applaud Turkey and the UN Secretary General for their efforts to broker an agreement to allow millions of tonnes of grain to be exported through safe lanes in Ukrainian waters. But our position is clear, this agreement is only needed to solve a problem caused by Russia.

Russia is responsible for stopping Ukrainian grain exports; Russia holds the keys for them to restart. It is absolutely appalling that only a day after reaching an agreement, Russia launched missile strikes on the port of Odesa. Russia must implement its agreement and allow safe export from Ukraine; the world will be watching. The international community must present a united front and make clear to the Russian government that their actions to worsen world hunger are unacceptable and will not be tolerated.

The UK stands firmly with those who are worst affected by the global food crisis and we will continue to provide humanitarian aid and economic support for those that need it most. Over the next three years, the UK will provide 3 billion in humanitarian funding globally and drive a more effective international response to humanitarian crises.

Mr Chair, 5 months on from Russias invasion of Ukraine, the death and destruction Russia has caused are clear for all to see. We must continue to collectively hold Russia to account for what it has done in Ukraine and across the globe. And we must continue to stand with and support Ukraine in its fight for its homeland. Ukraine deserves peace.

I join our partners in calling again on Russia to secure the immediate release of all national Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) members still in detention. As the Acting Chief Monitor made clear on Monday, the Mission and its dedicated staff have performed their duties with the utmost professionalism and impartiality for the last 8 years. The unfounded claims and fabricated accusations Russia has levelled against it are shameful.

Finally, as we approach the summer period, the UK will continue to be watching Russias actions on the ground closely. There is no respite for the people of Ukraine, who continue to lay down their lives in pursuit of peace, freedom, and integrity of their country. We stand with them.

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155 days on, it is clear Russia will fail in Ukraine: UK statement to the OSCE - GOV.UK