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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Guardian staff and agencies

Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 625

A Ukrainian combat engineer, or sapper, stands by as his unit blows up explosives found in a field in the Kherson region.
A Ukrainian combat engineer, or sapper, stands by as his unit blows up explosives found in a field in the Kherson region amid Russia’s war in Ukraine. Photograph: Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters
  • A Ukrainian strike on occupied Skadovsk in the Kherson region reportedly hit a base for the FSB, Russia’s federal spy service. Reuters reported that five people were killed in the attack on Thursday. Various reports said high-ranking Russian officers were killed. Anton Gerashchenko, from Ukraine’s internal affairs ministry, said: “So the occupiers are well aware they not safe, that they are being watched and can be destroyed at any time. Ukraine uses high-precision western weapons for these strikes.”

  • The UK Ministry of Defence said Russia’s military was being overextended by the war in Ukraine. In its latest daily intelligence update, the MoD said that the likely need for Russia to reallocate surface-to-air missile (Sam) systems from distant parts of its territory to maintain coverage over Ukraine showed the conflict was straining its military.

  • Russian-installed health officials in illegally occupied Crimea say private clinics have “voluntarily” stopped providing abortions, which leaves them available only in state-run medical facilities. The move comes amid a wider effort in Russia to restrict abortion under the increasingly conservative regime of Vladimir Putin who has curried favour with the Orthodox church.

  • A Ukrainian diplomat said a global peace summit for Ukraine may take place next year. The Ukrainian president’s top diplomatic adviser, Ihor Zhovkva, said it might take place in February 2024.

  • Ukraine said queues were growing at its border with Poland as Polish lorry drivers continued to block crossings for a fourth day. The protests, which started on Monday, involved the drivers blocking three border crossings with Ukraine. They are protesting against competition from Ukrainian drivers.

  • Ukraine told its western allies that giving it the interest accrued from frozen Russian assets would not be enough to compensate for damage sustained by the war and that it hoped to receive the assets in full. Ukraine’s deputy justice minister, Iryna Mudra, said Kyiv’s partners were considering introducing a tax on income or investment of frozen Russian assets, an idea she said Kyiv welcomed but saw as insufficient.

  • Germany issued new defence policy guidelines for the first time in over a decade. The 19-page document details the implications for Germany’s military of the Zeitenwende, the major shift of policy German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

  • Hungary said the EU should not start membership talks with Ukraine. EU leaders are expected to decide next month whether to accept the European Commission’s recommendation to invite Kyiv to begin membership talks with the bloc, but Hungary prefers a form of “privileged partnership” for Ukraine, rather than full membership.

  • Ukraine will be able to overcome Hungary’s political opposition to its progress on EU membership, according to Kyiv’s minister for European integration, Olga Stefanishyna. “We understand that there is a such a statement, but we also understand there is a dialogue with Budapest,” she said.

  • The Kremlin is moving to absorb former Wagner soldiers into Russia’s military structures, the Guardian’s Russian affairs reporter Pjotr Sauer writes.

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