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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Harry Taylor

Russia-Ukraine war: Germany calls on Putin to take first step towards peace – as it happened

Ukrainian servicemen board boats on the shore of Dnipro river at the frontline near Kherson.
Ukrainian servicemen board boats on the shore of Dnipro river at the frontline near Kherson. Photograph: Mstyslav Chernov/AP

Summary

It’s now approaching 6pm in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, on a day where rocket attacks have killed two in Zaporizhzhia.

  • Two first responders were killed in the Zaporizhzhia region by Russian rocket attacks on Saturday.

  • Ukrainian police said Russia fired a series of rockets at the village of Komyshuvakha, which caused a fire. Emergency responders responding to the fire were hit by a second attack which killed two of them. Four residents were injured.

  • Ukraine was subject to an overnight drone attack by Russia, as the Ukrainian armed forces claimed it shot down 29 of the 38 drones that were sent on a raid.

  • More than 400 towns and villages in the south, south-east and north of the country were affected by the drone attacks.

  • An oil refinery was hit in Odesa as part of the attack.

  • Meanwhile, Ukraine said it had carried out “successful actions” on the eastern bank of the Dnipro River. It comes after Ukraine and Russia acknowledged earlier this week that Ukraine had established positions on the eastern side of the river, which marks part of the frontline in south-east Ukraine.

  • Ukraine’s armed forces have claimed to have killed another 620 Russian soldiers on Friday during its operations.

  • In response, Russia has said it had heavily bombed Ukrainian forces near the river, and killed about 75 soldiers.

  • In its daily intelligence briefing, the UK’s Ministry of Defence notes Russian forces are suffering “particularly heavy casualties” in fighting around Avdiivka, which is one of three areas seeing heavy ground fighting.

  • Despite the heavy fighting, however, the MoD said neither side was making any significant progress.

  • Hungary must say no to the current Europe model built in Brussels as the country continues to object to Ukraine joining the EU, the prime minister, Viktor Orbán, told a congress of his Fidesz party on Saturday.

  • The German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has called on Russian president, Vladimir Putin, to take the first step towards a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Ukraine.

  • More than 100 Russian doctors have signed a joint letter calling on Putin to release a woman jailed for a supermarket protest against the war in Ukraine.

  • Ukraine has been the target of nearly 4,000 cyber-attacks since the invasion began, three times higher than before.

That’s all for today. Thank you for following along.

Updated

More than 100 Russian doctors have signed an open letter to president Vladimir Putin calling for him to release a woman jailed for making a supermarket protest over Russia’s offensive against Ukraine.

A Saint Petersburg court last week sentenced Alexandra Skochilenko, 33, to seven years in prison for spreading “false information”. She had swapped supermarket price tags with slogans criticising Russia’s offensive in Ukraine.

Skochilenko, an artist known as Sasha, has health issues including coeliac disease and a congenital heart defect. Her mother recently told AFP that a long prison term would be a “catastrophe”.

“As the medical community, we have serious concerns about Sasha’s health,” stated the letter, published on social media and by independent Russian news sites Saturday.

Updated

Hungary must say no to the current Europe model built in Brussels as the country continues to object to Ukraine joining the EU, the prime minister, Viktor Orbán, told a congress of his Fidesz party on Saturday. He added that the European Union needed to be changed and not left.

“Correcting the mistaken promise to start talks [with Ukraine about EU membership] will also be our task, as Ukraine is light years away from the EU now,” Orban said, Reuters reports.

Updated

Two killed in Russian rocket attacks on Zaporizhzhia

Two first responders were killed in the Zaporizhzhia region by Russian rocket attacks on Saturday.

Ukrainian police said Russia fired a series of rockets at the village of Komyshuvakha, close to the frontline in Zaporizhzhia, which Russia annexed last year.

“As a result of the first two strikes, four local residents were injured and a fire broke out in a residential building,” they said in a statement.

“When the police and rescuers arrived at the scene, Russians conducted another strike. Two emergency service workers were killed and three more were injured.”

Updated

Summary

As the time approaches 3.30pm in Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, here’s a roundup of today’s news so far.

  • Ukraine was subject to an overnight drone attack by Russia, as the Ukrainian armed forces claimed it shot down 29 of the 38 drones that were sent on a raid.

  • More than 400 towns and villages in the south, southeast and north of the country were affected by the drone attacks.

  • An oil refinery was hit in Odesa as part of the attack.

  • Meanwhile, Ukraine said it had carried out “successful actions” on the eastern bank of the Dnipro River. It comes after Ukraine and Russia acknowledged earlier this week that Ukraine had established positions on the eastern side of the river, which marks part of the frontline in south-east Ukraine.

  • Ukraine’s armed forces have claimed to have killed another 620 Russian soldiers on Friday during its operations.

  • In response, Russia has said it had heavily bombed Ukrainian forces near the river, and killed about 75 soldiers.

  • In its daily intelligence briefing, the UK’s Ministry of Defence notes Russian forces are suffering “particularly heavy casualties” in fighting around Avdiivka, which is one of three areas seeing heavy ground fighting.

  • Despite the heavy fighting, however, the MoD said neither side was making any significant progress.

  • The German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has called on Russian president, Vladimir Putin, to take the first step towards a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Ukraine.

  • Ukraine has been the target of nearly 4,000 cyber-attacks since the invasion began, three times higher than before.

Updated

Overnight drone attack on Ukraine caused powercuts, energy ministry says

Russia carried out a major drone attack on Ukraine overnight, hitting infrastructure facilities and causing power outages in more than 400 towns and villages in the south, southeast, and north of the country, Ukrainian officials have said.

Ukraine air defences shot down 29 out of 38 Iranian-made Shahed drones launched from Russian territory, the air force said, according to Reuters.

The air force said in a statement the attack on several Ukrainian regions lasted from 8pm on Friday to 4am on Saturday.

The energy ministry said 416 towns and villages in the Odesa region in the south and in the Zaporizhzhia region in the south-east were cut off from electricity after networks were damaged in the strikes.

This year Ukraine had an unusually warm autumn. But as temperatures start to fall, officials have urged residents and businesses to prepare for renewed Russian attacks.

“We do not have a right to relax,” Volodymyr Kudrytskiy, head of the power grid operator Ukrenergo, told Ukrainian TV. “Certainly, all of us, energy workers and defence forces, are preparing to repel possible Russian attacks on the energy infrastructure this winter.”

The energy ministry also said an oil refinery was hit in the Odesa region. An administrative building was also damaged and one civilian was wounded in the strike, the south military command said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

In Ukraine’s northern Chernihiv region on the border with Russia and Belarus, two infrastructure buildings were damaged during the overnight strike, the military said.

The energy ministry said six settlements were without power in the Chernihiv region.

The drones also targeted Kyiv in the second attack so far this month, officials said, adding that all drones heading to the capital were shot down on their approach.

Russia claims to have bombed Ukrainian forces near Dnipro River, killing 75

The Russian military has said it has heavily bombed Ukrainian forces near the Dnipro River in southern Ukraine, and killed about 75 Ukrainian soldiers.

Reuters could not independently verify the battlefield claim.

On Friday, Kyiv’s military said Ukrainian troops had pushed Russian soldiers out of positions on the eastern bank of the Dnipro River in parts of Kherson region and established several bridgeheads.

Two days earlier, Moscow had conceded for the first time that some Ukrainian forces had crossed onto the River Dnipro’s eastern bank, but has said they faced “Hell fire”.

Russia’s defence ministry said in a statement on Saturday that artillery and air strikes had targeted Ukrainian forces in the settlement of Kachkarivka, on the west bank of the Dnipro River, and on two islands, killing up to 75 enemy soldiers and destroying four vehicles.

Ukrainian forces had managed to get as far as the western bank of the river last year, during its offensive which recaptured the regional capital of Kherson.

Updated

Germany calls on Putin to take first step towards peace

The German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has called on Russian president, Vladimir Putin, to take the first step towards a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Ukraine.

“He must withdraw troops,” Scholz said during a visit to Nuthetal in Brandenburg state.

However, there are currently no signs of this happening, he said in response to a question about whether peace negotiations are possible.

Putin must not succeed in his goal of using force to annex parts of a neighbouring country, Scholz said.

The chancellor once again assured Ukraine of Germany’s help in its defence against the Russian invasion for as long as necessary.

Updated

My colleague Charlotte Higgins has written a great piece about how Vogue responded to the war in Ukraine, a country where Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s dress of sweatshirts and cargo pants have become central to his image.

On 24 February 2022, the editor-in-chief of Vogue Ukraine, Venya Brykalin, woke up in Milan, where fashion week was in full swing, to the news that his country had been invaded. Nevertheless, he headed out as planned to the Max Mara show, and watched as a parade of luxurious cashmere coats sashayed past him.

“A sentiment that a lot of Ukrainians keep sharing is that doing your job is the most efficient way of staying sane,” he said this autumn by video call.

Many observers might ask what role a fashion magazine could play in a country that is defying a full-scale invasion. But fashion is powerful. Since February 2022, Volodymyr Zelenskiy has stuck faithfully to a utilitarian wardrobe of sweatshirts, cargo pants and military boots. It has become a potent means of the Ukrainian president projecting a sense of peril and readiness for action.

On the streets of Kyiv, there is a sense that taking pride in one’s appearance is a way of demonstrating defiance – and insisting on normality – in the face of the Russian invasion.

That said, fashion has not been Vogue Ukraine’s main focus since the full-scale invasion began.

“The first news about the war appeared on our site on 24 February 2022. We didn’t hesitate – there was no meeting – we just started posting,” said the magazine’s features editor, Daria Slobodianyk. “One of the first things we did was post a list of guidelines, about what to do in the case of an air-raid siren for example, essentially answering our own questions.”

Updated

Ukraine has been the target of nearly 4,000 cyber-attacks since the war began, three times higher than before Russia’s invasion.

The US assistant secretary of the Treasury Graham Steele told a conference on risk and federal insurance response in New York that between January 2022 and September 2023 Ukraine has been attacked by Russian state-sponsored cyber actors, Ukrinform reports.

Sectors including Ukraine’s infrastructure and financial services have been the focus of the attempts.

Cyber activity in the context of the Russia-Ukraine conflict is not limited to government actors, Steele said.

“We have observed that non-state cyber actors on both sides of the conflict have targeted a wide range of organisations – including in the financial services sector – with relatively unsophisticated incidents known as distributed denial of service attacks [DDOS],” he said.

DDOS attacks are when a website’s services become overwhelmed with traffic, which will stop users from accessing services.

Updated

One person was killed and three were injured in Russian attacks on the south-west Ukrainian region of Kherson on Friday, its governor has reported.

Oleksandr Prukudin said that the regional capital, Kherson, had been attacked 26 times. He claimed in a post on Telegram that more than 500 shells were fired.

Since the city’s liberation, more than 400 civilians have been killed and about 1,700 injured according to local authorities.

Updated

Russia’s interior ministry has placed the war critic Sergei Aleksashenko, formerly a deputy governor of the Bank of Russia and a deputy finance minister, on its wanted list, Russian state news agencies TASS and RIA reported on Saturday.

Aleksashenko has been living in exile in the US after falling out with President Vladimir Putin’s government and had already been designated a “foreign agent”, according to Reuters.

TASS reported that Aleksashenko had been added to the interior ministry’s wanted list on an unspecified criminal charge.

Reuters could not immediately access the ministry’s overall database and Aleksashenko could not immediately be reached for comment.

On his Telegram channel, Aleksashenko said he had been listed on the database for five years already, but suggested that being added to the wanted list was a new development.

Updated

Three civilians have been injured in Russia’s shelling of Donetsk over the last 24 hours.

Donetsk’s regional military administration’s acting head Ihor Moroz posted on Facebook: “On 17 November 2023, Russians injured three civilians in the Donetsk region, namely in Netailove, Maksymilianivka and Toretsk.”

Since the invasion began, 1,775 people have been killed and 4,315 have been injured in Donetsk.

Russia suffering 'heavy casualties' but neither side making progress, says UK

In its daily intelligence briefing, the UK’s Ministry of Defence notes Russian forces are suffering “particularly heavy casualties” in fighting around Avdiivka, which is one of three areas seeing heavy ground fighting.

The other two areas are Kupiansk and Luhansk.

Despite the heavy fighting, however, the MoD said neither side was making any significant progress.

Over the last week, the most intense ground combat has been taking place in three areas: on the Kupiansk axis, in Luhansk Oblast; around Avdiivka in Donetsk Oblast; and on the left bank of the Dnipro river in Kherson Oblast, where Ukrainian forces have established a bridgehead.

Neither side has achieved substantial progress in any of these areas. Russia continues to suffer particularly heavy casualties around Avdiivka.

Eyewitness reports suggest small uncrewed aerial vehicles and artillery (especially cluster rounds) continue to play a major role in disrupting the attacks of both sides.

As colder winter weather sets in earnest in eastern Ukraine, there are few immediate prospects of major changes in the frontline.

Ukraine’s armed forces have claimed it killed another 620 Russian soldiers on Friday during its operations.

In a post by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine on Facebook, they said that it took the number of Russian soldiers killed during the conflict to more than 317,000.

The statistics are disputed and have not been independently verified by the Guardian.

Russia and Vladimir Putin have repeatedly attempted to play down the number of casualties.

Today’s fighting comes a day after Ukrainian troops had a number of successes in skirmishes east of the Dnipro River.

The Ukrainian Marine Corps said in a statement on social media that: “The defence forces of Ukraine conducted a series of successful operations on the left bank of the Dnipro River, along the Kherson front.”

Both Russia and Ukraine acknowledged this week that Ukraine had established positions on the eastern side of the river.

It is the frontline for a stretch of territory in south-east Ukraine, after it liberated Kherson and nearby areas around the city on the western bank of the river a year ago. Russia was forced into a humiliating withdrawal.

You can read more below from our reporter Shaun Walker in Kyiv.

Hello, this is the Guardian’s live coverage of the Russian war against Ukraine.

Ukraine’s air defence has said it shot down 29 out of 38 drones in a Russian overnight strike.

The air force said in a statement the Russian forces launched Iranian-made Shahed drones from Russian territory in several waves. The attacks Ukrainian regions lasted from 8pm.

Here are some more developments:

  • Ukraine and the US will hold a military industry conference in Washington on 6-7 December, officials from both countries have said. Ukraine is ramping up production of its own weapons and seeking joint ventures with international armament producers. Ukraine has set up a joint venture with Rheinmetall of Germany to service and repair western weapons, and in September hosted a forum with more than 250 western arms producers.

  • Ukraine has said it has carried out “successful actions” on the eastern bank of the Dnipro River. It comes after Ukraine and Russia acknowledged earlier this week that Ukraine had established positions on the eastern side of the river, which marks part of the frontline in south-east Ukraine.

  • Celebrating the development, Volodymyr Zelenskiy published pictures showing Ukrainian soldiers on the eastern bank of the river. “Left bank of Kherson. Our warriors. Thank you for your strength and for moving forward!” Ukraine’s president said. “Glory to each and everyone who is returning freedom and justice to Ukraine!”

  • A total of 4.4m tonnes of cargo, including 3.2m tonnes of grain, has been shipped via Ukraine’s new Black Sea shipping corridor since it was established in August, according to a report by the Interfax-Ukraine agency. A UN-brokered deal that had allowed Ukrainian exports to pass through the Black Sea fell through in July after Russia withdrew, prompting Ukraine to announce a “humanitarian corridor” hugging the sea’s western coast.

  • Thousands of people living near the frontlines in southern and eastern Ukraine were left without power after Russian strikes on energy facilities, the Ukrainian government said. Last winter, systematic targeting of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure by Russia left millions without light or heating. Zelenskiy said this week that western support had allowed Ukraine to improve its air defences ahead of the coming winter months.

  • At least nine people were killed in Russian shelling of the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, according to local officials. Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said shelling on Thursday had targeted residential areas, shopping districts and administrative buildings. Another two people were killed in the eastern region of Donetsk, according to the acting head of its military administration.

  • Russian casualties since the start of the war now stand at 316,760, according to the Ukrainian military.

  • Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has said he has “no doubt” Vladimir Putin will still be Russian president after the election in March. Putin has not yet announced his intention to run but is widely expected to stand for another six-year term. Asked in an interview with student journalists what the next president should be like, Peskov said: “The same.”

  • The British foreign secretary, David Cameron, followed his trip to Ukraine on Thursday with a visit to neighbouring Moldova. The Moldovan president, Maia Sandu, posted a photo of her and Cameron together to social media and said the two had met on Thursday night to discuss “Black Sea security, bilateral cooperation and our united stance against corruption”.

  • The Dutch government has announced it has earmarked an additional €2bn in military aid for Ukraine in 2024. It is part of a wider package that includes an initial €102m (£89m/$111m) for reconstruction and humanitarian aid that will be increased during the year if needed.

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