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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Mattha Busby and Yang Tian

Russia-Ukraine war: Three dead in overnight shelling across Ukraine – as it happened

Summary

  • Three people died in a night of intense shelling across Ukraine, according to officials. Two people were reportedly killed in Kharkiv and four more were injured following a Russian air strike. A woman in her 80s also reportedly died amid Ukrainian shelling of Donetsk.

  • Russia launched a multi-wave overnight attack on Ukraine, using 70 air assault weapons, including cruise and hypersonic missiles and Iranian-made drones, Kyiv’s air force said.

  • The official symbol of Ukraine has begun to replace the Soviet Union coat of arms on the shield of the Motherland Monument in the centre of Kyiv as part of derussification efforts. This morning in Ukraine, workers started to install a trident in place of the removed USSR hammer and sickle symbol.

  • A hostile drone was destroyed by air defences as it approached Moscow, city mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. Temporary restrictions that had been introduced at Moscow’s Vnukovo international airport were lifted, Russian-state run news agency RIA Novosti reported.

  • China was said to be in support of a third round of talks to find a framework for peace in Ukraine after a meeting of senior officials from about 40 countries in Saudi Arabia over the weekend.

  • Japan’s prime minister, Fumio Kishida, whose family comes from Hiroshima, hit out at Russian threats to use nuclear weapons as the country marked the 78th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

Updated

The Chonhar bridge to Crimea was damaged by a Ukrainian missile strike today, the RIA news agency cited the Moscow-appointed head of Crimea, Sergei Aksyonov, as saying.

Ukraine previously struck the same bridge, one of a handful of links between Crimea and mainland Ukraine, in June.

The acting governor of the Kherson region, Volodymyr Saldo, said on his Telegram channel that the bridge across the Tonky strait next to Crimea was also damaged along with a school.

In total, the Kyiv terrorists fired 12 missiles, 9 were shot down by our air defence. One civilian was wounded, passing over the bridge at the time of arrival. The gas pipeline from the Strelkovskoye field to Genichesk, which ran next to the bridge, was also interrupted. More than 20 thousand residents of the city were left without gas supply.

The bridge has no important military significance. Having switched to state terrorism, as always, vilely and lowly hits civilian infrastructure in order to disrupt the peaceful life of people.

Updated

Angela Giuffrida has the full story on the overnight Russian missile strikes.

Ukraine’s air force shot down 30 out of the 40 cruise missiles and all Shahed drones launched by Russia during a multi-wave overnight assault, which included a deadly attack on a blood transfusion centre condemned by the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, as a war crime of “beasts”.

We have a few more comments from president Vladimir Putin’s press secretary, Dmitri Peskov, who we quoted cited earlier as saying there were currently no grounds for a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire or peace.

He told the New York Times that Russia did not seek any more territory in Ukraine than the four provinces now annexed: “We just want to control all the land we have now written into our Constitution as ours.”

On next year’s presidential election, he was frank: “Our presidential election is not really democracy, it is costly bureaucracy … Mr Putin will be re-elected next year with more than 90% of the vote.”

The lengthy piece also quotes Pyotr Tolstoy, a deputy chair of the State Duma. Asked how Russia could fund an extended war, he said: “We pay for it all from our sales of oil to Europe via India.” The Times writer wrote: “This was bravado, but it had some truth to it.”

Tolstoy added: “Our values are different. For Russians, freedom and economic factors are secondary to the integrity of our state and the safeguarding of the Russian world.”

Updated

Polish pipeline operator Pern has said it had halted pumping through a section of the Druzhba pipeline, which carries oil from Russia to Europe, after detecting a leak in central Poland yesterday, but expects flows can be resumed on Tuesday.

There was no indication as to the cause of the leak, which follows a series of attacks on pipelines carrying Russian oil and gas since Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, reports Reuters.

“Pern services have reached the damaged section of one of the lines of the western section of the Druzhba pipeline in the commune of Chodecz,” Pern said this afternoon. “It is the main line that transports crude oil from sea deliveries to the west. Repair work on the oil pipeline is currently underway. The expected time for pumping to resume is Tuesday morning.”

Pern did not say what the impact on supply to Germany was but a spokesperson for the federal economy ministry in Berlin said: “We are in contact with the operators of the East German refineries. The security of supply is still fully guaranteed.”

Updated

Russia is to discuss the results of talks in Saudi Arabia with fellow Bric states who attended the meeting, according to the deputy foreign minister of Russia, Sergey Ryabkov, as quoted in Tass.

From the point of view of conveying common sense to the sponsors of the Kiev regime, I think the participation of Brics colleagues in this event may have brought some benefit. But we still need to figure out what happened in Jeddah.

President Vladimir Putin’s press secretary Dimitri Peskov said, according to the state-owned news agency, citing a New York Times article: “There are no grounds for an agreement at the moment. We will continue the operation for the foreseeable future.”

Updated

Moscow has said that weekend talks in Saudi Arabia including the US, China and India aiming to establish principles for a peaceful end to Russia’s war in Ukraine were a doomed western attempt to align the global south behind Kyiv.

Senior officials from about 40 countries have attended the two-day meeting, part of a push by Ukraine to build support beyond its core western backers among countries that have been reluctant to take sides, reports Reuters. Russia was not invited.

Russia’s deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, was quoted by the state news agency Tass calling the meeting “a reflection of the West’s attempt to continue futile, doomed efforts to mobilise the international community, and more precisely, the Global South, even if not entirely, in support of the so-called Zelenskyi formula, which is doomed and untenable from the outset”.

Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said on Wednesday he hoped the initiative would lead to a peace summit of leaders from around the world this autumn to endorse principles for a settlement based on his own 10-point formula. At its heart is a withdrawal of Russian troops and the restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity.

Updated

Swedish authorities have accused Russia of trying to influence how Qur’an burnings are viewed around the world through disinformation campaigns written in Arabic.

It is believed to be part of an attempt to disrupt Sweden’s Nato membership process – which came about as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which is still waiting for approval by Turkey and Hungary.

Sweden’s psychological defence agency, part of the ministry of defence, said the Russian state-controlled media outlets RT and Sputnik had published a series of articles in Arabic, falsely claiming that the Swedish government supported Qur’an burning.

Since the end of June, the authorities have logged about a million similar posts in Arabic and other languages. The warning from the agency – a cold war-era body brought back last year to fight foreign disinformation as tensions with Russia escalated – follows another burning in a spate of such desecrations in Sweden.

Updated

China is said to be in support of a third round of talks to find a framework for peace in Ukraine after a meeting of senior officials from about 40 countries in Saudi Arabia over the weekend.

The two-day summit in Jeddah was the second of its kind following a similar forum in Copenhagen earlier this summer and aims to draft key principles on how to end Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said he hoped the initiative would lead to a “peace summit” of world leaders this autumn to endorse the principles, based on his own 10-point formula for a settlement.

The talks, which excluded Russia, were attended by the US, India, the EU and China’s special envoy for Eurasian affairs, Li Hui. “We have many disagreements and we have heard different positions, but it is important that our principles are shared,” Li was reported by Reuters as saying before the meeting.

A Russian missile strike yesterday hit a facility of the Ukrainian aeronautics group Motor Sich, one of several companies requisitioned by the government since Moscow’s invasion, president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said.

“Today there was another Russian missile attack against our country. Kinzhals, Kalibrs. They hit Motor Sich,” and the Khmelnytskyi region in western Ukraine, around 190 miles south-west of Kyiv, Zelenskiy said in his evening address.

Motor Sich, which makes plane and helicopter engines and other components, was among the “strategic” firms taken over by Ukraine‘s defence ministry last November.

Zelenskiy said the strikes included Russia’s hypersonic Kinzhal weapons, which are designed to elude air-defence systems, though he added that “some of the missiles were shot down”.

The Khmelnytskyi region, hundreds of kilometres from the frontlines of the fighting in eastern Ukraine, has been regularly targeted by Russian strikes. The region is home to a major Ukrainian airbase.

Updated

Russia has said its forces struck military airbases in the Khmelnytskyi and Rivne regions in western Ukraine and that “all targets were hit.”

“Overnight Russia’s armed forces carried out strikes ... on Ukrainian armed forces airbases around the settlements of Starokostiantyniv in the Khmelnytskyi region and Dubno in the Rivne region,” the Russian defence ministry said.

Ukraine has said it faced several waves of attacks overnight, downing 30 out of 40 cruise missiles. It also said Russia launched three hypersonic Kinzhal missiles, which are harder to intercept, but did not provide information on whether or not they were destroyed.

The Game4Ukraine, led by legendary Ukrainian football player Andriy Shevchenko and Arsenal defender Oleksandr Zinchenko who captained two teams of former and current footballers, ended in a 2-2 draw yesterday.

The charity football match took place on yesterday evening at London’s Stamford Bridge stadium.

The singer Jamala performed the Ukrainian national anthem of Ukraine before kick-off. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky then addressed the players and spectators prior to a minute’s silence to honour the memory of those who have died following the Russian invasion.

Shevchenko’s Dynamo teammate Sergei Rebrov also played in the match, as well as Gerard Pique, Patrick Vieira, Petr Cech and Gianfranco Zola. Ukrainian Mikhail Mudryk, purchased this year by Chelsea, made a brief cameo.

The sides were coached by Chelsea women’s team boss Emma Hayes and former Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger, who now works for Fifa.

The players pose after a draw in the Game4Ukraine charity match at Stamford Bridge at Stamford Bridge on 5 August.
The players pose after a draw in the Game4Ukraine charity match at Stamford Bridge at Stamford Bridge on 5 August. Photograph: Chris Lee/Chelsea FC/Getty Images
Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky addresses the players and crowd from a giant screen ahead of the Game4Ukraine fundraising football match at Stamford Bridge on 5 August.
Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky addresses the players and crowd from a giant screen ahead of the Game4Ukraine fundraising football match at Stamford Bridge on 5 August. Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images

Three people dead after overnight shelling across Ukraine

Three people have died in a night of intense shelling across Ukraine, according to officials.

Oleh Syniehubov, the head of the local regional military administration in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region said that two people were killed and four more were injured following a Russian air strike.

The Moscow-appointed mayor of Russian-held Donetsk, Alexei Kulemin, said a woman in her eighties also died amid Ukrainian shelling of the city, AP reports.

Serhiy Tyurin, deputy head of Ukraine’s Khmelnytsky region military administration, said that Russian missiles had damaged several buildings in the area, injuring a worker at a grain silo and sparking a fire in a warehouse, according to AFP.

Updated

Yuriy Savchuk, the general director of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War, has celebrated the raising of the trident on the Kyiv monument.

“It’s really nice that we’ve completed a certain stage of the work,” he said. “It’s a beautiful, sunny day, the Dnieper [river] is sparkling, there is no air alert. The trident is on the shield, Glory to Ukraine.”

The trident’s sculptor, Oleksiy Pergamenshchyk, waving a Ukrainian flag at the base, said: “Glory to Ukraine! Glory to the heroes! Glory to the Armed Forces!”

He later told AFP: “I’m happy because it’s just right – it’s not too big, not too small, not too thin – it’s just right … I’m grateful that I was put on this task and I hope the Ukrainian nation and Ukrainian people will be happy with it.” He said he was planning to go up later and work from a cradle to perfectly centre the trident and finish the steel surface so “it will look as [if] it was there originally”.

The total cost of replacing the hammer and sickle with the trident has been reported as $758,000, paid for by donations and sponsorship rather than state funds, AFP reports. A survey by the culture ministry last year found that 85% of Ukrainians backed removing the hammer and sickle.

Steeplejacks wave a flag after they install the Ukrainian official coat of arms on 6 August.
Steeplejacks wave a flag after they install the Ukrainian official coat of arms on 6 August. Photograph: Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

Russia 'destroys' hostile drone approaching Moscow, says mayor

A hostile drone was destroyed by air defences as it approached Moscow today, city mayor Sergei Sobyanin has said.

Sobyanin wrote on messaging app Telegram: “Today at around 11 am a drone attempted to make a breakthrough toward Moscow. It was destroyed while approaching by air defence forces.”

The Russian defence ministry said the Ukrainian drone was destroyed over the Podolsky district in the Moscow region. “There were no casualties or damage,” the ministry said.

Temporary restrictions that had been introduced at Moscow’s Vnukovo international airport were lifted, Russian-state run news agency RIA Novosti said.

Russia accused Ukraine of two drone attacks on its capital last week. A skyscraper in Moscow was attacked twice in two days over the past week, according to Sobyanin. Several drones had been shot down but “one flew into the same tower at the Moskva City complex” that was targeted last Sunday.

Updated

Ukraine replacing Soviet crest on Kyiv monument with national symbol

The official symbol of Ukraine has begun to replace the Soviet Union coat of arms on the shield of the Motherland Monument in the centre of Kyiv as part of derussification efforts.

This morning in Ukraine, workers started to install a trident in place of the removed USSR hammer and sickle symbol that had been there since its installation in 1981 until Tuesday. Strong winds had prevented the work from taking place yesterday on the 102-metre-high structure.

The former Ukraine minister of culture Oleksandr Tkachenko said on Telegram:

It happened! Ukrainian trident in its place. It was a complex, responsible, historical project. I thank everyone who made this happen – donors, designers, builders, a sculptor, employees of the War Museum, everyone who supported and cheered for these changes.

It is hoped the trident will be fully installed by Independence Day on 24 August. The coat of arms of the USSR will be sent to the museum for storage, BBC Russia reports.

The idea of the transition arose when Russian-backed separatists took power in eastern Ukraine. But due to costs and fears that the monument’s stability could become compromised, the plans were shelved.

Steeplejacks install the coat of arms of Ukraine on the shield of the Motherland Monument in Kyiv, on 6 August.
Steeplejacks install the coat of arms of Ukraine on the shield of the Motherland Monument in Kyiv, on 6 August. Photograph: Roman Pilipey/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

The fire that had engulfed a university building’s wooden roof in Donetsk following Ukrainian shelling last night has been contained, according to Russian-state news.

Officials from the regional ministry of emergency situations said on Telegram:

Open burning in the building of the Donetsk National University of Economics and Trade named after M Tugan-Baranovsky has been eliminated. At the moment, the structures are being dismantled and poured.

The Russia-installed minister of Donetsk, Alexei Kostrubitsky, had said Ukrainian forces used cluster munitions in the shelling that caused the blaze. Reuters could not independently verify the information. Both sides have used cluster munitions in the course of Russia’s 17-month invasion of Ukraine.

Kostrubitsky said there were no people inside the building during the shelling. Russia’s RIA state news agency cited Kostrubitsky and emergency services as saying the fire spread to an area of about 1,800 sq metres before being contained early today.

Updated

At least 10 missiles appear to have got through air defences following Russia’s multi-wave overnight attack on Ukraine.

The deputy governor of the Khmelnytskyi region in western Ukraine, Serhiy Tiurin, said a military airfield in Starokostiantyniv was among the targets. Tiurin said explosions had damaged several private houses, a communal cultural institution and the bus station and that a fire had broken out at a grain silo.

The Starokonstiantyniv airfield is on the enemy’s mind. There was a series of explosions in Starokonstiantyniv and Khmelnytskyi communities. Most of the missiles were shot down by air defence forces.

Updated

Japan’s prime minister has hit out at Russian threats to use nuclear weapons as the country marked the 78th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima today.

Around 140,000 people died in Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 and 74,000 in Nagasaki three days later, when the US dropped atomic bombs on the two Japanese cities days before the end of World War II.

Prime minister Fumio Kishida, whose family comes from Hiroshima, said:

Japan, as the only nation to have suffered atomic bombings in war, will continue efforts towards a nuclear-free world. The path towards it is becoming increasingly difficult because of deepening divisions in the international community over nuclear disarmament and Russia’s nuclear threat.

Given this situation, it is all the more important to bring back international momentum towards realisation of a nuclear-free world. Devastation brought to Hiroshima and Nagasaki by nuclear weapons can never be repeated.

Japan's prime minister Fumio Kishida observes a moment of silence during a ceremony marking the 78th anniversary of the world's first atomic bombing at the Hiroshima peace memorial park on 6 August.
Japan's prime minister Fumio Kishida observes a moment of silence during a ceremony marking the 78th anniversary of the world's first atomic bombing at the Hiroshima peace memorial park on 6 August. Photograph: 松田優/AP

Since Putin’s tanks rolled into Ukraine, the the UK’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation’s (OFSI) staff have become desk-bound combatants in Europe’s largest land conflict since the second world war, responsible for enforcing sanctions against 1,600 people targeted as part of international efforts to heap pressure on the Kremlin.

In the year before the Ukraine war, the government received 11 licence applications related to Russian sanctions and approved nine. It has since been inundated with more than 1,000 licence requests, approving 82. The volume of frozen assets under the Russian sanctions regime has ballooned, from £44.5m in September 2021 to £18.4bn in December 2022.

Concerns remain about the overall licensing framework. Sanctioned individuals may apply for licences allowing them to spend up to £60,000 a month, or £720,000 a year, to cover their “basic needs”.

Susan Hawley, executive director of Spotlight on Corruption, said the licences for legal fees put the UK “at serious odds” with allies such as the US.

There is a real risk that the government’s general licence – or ‘free pass’ – for the legal sector encourages UK lawyers to adopt a ‘business as usual’ approach and keep profiting from working for clients sanctioned in relation to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Updated

Russia’s air defence system destroyed two aircraft-type drones over the Karachevskyi district in the Bryansk region, Alexander Bogomaz, governor of the Russian region that borders Ukraine, has said.

“There were no damages or casualties,” Bogomaz said today on a Telegram channel. It was not clear who launched the drones, and there was no immediate comment from Ukraine. Kyiv almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks inside Russia or on Russia-controlled territory in Ukraine, Reuters reports.

Russian authorities say the Bryansk region - which borders both Ukraine and Belarus - has seen multiple attacks by Ukrainian forces and pro-Ukrainian sabotage groups in the 17 months since Russia launched its invasion on Ukraine.

Updated

Here are some of the latest images coming out of Ukraine:

Workers mount Ukraine’s state coat of arms to the shield of the Motherland monument instead of a Soviet one, at a compound of the second world war museum in Kyiv.
Workers mount Ukraine’s state coat of arms to the shield of the Motherland monument instead of a Soviet one, at a compound of the second world war museum in Kyiv. Photograph: Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Firefighters extinguish a fire in the university building after a reported shelling in Donetsk.
Firefighters extinguish a fire in the university building after a reported shelling in Donetsk. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
Citizens walk through the street as the sun goes down in Kyiv.
Citizens walk through the street as the sun goes down in Kyiv. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Ukrainian soldier attends military training in Kyiv.
Ukrainian soldier attends military training in Kyiv. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Updated

Russia had promised retaliation after Ukrainian drones hit a Russian tanker in the Black Sea near Crimea on Friday night, following another naval attack involving drones a day before.

Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said:

There can be no justification for such barbaric actions, they will not go unanswered and their authors and perpetrators will inevitably be punished.

Ukraine’s maritime agency warned that all Russian ports should now be considered a “war risk area”, after Russia’s decision to pull out of a Black Sea deal brokered by Turkey and the UN, which was supposed to ensure exports of grain from the ports.

Updated

In Russia, an apparently unsanctioned disclosure of the scope of casualties the country’s elite airborne forces have suffered in Ukraine has overshadowed its annual celebrations, according to the UK Ministry of Defence’s latest intelligence report.

In a recorded address for VDV Day, the VDV’s commander-in-chief general colonel Mikhail Teplinsky said that 8,500 paratroopers had been wounded and later returned to duty or had refused to leave the frontline at all.

The video was quickly deleted from the Russian MoD’s official channels. He did not comment on how many troops had been killed or were too seriously wounded to return to duty.

However, extrapolating Teplinksy’s figures endorses the assessment that at least 50 per cent of the 30,000 paratroopers who deployed to Ukraine in 2022 have been killed or wounded.

Updated

Russian officials in the Moscow-controlled city of Donetsk have accused Ukraine of shelling a university building, Reuters reports.

The building’s wooden roof was set ablaze, but there were no people inside during the attack. Alexei Kostrubitsky, the Russia-installed emergency minister alleged Ukraine had used cluster munitions in the attack, but those claims could not be independently verified.

There was no immediate comment from Ukraine on the alleged shelling.

Firefighters extinguish a fire in the university building after a reported shelling in Donetsk.
Firefighters extinguish a fire in the university building after a reported shelling in Donetsk. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters

Updated

Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has said Russia attacked a blood transfusion centre in the country as he condemned the fatal strike as a “war crime”.

Russian forces struck the blood transfusion centre in the Kharkiv region of north-east Ukraine, Zelenskiy said, adding that “dead and wounded are reported”. A “guided air bomb” hit the centre in Kupiansk, a city a few dozen kilometres from the Russian border.

For more on this story:

Updated

Russia attacks Ukraine with waves of missiles and drones, says Kyiv

Russia launched a multi-wave overnight attack on Ukraine, using 70 air assault weapons, including cruise and hypersonic missiles and Iranian-made drones, Kyiv’s air force has said.

Reuters reports that the air force said Ukraine’s air defence destroyed 30 out of 40 cruise missiles and all 27 of the Shahed drones that Russia launched overnight.

In total, in several waves of attacks, from the evening of 5 August to the morning of 6 August 2023, the enemy used 70 means of air assault weapons.

It was not immediately clear whether there was any damage from the attack or what happened to the 10 cruise missiles that were not shot down. There was no immediate comment from Russia.

Air force spokesperson Yuriy Ihnat said one of the key targets for Russia’s overnight attack was the Khmelnytskiy region. Russia had earlier targeted the Starokostiantyniv military airfield in the Khmelnytskiy region at the end of July.

Updated

Opening summary

Welcome back to our continuing coverage of the war in Ukraine, I’m Yang Tian bringing you the latest news.

Kyiv’s air force says Russia has launched a multi-wave overnight attack on Ukraine, using 70 air assault weapons, including cruise and hypersonic missiles and Iranian-made drones.

Moscow has promised retaliation after Ukrainian drones hit a Russian tanker in the Black Sea near Crimea, the second naval attack in one day.

More details to come, in other recent developments:

  • The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, says Russia has attacked a blood transfusion centre in the country as he condemned the fatal strike as a “war crime”. A separate attack struck a key factory, both incidents coming just hours after Kyiv hit a Russian tanker in the Kerch Strait. Russian forces struck the blood transfusion centre in the Kharkiv region of north-east Ukraine, Zelenskiy said, adding that “dead and wounded are reported”. A “guided air bomb” hit the centre in Kupiansk, a city a few dozen kilometres from the Russian border, he said.

  • Ukraine carried out a drone strike on a Russian tanker in the Kerch Strait, a day after one of Moscow’s warships was hit in the Black Sea. A video released by Ukrainian authorities appeared to show an unmanned sea drone striking the side of the 141-metre Russian-flagged Sig under the darkness of night. The strike was the second such naval attack in a 24-hour period, after the scuppering of a Russian landing ship on Friday outside the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk.

  • Russia says it has captured the settlement of Novoselivske in north-eastern Ukraine, where Kyiv has reported increased attacks. Footage from the Russian army showed Novoselivske completely destroyed, with white smoke billowing over crumbling buildings. Ukrainian army spokesperson Ganna Malyar said Russian troops were aiming to draw Ukrainian resources to the east, as Ukraine pursues its counter-offensive in the south.

  • There were reports of explosions in several cities including Kyiv and Zaporizhzhia with air alerts. Ukraine said Russia fired ballistic and Kinzhal missiles into cities with some reports indicating Russian forces were firing missiles from inside Belarusian territory. Zelenskiy’s spokesperson Iuliia Mendel tweeted: “Right now the missile attack is at Kyiv, Vinnutsia, Zhytomyr, Cherkasy regions. But the alert is all over Ukraine.”

  • Zelenskiy has promised a fresh round of institutional “cleaning”, a reference to his campaign to show western partners that Kyiv has moved on from a history of deep-rooted corruption. “Next week will be a continuation of our work on cleaning state institutions of those who tried to drag from the past all those old habits, old schemes that weakened Ukraine for a very long time, for decades,” he said. Zelenskiy gave no details about who might be a target.

  • Talks have started in Saudi Arabia to find a peaceful settlement to Russia’s war in Ukraine. It is hoped this weekend’s meeting of national security advisers and other senior officials from about 40 countries – but not Russia – will reach agreement on principles of how to end the conflict. Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian president’s office and his main envoy for the talks in Jeddah, said: “I expect that the conversation will be difficult, but behind us is truth, behind us goodness.”

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