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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Amy Sedghi

Ukraine war: Russia says it has full control over Ukrainian town of Avdiivka – as it happened

Ukrainian troops build a fortification with earthbags not far from Avdiivka, 17 February.
Ukrainian troops build a fortification with earthbags not far from Avdiivka, 17 February. Photograph: Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images

Closing summary

It has just gone 6pm in Kyiv and 7pm in Moscow. We will be closing this blog soon, but you can stay up-to-date on the Guardian’s Russia and Ukraine coverage here.

Here is a recap of the latest developments:

  • Russian troops have reportedly established full control over the Ukrainian town of Avdiivka and have advanced 8.6 km (5.3 miles) in that part of the frontline, Russian news agencies reported on Sunday, citing the defence ministry. Russia claimed the capture Avdiivka after Ukraine withdrew, but Moscow said that some Ukrainian troops were still holed up in a vast Soviet-era coke plant. The fall of Avdiivka is Russia’s biggest gain since capturing the city of Bakhmut in May 2023.

  • Ukraine’s army on Sunday accused Russian forces of shooting two prisoners of war (PoW) and posted a grainy video shot from the air that they said showed the incident. AFP could not verify the authenticity of the video or the location and Ukrainian authorities have not commented on the news agency’s report.

  • More than 400 people were detained in Russia by Saturday night while paying tribute to opposition leader Alexei Navalny, according to the OVD-Info rights group that tracks political arrests and provides legal aid. Hundreds of people in dozens of Russian cities streamed to ad-hoc memorials and monuments to victims of political repressions with flowers and candles on Friday and Saturday to pay a tribute to the politician.

  • Ukrainian forces repelled a Russian offensive on the southern front after the withdrawal of Kyiv’s troops from the devastated eastern town of Avdiivka, the Ukrainian military said on Sunday. “Defence forces in the Zaporizhzhia sector defeated yesterday’s Russian offensive,” Ukrainian military said on Telegram, adding that 18 armoured vehicles including three tanks were destroyed and that the Russians “retreated to their previous positions”. So far there has been no comment from the Russian side.

  • “Please, do not ask Ukraine when the war will end. Ask yourself – why is Putin still able to continue it,” Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said as he addressed delegates at the 60th Munich Security Conference on Saturday. In a lengthy thread posted on his X account today, Zelenskiy shared a video of the speech and also wrote: “We can get our land back. And Putin can lose.”

  • China’s foreign minister Wang Yi has told his Ukrainian counterpart that Beijing does not sell lethal weapons to Russia for its war against Ukraine, a statement said on Sunday. China says it is a neutral party in the Ukraine conflict but has been criticised for refusing to condemn Moscow for its offensive.

  • Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Saturday he had discussed the prospects for peace in Kyiv’s war against Russia with his Chinese counterpart. Kuleba said he had discussed Ukraine’s plans to hold a global peace summit, which Switzerland has agreed to help stage. The two men, he said, “agreed on the need to maintain Ukraine-China contacts at all levels and continue our dialogue”.

  • The UK’s shadow foreign secretary, David Lammy has said he would support further sanctions against Russia and added he would “plug the gaps” of existing measures. In seperate comments made at the Munich Security Conference on Sunday, Lammy said: “Russia will continue to be a threat for Europe for months, years, perhaps a generation more.”

  • Events on the battlefield in Ukraine are a matter of “life and death” for Russia that could determine its fate, president Vladimir Putin said in remarks aired on Sunday. The Kremlin has repeatedly framed the almost two-year conflict as a battle for Russia’s survival in a bid to rally patriotic sentiment among its population.

  • More than 100 Kremlin documents obtained by a European intelligence service and reviewed by The Washington Post, show that Russia ran a disinformation campaign to undermine the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy. The US publication said Kremlin instructions had “resulted in thousands of social media posts and hundreds of fabricated articles” that “tried to exploit what were then rumoured tensions” between Zelenskiy and his top army commander, Valerii Zaluzhnyi.

  • German politician Ricarda Lang pushed back at the idea of a deal with Russia, in response to US Republican senator JD Vance’s comments, that included his belief that Putin is not “an existential threat to Europe”, on a panel at the Munich Security Conference on Sunday. Lang said: “Putin has shown over and over again – and he just showed this with the murder of Navalny on Friday – that he has no interest in peace at the moment.”

  • Poland’s Radek Sikorski stressed Poland’s support for Ukraine at the third day of the Munich Security Conference, but acknowledged that Warsaw and Kyiv have two problems linked to grain and trucking. Responding to Sikorski on stage, Olha Stefanishyna, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, said: “We have to solve it. There are legitimate messages on both sides. I think that the major contribution in resolving these issues has been done by Ukraine, because we secured the Black Sea.”

  • Brazil’s president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said on Sunday there should be a thorough investigation into the death of prominent Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny before making any accusations. Speaking at a press conference after attending an African Union summit in Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, Lula said refraining from taking a stance on the death at this moment was a matter of “common sense”.

  • Denmark has decided to donate all the artillery rounds from its stockpiles to Ukraine, Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen told the Munich Security Conference on Saturday. Frederiksen did not specify how many artillery shells Denmark has in its stockpiles.

  • The EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, said “the most important security commitment for Ukraine is membership” of the EU, in comments made at the Munich Security Conference on Sunday.

  • Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s wife, Yulia Navalny, published a picture of the couple on her Instagram account on Sunday in what is her first social media post since her husband died. The caption read simply: “I love you.”

  • Estonian prime minister Kaja Kallas on Sunday dismissed a warrant issued by Russia for her arrest, saying it was just an attempt to intimidate her amid speculation she could get a top EU post. “It’s Russia’s playbook. It’s nothing surprising and we are not afraid,” she told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference. When asked by Reuters whether she was interested in any future European role she said: “We are not there yet.”

  • The wife of jailed British-Russian dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza has said she fears for her husband’s life after the death of Alexei Navalny. Evgenia Kara-Murza, has called on the international community to take further action to free political prisoners in Russia who she says are the only alternative to Putin’s regime.

Ukraine army accuses Russian forces of shooting two PoWs

Ukraine’s army on Sunday accused Russian forces of shooting two prisoners of war (PoW) and posted a grainy video shot from the air that they said showed the incident, reports AFP.

In the video, two soldiers labelled as Ukrainians run towards another labelled as Russian in a trench. The Russian soldier then grabs them and shoots numerous times until they stop moving, before turning back. The two men do not appear to have resisted capture. AFP could not verify the authenticity of the video or the location.

“This morning … the Russians once again showed their attitude to international humanitarian law by shooting two Ukrainian prisoners of war,” the ground forces wrote on Telegram. They said the incident happened in the area of responsibility of the Khortytsia group of troops, which operates on the eastern front, without giving a more precise location.

Ukrainian media reported it happened northeast of the village of Vesele in the Donetsk region, citing the Khortytsia group’s press service. Khortytsia’s troops were not involved in the withdrawal from the town of Avdiivka in the region, which Russia claimed Saturday to fully control.

Russia and Ukraine have several times accused each other of violating international humanitarian law by killing prisoners-of-war since Russia invaded.

The UN human rights office of the high commissioner has documented cases of summary executions of Ukrainian prisoners of war as well as torture.

Earlier on Sunday, the DeepState Telegram channel seen as close to the Ukrainian army reported that Russian forces had shot six injured Ukrainian soldiers left behind during the withdrawal from Avdiivka, most likely on Thursday.

It said the men had been too badly wounded to leave the Zenit position near the town of Avdiivka with other troops during Ukraine’s withdrawal and comrades had recognised their bodies on a video posted on social media by Russians.

Ukrainian authorities have not commented on AFP’s report.

Danish prime minister says Denmark to donate all its artillery to Ukraine – report

Denmark has decided to donate all the artillery rounds from its stockpiles to Ukraine, Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen told the Munich Security Conference on Saturday, reports The Kyiv Independent.

Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen told the Munich Security Conference on Saturday that Denmark has decided to donate all the artillery rounds from its stockpiles to Ukraine.
Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen told the Munich Security Conference on Saturday that Denmark has decided to donate all the artillery rounds from its stockpiles to Ukraine. Photograph: Anna Szilágyi/EPA

“If you ask Ukrainians, they are asking us for ammunition now, artillery now. From the Danish side, we decided to donate our entire artillery,” Frederiksen said.

“There is still ammunition in European stocks. This is not a question of only production because we have the weapons, we have ammunition, we have air defence that we don’t have to use ourselves at the moment that we should deliver to Ukraine.”

The Kyiv Independent report that Frederiksen did not specify how many artillery shells Denmark has in its stockpiles.

“Russia does not want peace with us. They are destabilizing the western world from many different angles – in the Arctic region, the Balkans, and Africa – with disinformation, cyber-attacks, hybrid war, and obviously in Ukraine,” she said.

Russia will not intimidate me, Estonia's Kallas says

Estonian prime minister Kaja Kallas on Sunday dismissed a warrant issued by Russia for her arrest, saying it was just an attempt to intimidate her amid speculation she could get a top EU post, reports Reuters.

Once ruled by Moscow but now a member of both the EU and Nato, Estonia has been a supporter of Kyiv and Kallas has been one of Moscow’s most vocal critics since the Russian invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago.

Estonia's prime minister Kaja Kallas has dismissed a warrant issued by Russia for her arrest, saying it was just an attempt to intimidate her.
Estonia's prime minister Kaja Kallas has dismissed a warrant issued by Russia for her arrest, saying it was just an attempt to intimidate her. Photograph: Reuters

Russian police placed her and several other Baltic politicians on a wanted list on 13 February for destroying Soviet-era monuments.

“It is meant to intimidate and make me refrain from the decisions that I would otherwise make,” Kallas told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference. “But it’s Russia’s playbook. It’s nothing surprising and we are not afraid.”

The Baltic politicians risk being arrested only if they cross the Russian border, otherwise declaring them wanted has no real consequences.

Kallas’s high profile in pushing the EU to do more to support Ukraine has led to speculation in Brussels that she could take on a senior role after the next EU parliamentary elections in June, possibly as foreign policy chief. She said that speculation was also contributing to Russia’s aggression towards her.

“It’s hard to be popular,” she said ironically. “The Russians have also seen that, and that’s why they issued the arrest warrant to really emphasise the biggest argument against me, that I am a provocation to Russia.”

When asked by Reuters whether she was interested in any future European role she said: “We are not there yet. I’m the prime minister of Estonia.”

More now on the aftermath of the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

His wife, Yulia Navalnaya, published a picture of the couple on her Instagram account on Sunday in what is her first social media post since her husband died.

The caption read simply: “I love you.”

It comes as hundreds of people in dozens of cities visited ad-hoc memorials and monuments to victims of political repressions with flowers and candles on Friday and Saturday to pay a tribute to the politician.

Hundreds of people attend a rally following the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny
Hundreds of people attend a rally in Berlin following the death of Russian opposition leader Navalny Photograph: Annegret Hilse/Reuters

As we reported earlier, police detained 401 people by Saturday night, according to the OVD-Info rights group that tracks political arrests and provides legal aid.

More than 200 arrests were made in St Petersburg, the group said. The city’s courts have ordered 42 of those detained on Friday to serve from one to six days in jail, while nine others were fined, officials said. In Moscow, at least six people were ordered to serve 15 days in jail, according to OVD-Info. One person was also jailed in the southern city of Krasnodar and two more in the city of Bryansk, the group said.

The news of Navalny’s death came a month before a presidential election in Russia that is widely expected to give Vladimir Putin another six years in power.

Updated

It has been almost two years since the invasion of Ukraine and our colleague Shaun Walker has been taking a look at what may happen in the coming months.

The grim news, as the second anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion approaches, is another sign that the third year of the war could be the hardest yet for Ukraine.

The mood is very different from that of a year ago, when amid the horror Ukrainians remained buoyed up by the extraordinary consolidation of national society, and looked forward to the swift liberation of all territories occupied by Russia.

You can read the full piece below:

Updated

The wife of jailed British-Russian dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza has said she fears for her husband’s life after the death of Alexei Navalny, reports the Press Association (PA).

Kara-Murza has been a long-term critic of Russian president Vladimir Putin and has survived two poisonings since 2015, which have left him with a form of nerve damage called polyneuropathy. He was jailed by a Moscow court in April 2023, leading the UK to sanction 11 individuals involved in his case.

According to PA, his wife, Evgenia Kara-Murza, has called on the international community to take further action to free political prisoners in Russia who she says are the only alternative to Putin’s regime.

The wife of jailed British-Russian dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza (pictured) has said she fears for her husband’s life after the death of Alexei Navalny.
The wife of jailed British-Russian dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza has said she fears for her husband’s life after the death of Alexei Navalny. Photograph: Dmitry Serebryakov/AP

She told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg that she had feared for her husband’s life since he was first poisoned in 2015 and now sleeps with her phone by her bed “dreading” a call with similar news.

She said:

I believe that my husband’s life is in danger, as are lives of many other political prisoners in Russian prisons, because these people are kept behind bars, very often with serious medical conditions with no proper medical treatment, and they are kept in such conditions in order to make their state of health deteriorate.

With all that is happening, I cannot afford breaking down, I cannot afford being afraid, I cannot afford just the normal human feeling of fear. I have to always fight that and step over it and say yes, I am afraid, but that is not important right now.

Continuing the fight is important, telling the stories of those people who are suffering from the regime is important. Today, people are getting arrested for laying flowers to the memorials of the victims of repression, that situation is deteriorating, it seems, by the day.”

Speaking of Navalny’s death, she said:

I was horrified but not surprised because the use of political assassination as a method of dealing with opponents has been there for the entire rule of Vladimir Putin. He has been using this method since early-2000s.

This was a murder for which Vladimir Putin is responsible. All that impunity that lasted for decades, led him to believe that he is somehow untouchable, and for as long as he is sitting in the Kremlin unchecked, we will see more warmongering, we will see more repression and we will see more deaths.”

Calling on governments to step up action against Russia, she urged them to “get on the same page with help to Ukraine. The US Congress has been debating that aid to Ukraine for how long now? And they seem to be finally, finally agreeing that it is needed, but come on, did Alexei Navalny have to die for this to happen?”

She added:

I have this question to the international community. Will it maybe, finally, say that Vladimir Putin isn’t a legitimate leader when it comes to political prisoners?

Yes, more should be done to get those whose lives are in danger out. These people who are being now slowly killed, these are – they represent that alternative to Vladimir Putin, and if they’re not saved, who is going to be there to rebuild the country from scratch? Who is going to make Russia into a democracy if not these people that have stood up, with their heads held high and said no?”

Updated

China tells Ukraine it 'does not sell lethal weapons’ to Russia

China’s foreign minister has told his Ukrainian counterpart that Beijing does not sell lethal weapons to Russia for its war against Ukraine, a statement said on Sunday.

According to AFP, Wang Yi told Dmytro Kuleba during a meeting on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference on Saturday that China “does not take any advantage of the situation, and does not sell lethal weapons to conflict areas or parties to the conflict”, according to a foreign ministry readout.

China says it is a neutral party in the Ukraine conflict but has been criticised for refusing to condemn Moscow for its offensive.

China and Russia have ramped up economic cooperation and diplomatic contacts in recent years, and their strategic partnership has only grown closer since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Beijing has faced accusations that it is supplying lethal arms to Russia, charges it has always denied.

“No matter how the international situation changes, China hopes that China-Ukraine relations will develop normally and continue to benefit the two peoples,” Wang told Kuleba, according to the ministry’s readout.

“Once again, I would like to thank Ukraine for helping the Chinese people evacuate safely under emergency conditions,” it said. “The Chinese people will never forget that.”

The readout said Wang stressed that China adheres to the political settlement of flashpoint issues and insisted on promoting peace talks.

“We will continue to play a constructive role in bringing an early end to the war and re-establishing peace,” Wang told Kuleba.

“Even if there is only a glimmer of hope for peace, China will not give up its efforts.”

Brazil's Lula says there should be a thorough investigation into Navalny's death before any accusations

Brazil’s president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said on Sunday there should be a thorough investigation into the death of prominent Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny before making any accusations, reports Reuters.

His remarks were in sharp contrast to western leaders’ strong and swift criticisms of Russia over Navalny’s death while being held in a jail about 40 miles north of the Arctic Circle on Friday. US president Joe Biden said Russian president Vladimir Putin and “his thugs” were responsible.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov rejected such accusations as unacceptable.

Speaking at a press conference after attending an African Union summit in Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, Lula said refraining from taking a stance on the death at this moment was a matter of “common sense”.

Brazil's president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said to ‘to make an accusation is to trivialise’ the death of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.
Brazil's president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said to ‘to make an accusation is to trivialise’ the death of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny. Photograph: Reuters

“A citizen died in prison, I don’t know if he was ill or had any issues,” Lula said. “To make an accusation is to trivialise. I hope that a coroner will provide an explanation for why the individual died, that’s all.”

Lula’s comments reflected how non-western nations have not joined the west in its efforts to deeply isolate Russian Putin over the invasion of Ukraine and other issues.

Lula has repeatedly called for peace in Ukraine and says that Russia should not have invaded, but he says that the US has needlessly prolonged the war.

Navalny’s mother was told on Saturday her son had been struck down by “sudden death syndrome” and that his body would not be handed over to the family until an investigation was completed, his team said.

During the press conference, Lula advocated for the global south to assert its due place in the economy, politics, and culture, highlighting the importance of the Brics bloc for this purpose. The group, consisting of Brazil, Russia, China, India and South Africa, officially expanded in January with the inclusion of Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.

Updated

Kremlin ran disinformation campaign to undermine Zelenskiy, reports The Washington Post

More than 100 Kremlin documents obtained by a European intelligence service and reviewed by The Washington Post, show that Russia ran a disinformation campaign to undermine the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

According to The Washington Post, files were shared with them to “expose for the first time the scale of Kremlin propaganda targeting Zelenskiy with the aim of dividing and destabilising Ukrainian society – efforts that Moscow dubbed ‘information psychological operations’”.

The Washington Post said Kremlin instructions had “resulted in thousands of social media posts and hundreds of fabricated articles, created by troll farms and circulated in Ukraine and across Europe” that “tried to exploit what were then rumoured tensions” between Zelenskiy and his top army commander, Valerii Zaluzhnyi. Earlier this month, Zelenskiy fired Zaluzhnyi, in Ukraine’s biggest military shake-up since Russia’s full-scale invasion began nearly two years ago.

More than 100 Kremlin documents reviewed by The Washington Post show that Russia ran a disinformation campaign to undermine Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy and ‘tried to exploit what were then rumoured tensions’ between him and his top army commander, Valerii Zaluzhnyi.
More than 100 Kremlin documents reviewed by The Washington Post show that Russia ran a disinformation campaign to undermine Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy and ‘tried to exploit what were then rumoured tensions’ between him and his top army commander, Valerii Zaluzhnyi. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Reuters

The US publication said that at a meeting on 16 January 2023, the Kremlin’s first deputy chief of staff, Sergei Kiriyenko “laid out four key objectives for the Ukraine propaganda team: discrediting Kyiv’s military and political leadership, splitting the Ukrainian elite, demoralizing Ukrainian troops and disorienting the Ukrainian population, the documents show”.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov, head of the Kremlin’s department for developing information and communication technologies Tatyana Matveeva, and Alexander Kharichev did not respond to The Washington Post’s requests for comment on the contents of the documents.

Updated

'Most important security commitment' for Ukraine is membership of the EU, says Josep Borrell

Speaking at the Munich Security Conference on Sunday, the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, said the most important geopolitical issues facing the EU today are related to Ukraine, Gaza and the global south – as well as defence.

“We have to increase and provide Ukraine with security commitments,” he said, adding that “the most important security commitment for Ukraine is membership” of the EU.

He also warned that “we have to consider different scenarios about how much engaged will US be on European security.”

The EU's high representative for foreign affairs and security policy Josep Borrell opens a panel discussion at the 60th Munich Security Conference in southern Germany on Sunday.
The EU's high representative for foreign affairs and security policy Josep Borrell opens a panel discussion at the 60th Munich Security Conference in southern Germany on Sunday. Photograph: Tobias Schwarz/AFP/Getty Images

'We can get our land back and Putin can lose', says Zelenskiy

“Please, do not ask Ukraine when the war will end. Ask yourself – why is Putin still able to continue it,” Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said as he addressed delegates at the 60th Munich Security Conference on Saturday.

In a lengthy thread posted on his X account today, Zelenskiy shared a video of the speech and also wrote:

24 February 2022, could have marked the end of the world as we all know it. A world of rules meant to protect life. Our resistance, with the support of partners, has put on hold the destruction of this rules-based world order. 2024 must become a time for its full restoration.

It is not the rules that define the world’s life that should remain in the past, but rather, a Russia that doesn’t respect the rules should remain in the past. And we can ensure this. Not just by doing something. But by doing everything necessary.

He also said: “Ukrainians have proven that we can force Russia to retreat and that we are capable of restoring the rules. And with this, we leave absolutely nothing of the key Russian myth-the myth that Ukraine supposedly cannot win this war.”

Zelenskiy said that if Ukraine did not defeat Russian president Vladimir Putin now, then it would not matter who leads Russia:

If we don’t defeat Putin now, it won’t eventually matter who leads Russia. Every new Russian dictator will remember how to maintain power by annexing lands, killing opponents, and destroying the world order. If this happens, Europe, Central Asia and the world will be dark places.”

“We can get our land back. And Putin can lose,” wrote Zelenskiy, saying that “this has already happened more than once on the battlefield”. He added: “Our actions are limited only by the sufficiency and length of the range of our strength-by what does not depend on us. And the Avdiivka situation proves this exactly.”

Updated

Russia says Avdiivka under its full control - Russian reports

Russian troops have established full control over the Ukrainian town of Avdiivka and have advanced 8.6 km (5.3 miles) in that part of the frontline, Russian news agencies reported on Sunday, citing the defence ministry.

According to Reuters, Russia claimed the capture of the Ukrainian town of Avdiivka after Ukraine withdrew, but Moscow said that some Ukrainian troops were still holed up in a vast Soviet-era coke plant after one of the most intense battles of the war.

Updated

Here are some of the latest images from the newswires:

Ukrainian soldiers prepare a mortar in a forest as the Russia-Ukraine war continues in the direction of Kreminna, Donetsk oblast.
Ukrainian soldiers prepare a mortar in a forest as the Russia-Ukraine war continues in the direction of Kreminna, Donetsk oblast. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
A group hold a banner reading ‘don’t give up’ during a tribute rally to Alexei Navalny at Place du Trocadero in Paris on Saturday.
A group hold a banner reading ‘don’t give up’ during a tribute rally to Alexei Navalny at Place du Trocadero in Paris on Saturday. Photograph: Geoffroy van der Hasselt/AFP/Getty Images
Police officers detain participants of a civil memorial service to Russian late opposition leader Alexei Navalny near the memorial to political prisoners in St Petersburg, Russia, on Saturday.
Police officers detain participants of a civil memorial service to Russian late opposition leader Alexei Navalny near the memorial to political prisoners in St Petersburg, Russia, on Saturday. Photograph: Anatoly Maltsev/EPA
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskiy (L) and US vice-president Kamala Harris (R) attend their joint press conference during the Munich Security Conference 2024 on Saturday.
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskiy (L) and US vice-president Kamala Harris (R) attend their joint press conference during the Munich Security Conference 2024 on Saturday. Photograph: Presidential Press Service Handout/EPA

Updated

Russia says Ukrainian units entrenched at Avdiivka coke plant

Russia claimed the capture of the Ukrainian town of Avdiivka after Ukraine withdrew, but Moscow said that some Ukrainian troops were still holed up in a vast Soviet-era coke plant after one of the most intense battles of the war, reports Reuters.

The fall of Avdiivka is Russia’s biggest gain since capturing the city of Bakhmut in May 2023, and comes almost two years to the day since Russian president Vladimir Putin triggered a full-scale war by ordering the invasion of Ukraine.

According to Reuters, Ukraine said it had withdrawn its soldiers to save troops from being fully surrounded after months of fierce fighting. Putin hailed the fall of Avdiivka as an important victory and congratulated Russian troops.

“The head of state congratulated Russian soldiers on this success, an important victory,” the Kremlin said in a statement on its website.

But Russia said some Ukrainian forces were still holed up at the Soviet-era coke plant, once one of Europe’s biggest, in Avdiivka, which is key to Russia’s aim of securing full control of the industrial Donbas region.

“Measures are being taken to completely clear the town of militants and to block Ukrainian units that have left the town and are entrenched at the Avdiivka Coke and Chemical Plant,” Russian defence ministry spokesperson Igor Konashenkov said.

There was no public comment yet by Ukrainian authorities on this. Russian state television showed blue and yellow Ukrainian flags being taken down in Avdiivka and Russia’s white, blue and red flag raised, including over the coke plant.

The Russian defence ministry said Russia had taken about 32 square kilometres (12 square miles) of territory in the advance amid heavy losses for Ukraine. It gave no figures for Russian losses, which Ukraine says are huge.

Russia cast the Ukrainian withdrawal as rushed and chaotic, with some soldiers and weapons left behind. The Ukrainian military said there had been casualties but that the situation had stabilised somewhat after the retreat.

Updated

Ukraine military says it repelled Russian offensive on southern front

Ukrainian forces repelled a Russian offensive on the southern front after the withdrawal of Kyiv’s troops from the devastated eastern town of Avdiivka, the Ukrainian military said on Sunday.

According to Reuters, Ukraine’s army top general Oleksandr Syrskyi said on Saturday that Kyiv’s troops withdrew from Avdiivka to avoid encirclement after months of fierce Russian attacks, Moscow’s biggest advance since its troops captured the city of Bakhmut last May.

“Defence forces in the Zaporizhzhia sector defeated yesterday’s Russian offensive,” Ukrainian military said on Telegram messaging app. The military said 18 armoured vehicles including three tanks were destroyed and that the Russians “retreated to their previous positions”.

So far there has been no comment from the Russian side.

The southern Zaporizhzhia direction became the main focus of the Ukrainian counteroffensive in the summer of 2023 although there were no significant breakthroughs and only a few settlements were liberated.

Updated

UK shadow foreign secretary David Lammy says he would support further sanctions against Russia

The UK’s shadow foreign secretary, David Lammy has said he would support further sanctions against Russia and added he would “plug the gaps” of existing measures.

The UK’s shadow foreign secretary David Lammy has said he would support further sanctions against Russia.
The UK’s shadow foreign secretary David Lammy has said he would support further sanctions against Russia. Photograph: Mohamed Azakir/Reuters

He told BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg:

The UK has led on sanctions, the issue now is the enforcement of those sanctions and if we do have the privilege to serve, that is the area in which I will look more closely to ensure that there is the proper coordination across both the Foreign Office and the Treasury.

I remain concerned about the dirty money that continues to flow through London, I remain concerned that the full implementation of the Russia report following the interference in our elections and the work of our select committee have not been fully implemented.

So yes, I think there are gaps and if we are successful, when the general election is held, I intend to plug those gaps.”

Updated

Poland’s Radek Sikorski has stressed Poland’s support for Ukraine at the third day of the Munich Security Conference, but acknowledged that Warsaw and Kyiv have two problems linked to grain and trucking.

This is difficult because it’s structural.

Responding to the Polish foreign minister on stage, Olha Stefanishyna, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, said:

We have to solve it. There are legitimate messages on both sides.

I think that the major contribution in resolving these issues has been done by Ukraine, because we secured the Black Sea. And now the grain is easily releasable through the Black Sea. We also have done our steps that we ensured the control of exports to neighbouring countries.

So there are some steps done, but we have to solve it.

Putin says Ukraine 'matter of life and death' for Russia

Events on the battlefield in Ukraine are a matter of “life and death” for Russia that could determine its fate, president Vladimir Putin said in remarks aired Sunday, reports news agency Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The Kremlin has repeatedly framed the almost two-year conflict as a battle for Russia’s survival in a bid to rally patriotic sentiment among its population, many apathetic toward the offensive.

“I think it is still important for us ourselves, and even more so for our listeners and viewers abroad, to understand our way of thinking,” Putin said in an interview with state TV.

Russian president Vladimir Putin in remarks aired Sunday, that events on the battlefield in Ukraine are a matter of ‘life and death’ for Russia.
Russian president Vladimir Putin in remarks aired Sunday, that events on the battlefield in Ukraine are a matter of ‘life and death’ for Russia. Photograph: Alexander Kazakov/AP

“Everything that is happening on the Ukraine front: For them it is an improvement of their tactical position, but for us it is our fate, it is a matter of life and death,” he said.

Putin was responding to a question about a two-hour long interview he gave to US talkshow host Tucker Carlson, which the Kremlin used to promote its narratives on the conflict.

In that interview, Putin talked at length about Russian history and continuously questioned Ukraine’s statehood, drawing ire in both Kyiv and the west.

“For the western listener, the viewer, it was not easy. Even more so for Americans,” Putin said when asked about his long, historical musings in the Carlson interview.

“The history of the US is 300-odd years, and I started in 862. So I think it was not easy for American audiences to understand,” he said.

Responding to US Republican senator JD Vance on a panel at the Munich Security Conference on Sunday, German politician Ricarda Lang pushed back at the idea of a deal with Russia.

Putin has shown over and over again – and he just showed this with the murder of Navalny on Friday – that he has no interest in peace at the moment. That he does not want peace.

So if you say we stop supporting Ukraine, stop giving weapons to them, you are not having some scenario where this leads to peace, but at the moment this leads to two scenarios: either you are prolonging this war, or you give up Ukraine and Putin wins.

More than 400 people detained in Russia as they paid tribute to opposition leader Alexei Navalny

A prominent rights group says more than 400 people have been detained in Russia while paying tribute to opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died at a remote Arctic penal colony, reports news agency the Associated Press (AP).

The sudden death of the 47-year-old Navalny was a crushing blow to many Russians, who had pinned their hopes for the future on president Vladimir Putin’s fiercest foe.

Navalny remained vocal in his unrelenting criticism of the Kremlin even after surviving a nerve agent poisoning and receiving multiple prison terms. Hundreds of people in dozens of Russian cities streamed to ad-hoc memorials and monuments to victims of political repressions with flowers and candles on Friday and Saturday to pay a tribute to the politician. In more than 12 cities, police detained 401 people by Saturday night, according to the OVD-Info rights group that tracks political arrests and provides legal aid.

Thousands of people across Russia laid flowers in memory of the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny who died in an Arctic penal colony on Friday.
Thousands of people across Russia laid flowers in memory of the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny who died in an Arctic penal colony on Friday. Photograph: Getty Images

More than 200 arrests were made in St Petersburg, Russia’s second largest city, the group said. Among those detained there was Grigory Mikhnov-Voitenko, a priest of the Apostolic orthodox church – a religious group independent of the Russian orthodox church – who announced plans on social media to hold a memorial service for Navalny and was arrested on Saturday morning outside his home. He was charged with organising a rally and placed in a holding cell in a police precinct, but was later hospitalised with a stroke, OVD-Info reported.

According to AP, courts in St Petersburg have ordered 42 of those detained on Friday to serve from one to six days in jail, while nine others were fined, court officials said late on Saturday. In Moscow, at least six people were ordered to serve 15 days in jail, according to OVD-Info. One person was also jailed in the southern city of Krasnodar and two more in the city of Bryansk, the group said.

The news of Navalny’s death came a month before a presidential election in Russia that is widely expected to give Putin another six years in power. Questions about the cause of death lingered on Sunday, and it remained unclear when the authorities would release his body to his family.

Updated

Republican senator says Putin not existential threat to Europe

JD Vance, the Republican senator from Ohio, said he believes Donald Trump doesn’t want to abandon Europe, but “is actually issuing a wake up call to say that Europe has to take a bigger role in its own security.”

Speaking at the third day of the Munich Security Conference, he added: “I do not think that Vladimir Putin is an existential threat to Europe, and to the extent that he is, again, that suggests that Europe has to take a more aggressive role in its own security.”

The limiting factor for US support to Ukraine, Vance argued, is “not money, it’s munitions.”

We don’t make enough munitions to support a war in eastern Europe, a war in the Middle East and potentially contingency in East Asia. So the United States is fundamentally limited.

'Russia will continue to be a threat for Europe', says UK shadow foreign secretary as he calls for UK-EU security pact

David Lammy, the UK shadow foreign secretary, said on stage at the Munich Security Conference that he wants a new security pact between the EU and the UK.

He said:

Of course I’m hoping that there is a general election this year and I have the privilege of becoming the UK foreign secretary, because it’s absolutely fundamental that the United Kingdom and Europe have the closest of relationships and the Brexit era is over, the situation is settled.

And what my party is proposing is a new EU-UK security pact. And it’s a pact that is effectively built on the fact that we obviously have war here in Europe.

But the truth is, and it’s important that we summon up to the room the courage of Alexei Navalny – what it reminds is that not withstanding that war, Russia will continue to be a threat for Europe for months, years, perhaps a generation more.

And that means that the defence capability of the UK, alongside our partners in France particularly representing about 50% of Europe’s defence capability, but also the intelligence capability of the Five Eyes system in partnership with the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, is absolutely essential, and is why we need now a new security pact.

Now, that security pact is not to rival Nato, it is to run in parallel with Nato.

Here are some key points related to Russia-Ukraine from the second day of the Munich Security Conference on Saturday. The annual event brings together policymakers from across the globe for discussions on security. The day focused heavily on Russia’s war in Ukraine and the war in the Middle East.

  • The chief topic of conversation among the western defence establishment inside the gilded Hotel Bayerischer Hof was whether Ukraine’s problems are fixable – the answer is mainly yes – but only if the west has the political will to act.

  • Speaking at the conference, the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, said Europeans need to do much more on security.

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian president, told the conference participants that “2024 must become a time for a full restoration of a rules-based world order.”

  • The Ukrainian leader said that if Donald Trump visits Ukraine he would be ready to go with him to the frontline.

  • Zelenskiy also told world leaders not to fear Vladimir Putin’s defeat.

  • The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said the EU “has to step up its defence industrial base.”

  • David Cameron, the British foreign secretary, signalled that there would be “consequences” in the wake of the death of Alexei Navalny.

  • Germany’s Scholz said he was really depressed to hear of Navalny’s death.

  • Antony Blinken, the US secretary of state, warned against “dehumanisation.”

  • Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, said in Munich that Beijing wants to be a force for stability and that China and Europe should avoid “ideological distractions.”

  • In a speech today in Hungary, the country’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, said it is on course to ratify Sweden’s accession at the beginning of its parliament’s spring session, which begins on 26 February.

Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Saturday he had discussed the prospects for peace in Kyiv’s nearly two-year-old war against Russia with his Chinese counterpart, part of a long-running bid to bolster relations with Beijing.

“I met with my Chinese counterpart Wang Yi to discuss bilateral relations, trade, and the need to restore a just and lasting peace in Ukraine,” Kuleba wrote on X of their talks at the Munich Security Conference.

Kuleba said he had discussed Ukraine’s plans to hold a global peace summit, which Switzerland has agreed to help stage. The two men, he said, “agreed on the need to maintain Ukraine-China contacts at all levels and continue our dialogue”.

China has attended at least one of the preparatory meetings that have taken place in anticipation of such a summit.

Reuters reports that the Chinese foreign ministry has yet to release details on Wang’s talks with Kuleba. But, in his public remarks to the conference, Wang said China had persisted in promoting peace talks and in playing a positive role in restoring peace, according to a statement from the ministry released on Sunday.

Ukraine has sought to enhance ties with Beijing and bring China onside for Kyiv’s 10-point peace plan which focuses on a withdrawal of Russian troops from occupied territory, the restoration of 1991 post-Soviet borders and a framework to bring Moscow to account for its actions.

China, which has been pursing a “strategic partnership” with Russia, proposed a peace plan of its own last year calling for a ceasefire, negotiations and an end to sanctions against Russia. But the plan made little headway.

“China is not the creator of the Ukraine crisis, nor is it a party, but we have not merely watched the ‘fire’ on the other side, nor have we taken advantage of the opportunity to benefit [from the situation],” Wang said at the conference, according to the ministry’s statement.

Ukraine negotiations should restart as soon as possible to reduce losses on both sides, Wang told the conference. “As long as there is still a glimmer of hope for peace, we will not give up,” he said.

Updated

Also, the Guardian’s Moscow correspondent Andrew Roth has written about how the Kremlin are playing for time after Alexei Navalny’s death. You can read the piece here:

In Russia, it is not enough to kill an opposition leader. His ageing mother must travel to the Arctic Circle to search a prison colony and a morgue for his body. Russians with the temerity to lay carnations in his memory must be detained.

Even a preliminary cause of death, “sudden death syndrome”, was misleading, as though his death behind bars was not years in the making.

All this happened the day after Alexei Navalny died, as the bureaucratic machinery of the vast Russian state swung into gear, brushing over the Kremlin critic’s death with a veneer of official disdain and petty cruelty.

“It’s obvious that they are lying and doing everything they can to avoid handing over the body,” said Kira Yarmysh, Navalny’s press secretary, as 69-year-old Lyudmila, his mother, and a lawyer battled to retrieve his body in the city of Salekhard.

My colleague, the Observer’s Jon Ungoed-Thomas has written about a new scheme which means Ukrainians can extend their UK visas by 18 months. You can read the piece here:

Ukrainians who sought sanctuary in the UK after the Russian invasion will be permitted to extend their visas for an extra 18 months, the Home Office has announced.

More than 200,000 Ukrainians visa holders have arrived in the UK since March 2022, with the first visas to expire in March next year. The Home Office said that the new scheme would provide “certainty and assurance” for Ukrainians in the UK.

This weekend, the government appealed for more British families to come forward to sponsor Ukrainians. But the Local Government Association (LGA) sounded a note of caution, urging the government to review the financial support for Ukrainians facing the risk of homelessness.

Ukraine’s forces destroyed 12 Russia-launched attack drones overnight as well as one Kh-59 cruise missile and one SU-34 fighter-bomber, Ukraine’s air force commander said on Sunday, reports Reuters.

“I want to thank air force units for their successful combat work!” Mykola Oleshchuk wrote on the Telegram messaging app. “Have a nice day everyone!”

Reuters could not independently verify the report.

Opening summary

It has gone 10am in Kyiv and 11am in Moscow. This is our latest Guardian blog on the war in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has called the capture of Avdiivka “an important victory” after Ukraine’s military chief said on Saturday that his troops withdrew from the devastated town in the east of the country after months of intense combat.

Although the Russian defence ministry said that Ukrainian units were still entrenched at the town’s coke plant, the advance on Avdiivka was Moscow’s biggest advance since it took the city of Bakhmut last May.

It is also the clearest sign yet of how the tide of the war has turned in Moscow’s favour after a Ukrainian counteroffensive failed to break through Russian lines last year.

“The head of state congratulated Russian soldiers on this success, an important victory,” the Kremlin said in a statement on its website.

US President Joe Biden meanwhile said he had told his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskiy he was “confident” the US Congress would renew war aid, but added that without American help Kyiv could lose further territory to Russian advances.

Failure by US lawmakers to approve new funding for military aid to Kyiv would be “absurd” and “unethical,” Biden told reporters after attending church in Delaware, adding: “I’m going to fight to get them the ammunition they need.”

In other key developments:

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy issued a desperate plea for fresh arms on Saturday. He told the Munich Security Conference that the slowing of weapons supplies was having a direct impact on the frontline and was forcing Ukraine to cede territory.

  • Zelenskiy also told world leaders not to ask when the Ukraine war will end but instead “why is Putin still able to continue it” as he underlined the threat Russia poses beyond his own country and called for more support.

  • A number of Ukrainian troops were captured by Russia during their withdrawal from the town of Avdiivka, Oleksandr Tarnavskiy, the Ukrainian commander responsible for forces in Ukraine’s south-east, has said.

  • The Russian defence ministry said on Sunday that Ukrainian forces had left Avdiivka and were entrenched at the nearby Avdiivka coke and chemical plant in Ukraine’s Donetsk region. “Measures are being taken to completely clear the city of militants and to block Ukrainian units that have left the city and are entrenched at the Avdiivka Coke and Chemical Plant,” spokesperson Igor Konashenkov said in a video published on the ministry’s Telegram channel.

  • Russian forces shelled and fired missiles at a series of cities in eastern Ukraine on Saturday, killing at least three people and leaving others under the rubble of shattered buildings, Ukrainian officials said. Two cities close to the frontline in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region – Kramatorsk and Slovyansk – came under fire. And farther north in the town of Kupiansk one person was killed when a two-storey house was struck by Russian shells, the governor of Kharkiv region said.

  • Ukrainian forces shot down three Russian warplanes over eastern Ukraine on Saturday, the country’s air force chief has said. This claim has not been independently verified.

  • Kamala Harris on Saturday criticised Donald Trump’s cajoling of Russia to attack Nato allies of the US who don’t pay their dues, saying the American people would never accept a president who bowed to a dictator. “The idea that the former president of the US would say that he – quote – encourages a brutal dictator to invade our allies, and that the United States of America would simply stand by and watch,” Harris said. “No previous US president, regardless of their party, has bowed down to a Russian dictator before.”

  • Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Saturday he had discussed the prospects for peace with his Chinese counterpart, part of a long-running bid to bolster relations with Beijing. Kuleba said he had discussed with China’s top diplomat Wang Yi about Ukraine’s plans to hold a global peace summit, which Switzerland has agreed to help stage.

  • Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s mother and his lawyer were told on Saturday that he had been struck down by “sudden death syndrome”, his team has said. Another lawyer of Navalny’s, however, was told by the penal colony’s investigative committee that the cause of death had not yet been established, Navalny’s spokesperson said.

  • G7 foreign ministers have demanded that Russia fully clarify the circumstances surrounding Navalny’s death. The foreign ministers of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the US met in Munich on Saturday.

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