Local authorities say Russian forces targeted a hospital, school, bus station, post office, bank and residential buildings
Four people were killed and five injured when Ukrainian forces attacked a bridge in south-eastern Ukraine’s Melitopol district, Russian-backed authorities said on Sunday.
Reporters from Reuters were unable to immediately corroborate the report.
The Russian-installed head of the occupied part of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region, Yevgeny Balitsky, wrote on Telegram that a rocket had been launched from a Himars system at a railway bridge across the Molochna river.
“At this time, renovation work was under way at the facility. According to preliminary data, as a result of the shelling, four people from the railway brigade were killed, five were injured, they are receiving the necessary medical care,” he said.
Zaporizhzhia region, which includes Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, has been partially occupied by Russia since the start of the invasion.
It is just after 6pm in Kyiv, here is what you might have missed:
Three people are dead and five others have been injured after Russian shelling in the port city of Kherson, claim local authorities. The Kherson regional military administration said on its Telegram channel that Russian forces targeted a hospital, school, bus station, post office, bank and residential buildings. It said there were eight victims, three dead and five injured.
Mourners gathered in Kyiv today to commemorate a British volunteer killed while on a rescue mission from the eastern Ukrainian town of Soledar. British voluntary aid worker Andrew Bagshaw, for whom the service was held, and fellow volunteer Chris Parry, were killed during an attempted humanitarian evacuation. Several dozen mourners, including fellow volunteers who knew Bagshaw, came to express their condolences at a small church on the territory of Kyiv’s ancient St Sophia cathedral for a service led by an Orthodox priest.
Russia’s ministry of education has provided further details on plans to include basic military training in the country’s secondary schools, the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) said today. In its daily intelligence update, the MoD said that the module “will include training with AK series assault rifles and hand grenades, military drill and salutes”. It added that the initiatives, which come into force in September, are most likely a deliberate “evocation of the Soviet Union” as similar training took place in schools up until 1993.
Ukraine has imposed sanctions against 182 Russian and Belarusian companies, and three individuals, in the latest of a series of steps since the start of the invasion that Ukraine has taken to block Moscow’s and Minsk’s connections to Ukraine. The sanctioned companies chiefly engage in the transportation of goods, vehicle leasing and chemical production, according to the list published by the Ukraine’s national security and defence council.
US military officials are reportedly urging the Pentagon to supply F-16 jets to Ukraine so the country is better able to defend itself from Russian missiles and drones.
Ukraine’s military and Russia’s Wagner private military group are both claiming to have control in the area of Blahodatne in the eastern part of the Donetsk region. “Units of Ukraine’s Defence Forces repelled the attacks of the occupiers in the areas of … Blahodatne … in the Donetsk region,” Ukraine’s armed forces said in its daily morning report, adding its forces also repelled attacks in 13 other settlements in the Donetsk region. The Wagner group, designated by the US as transnational criminal organisation, said on the Telegram messaging app on Saturday that its units had taken control of Blahodatne.
The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said ahead of an EU-Ukraine summit next week that Ukraine had unconditional support from the bloc and needed to prevail against Russian attacks to defend European values. “We stand by Ukraine’s side without any ifs and buts. Ukraine is fighting for our shared values, it is fighting for the respect of international law and for the principles of democracy and that is why Ukraine has to win this war.”
A Russian strike killed three people in a residential district of the eastern Ukrainian city of Kostiantynivka on Saturday, the regional governor said. Fourteen other people were wounded in the attack, which also damaged four apartment buildings and a hotel. According to Ukraine’s defence ministry, Russia carried out attacks on Konstantynivka with multiple rocket launchers.
Russia accused the Ukrainian military of deliberately striking a hospital in a Russian-held area of eastern Ukraine on Saturday. It said a strike killed 14 people and wounded 24 patients and medical staff. The strike hit a hospital in the Russian-held settlement of Novoaidar and was carried out using a US-supplied Himars rocket launch system, the Russian defence ministry said. The claims could not be independently verified, AP reported.
Kyiv and its western allies are engaged in “fast-track” talks on the possibility of equipping Ukraine with long-range missiles and military aircraft, a top aide to Ukraine’s president says, AP reported. Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said Ukraine’s supporters in the west “understand how the war is developing” and the need to supply planes capable of providing cover for the armoured fighting vehicles that the US and Germany have pledged.
Ukraine said on Friday it would take its pilots about half a year to train for combat in western fighter jets such as US F-16s, as Kyiv steps up its campaign to secure fourth-generation warplanes. Ukraine got a huge boost this week when Germany and the US announced plans to provide heavy tanks to Kyiv, which is now hoping the west will also provide long-range missiles and fighter jets.
North Korea on Saturday denounced US pledges of battle tanks, claiming Washington was “further crossing the red line” to win hegemony by proxy war, Reuters quoted state media KCNA reporting. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s sister, Kim Yo-jong, made the remarks in a statement, saying that North Korea will “stand in the same trench” as Russia against the US.
Russia’s deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, will hold a meeting with Lynne Tracy, the new US ambassador to Moscow, early next week, the RIA news agency reported.
Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Saturday redoubled his efforts to stop Russian athletes participating the 2024 Olympics, saying they would try to justify the war against Ukraine if allowed to compete. Zelenskiy said on Friday that Ukraine would launch an international campaign to keep Russia out of the summer Games, which will be held in Paris. Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said on Friday that any attempt to squeeze Moscow out of international sport because of what it calls its special military operation in Ukraine was “doomed to fail”.
Three people are dead and five others have been injured after Russian shelling in the port city of Kherson, claim local authorities.
The Kherson regional military administration said on its Telegram channel that Russian forces targeted a hospital, school, bus station, post office, bank and residential buildings. It said there were eight victims, three dead and five injured.
Among those injured was a nurse working at the regional hospital when it was attacked, Yuri Sobolevskiy, deputy head of Kherson regional council, said on his Telegram channel.
Mourners gathered in Kyiv today to commemorate a British volunteer killed while on a rescue mission from the eastern Ukrainian town of Soledar.
British voluntary aid worker Andrew Bagshaw, for whom the service was held, and fellow volunteer Chris Parry, were killed during an attempted humanitarian evacuation, Reuters reports.
Several dozen mourners, including fellow volunteers who knew Bagshaw and others who came to express their condolences at a small church on the territory of Kyiv’s ancient St Sophia cathedral for a service led by an Orthodox priest.
Volunteer Ignat Ivlev-Yorke, who organised Bagshaw’s memorial service, said:
I remember one of the first times when we went (on an evacuation run) together. He was a very quiet person, he just wanted to help people. He felt that this was his mission. That he had a duty to do it.
Ukraine acknowledged for the first time on Wednesday that it had withdrawn from Soledar, almost two weeks after Russian troops said they had captured the small salt-mining town.
Dr Jonathan Eyal is associate director, strategic research partnerships, Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), and writes for us today to argue that amid the smoke of war, power in Europe is shifting decisively to the east.
Huffing and puffing and occasionally fluffing his words during months of tense diplomatic negotiations, the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has finally agreed to supply Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine.
The numbers involved are not impressive; as things stand, only 14 German tanks will get a fresh lick of paint with Ukrainian military markings. Still, his decision has removed a significant obstacle to Ukraine’s rearmament.
Finland, Poland, Portugal and the Netherlands have already announced that they will transfer some of their Leopards and Norway and Spain are not far behind.
The Leopard tank contingent could, therefore, end up being quite substantial, providing Ukraine with the ability to flush out Russian troops from their dugouts, thereby injecting much-needed mobility into a war of attrition that currently allows Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, to kill civilians and pulverise Ukraine’s economic infrastructure systematically and primarily with impunity.
Read more: Amid the smoke of war, power in Europe is shifting decisively to the east
Russia’s ministry of education has provided further details on plans to include basic military training in the country’s secondary schools, the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) said today.
In its daily intelligence update , the MoD said that the module “will include training with AK series assault rifles and hand grenades, military drill and salutes”.
It added that the initiatives, which come into force in September, are most likely a deliberate “evocation of the Soviet Union” as similar training took place in schools up until 1993.
Latest Defence Intelligence update on the situation in Ukraine – 29 January 2023
Find out more about the UK government's response: https://t.co/Uq5hma9yKs
🇺🇦 #StandWithUkraine 🇺🇦 pic.twitter.com/FD9fqU8Yiz
These are some of the latest images to be sent to us over the newswires from Ukraine.
The Ministry of Defence has posted pictures on its Twitter account of Ukrainian tank crews arriving in the UK for training.
It comes after an announcement earlier this month that the UK will provide Challenger 2 tanks to Ukraine.
A spokesperson for prime minister Rishi Sunak said that the offer of tanks and other artillery systems was a sign of the UK’s “ambition to intensify our support to Ukraine”.
Ukrainian tank crews have arrived in the UK to begin training for their continued fight against Russia.
The UK will provide Challenger 2 tanks to Ukraine alongside global partner nations – demonstrating the strength of support for Ukraine, internationally.#StandWithUkraine pic.twitter.com/OLKtllePzN
Russian president Vladimir Putin is open to contacts with German chancellor Olaf Scholz though has no phone call scheduled with him, a Kremlin spokesperson told the state RIA Novosti news agency.
Reuters reports that Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti.
For now, there are no agreed talks (with Scholz) in the schedule. Putin has been and remains open to contacts.
Scholz was quoted by the Berlin daily Tagesspiegel in an interview published on Sunday as saying:
I will also speak to Putin again because it is necessary to speak.
He added:
The onus is on Putin to withdraw troops from Ukraine to end this horrendous, senseless war that has cost hundreds of thousands of lives already.
Putin and Scholz last spoke by phone in early December.
The Russian leader said at the time the German and western line on Ukraine was “destructive” and called on Berlin to rethink its approach.
Germany is the second largest donor of military hardware to Ukraine after the US, according to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, ahead of other European powers such as France and Britain.
Natalia Samsonova says she imagines the muffled screams of those trapped under the rubble, the fire and smell of smoke, the grief of the mother who lost her husband and infant child beneath the ruins of the building in Dnipro bombed by Russia. She imagines being unable to breathe.
That is why she is here, at a statue to the Ukrainian poet Lesya Ukrainka, a largely unknown monument tucked away among Moscow’s brutalist apartment blocks that has hosted a furtive anti-war memorial at a time when few in Russia dare protest against the conflict.
“I don’t know what else I can do … I wanted to show that not everyone is indifferent [to the war] and that some people still have a conscience,” she says, her eyes filling with tears.
It is the second time she has returned to place flowers at a makeshift memorial to victims of the strike on 14 January that killed 46 people and wounded more than 80. She passes it when she comes to visit her mother, who lives nearby.
Read more: ‘Ukraine is not our enemy’: Russians risk arrest to honour victims of war