Friday, March 29

Russia-Ukraine war: Ukraine decries ‘barbaric’ missile strikes on Kyiv; Russian gains in Donbas come at ‘significant cost’, says UK – live | Ukraine


Russian gains in Donbas come at ‘significant cost’, says UK

Russian gains in Donbas have come at a “significant cost” to its forces, the UK ministry of defense has said in its latest intelligence report.

Released just after 6am GMT, the report reads: says UK

The Battle of Donbas remains Russia’s main strategic focus, in order to achieve its stated aim of securing control over the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts.

In these oblasts fighting has been particularly heavy around Lysychansk and Severodonetsk, with an attempted advance south from Izium towards Slovyansk.

Due to strong Ukrainian resistance, Russian territorial gains have been limited and achieved at significant cost to Russian forces.

Latest Defense Intelligence update on the situation in Ukraine – 29 April 2022

Find out more about the UK government’s response: https://t.co/94lb8T09GX

🇺🇦 #StandWithUkraine 🇺🇦 pic.twitter.com/Shgw19Ejz0

— Ministry of Defense 🇬🇧 (@DefenceHQ) April 29, 2022

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Summary and welcome

Hello and welcome back to the Guardian’s live coverage of the war in Ukraine.

I’m Samantha Lock and I’ll be bringing you all the latest developments until my colleague Martin Belam takes the reins a little later in the day.

It is just past 7am in Ukraine and its capital, Kyiv, is still reeling from a missile attack launched the night before. The blasts came soon after the UN secretary general, António Guterres, met with the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, admitting the UN had failed to prevent or end the war.

Meanwhile, Nato has warned that the west needs to be prepared for the long haul and the possibility that the war will “drag on and last for months and years”.

Here’s everything you might have missed:

  • Russia attacked Kyiv with two cruise missiles on Thursday eveninginjuring at least 10 people and partially destroying a 25-storey residential building in the central Shevchenkivskyi district.
  • The blasts came “immediately after” Guterres met with Ukraine’s presidentVolodymyr Zelenskiy, in the capital.
  • The UN chief admitted: “Let me be very clear. The security council failed to do everything in its power to prevent and end this war.”
  • Joe Biden has called for a $33bn package of military and economic aid to Ukraine, more than doubling the level of US assistance to date. The package would include over $20bn in military aid, including heavy artillery and armored vehicles, greater intelligence sharing, cyberwarfare tools and many more anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles. “We’re not attacking Russia. We’re helping Ukraine defend itself against Russian aggression,” Biden said.
  • The US House has given final passage to legislation that would streamline a second world war-style lend-lease program to more quickly provide Ukraine with military aid. The measure would update the 1941 legislation Franklin Roosevelt signed into law to help allies fight Nazi Germany.
  • The UK will send 8,000 soldiers to eastern Europe on expanded exercises to combat Russian aggression in one of the largest deployments since the cold war. Dozens of tanks will be deployed to countries ranging from Finland to North Macedonia between April and June.
  • A British citizen has been killed in Ukraine and a second is missing, the Foreign Office has confirmed, amid reports that both were volunteer fighters. The Briton who died was understood to be Scott Sibley, a former British soldier who had served in Iraq.
  • A 22-year-old former US marine and American citizen, Willy Joseph Cancel, was also reportedly killed while fighting alongside Ukrainian forces in Ukrainemembers of his family have told CNN.
  • Russian forces have been hitting the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol with the heaviest strikes yet while preventing wounded Ukrainian fighters from being evacuated, a local official said. They [want to] use the opportunity to capture the defenders of Mariupol, one of the main [elements] of whom are the… Azov regiment. Therefore the Russian side is not agreeing to any evacuation measures regarding wounded [Ukrainian] troops,” Donetsk regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said, according to Reuters.
  • the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said it was probing a report that a missile had flown directly over a nuclear power station, adding it would be “extremely serious” if true. The IAEA director general, Rafael Grossi, said Kyiv had formally told the agency the missile flew over the plant in southern Ukraine on 16 April. The facility is near the city of Yuzhnoukrainsk, 350km (220 miles) south of Kyiv.
  • The UN general assembly will vote on 11 May to replace Russia on its 47-member human rights council after Russia was suspended. Assembly spokeswoman Paulina Kubiak said the Czech Republic was the only candidate for the seat.
  • Ukraine’s prosecutor general has named 10 Russian soldiers allegedly involved in human rights abuses during the month-long occupation of Bucha. There were 8,653 alleged war crimes under investigation, according to the prosecutor’s office.
  • Moldova’s deputy prime minister, Nicu Popescu, said the country was facing “a very dangerous new moment” as unnamed forces were seeking to stoke tensions after a series of explosions in the breakaway region of Transnistria this week. Popescu said his government had seen “a dangerous deterioration of the situation” in recent days amid attacks in the region.
  • The European Union will consider it as a violation of sanctions if European energy companies comply with Moscow’s requirement to open a payment account in roubles with Gazprombank, EU officials warned. The EU “cannot accept” that payments in euros for Russian gas are considered completed by Moscow only after they are converted into roubles, an official said.
  • Nato said it was ready to maintain its support for Ukraine in the war against Russia for years, including help for Kyiv to shift from Soviet-era weapons to modern western arms and systems. “We need to be prepared for the long term,” Jens Stoltenberg, the Nato secretary general, told a summit in Brussels. “There is absolutely the possibility that this war will drag on and last for months and years.”
  • The Nato Secretary General, Jens Stoltenberg, said Finland and Sweden would be “warmly welcomed” should they decide to join the 30-nation military organization and any membership process could “go quickly”.

As usual, please feel free to reach out to me by email or Twitter for any tips or feedback.




www.theguardian.com

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