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Wars 2022 02/24 Monitoring Russian and Ukraine War.
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Russian strikes kill three in Ukraine
Agence France-Presse . Kyiv, Ukraine 08 February, 2025, 01:53

Russian strikes on the Ukrainian border region of Sumy overnight killed three people who were pulled from the rubble of a two-story residential building, prosecutors said on Friday.

They said Moscow’s forces had struck the village of Miropillia shortly before midnight in Sumy, which lies just across the border from Russia and has been coming under increasing fatal bombardments.

‘As a result of the enemy attack, three people were killed — their bodies were recovered from the rubble,’ the office of the prosecutor general wrote on social media.

The attack ripped a hole dividing two sections of a Soviet-era building, official images showed.

Prosecutors said they had opened a war crimes investigation into the strike they said comprised of three guided bombs.

Sumy borders the Russian region of Kursk where Ukrainian forces launched a shock offensive six months ago but Moscow in turn has stepped up its bombardments on the industrial and farming region.

A Russian drone attack on Sumy city late last month killed at least nine people in a residential building at night.​
 
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Russia claims east Ukraine village near strategic town
Agence France-Presse . Moscow 10 February, 2025, 00:44

Russia said on Sunday that its forces had captured the eastern Ukrainian village of Orikhovo-Vasylivka, near the strategic military hub of Chasiv Yar that Moscow is attempting to seize.

There is intensive fighting in the frontline town of Chasiv Yar, one of the last remaining urban areas blocking Russia from advancing further into the region, according to Russian military bloggers.

The Russian defence ministry said in a daily briefing that ‘as a result of decisive attack actions, the South group of troops liberated the settlement of Orekhovo-Vasilevka in the Donetsk region,’ using the Russian name for the village.

Orikhovo-Vasylivka is located around 10 kilometres north of Chasiv Yar and near the road to the Ukraine-held city of Sloviansk.

The latest advance comes as Russian troops are pushing further into the Donetsk region. They claimed the key mining town of Toretsk on Friday, while Ukraine denies Moscow troops are in full control there.

Ukraine’s Khortytsia army unit, which is fighting in the area, said Sunday that it had repelled attacks in the areas of Chasiv Yar and Toretsk and shot down a Russian military jet near Toretsk.

Ukraine’s air force said that overnight Russia had attacked six regions with 151 drones, of which it shot down 70 while a further 74 were lost ‘without negative consequences’.

Russia’s defence ministry said it had destroyed 35 Ukrainian drones overnight and one in the northwestern Leningrad region on Sunday morning.

Meanwhile, the Kremlin on Sunday declined to confirm or deny a US report of a phone call between US president Donald Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin.

Washington and Moscow have not officially confirmed any communication between the leaders since Trump took office on a pledge to swiftly end the Ukraine fighting.

The New York Post late Saturday reported that Trump told the publication he had spoken on the phone to Putin to discuss bringing an end to the conflict in Ukraine and the Russian told him he ‘wants to see people stop dying’.

The newspaper quoted Trump as saying he had ‘better not say’ how often the leaders have spoken.​
 
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RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR: Red Cross probes fate of 50,000 missing
Agence France-Presse . Geneva 13 February, 2025, 23:19

The Red Cross said on Thursday it was trying to find out what happened to nearly 50,000 people who have disappeared in the past three years of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The International Committee of the Red Cross also said it had been notified of around 16,000 prisoners of war and civilians who had been detained by both sides.

Shortly after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the ICRC created a special bureau of its Central Tracing Agency, dedicated to searching for those missing on both sides in the conflict.

‘Since February 2024, the number of open cases of missing persons has more than doubled, reaching almost 50,000 today,’ the CTA bureau chief Dusan Vujasanin told reporters in Geneva, adding that the vast majority of the missing were military personnel.

A year ago, the bureau said it was seeking to determine the fate of some 23,000 people who had gone missing in the war, and that it was striving to determine whether they were captured, killed or had lost contact after fleeing their homes.

The aim of the bureau’s work, Vujasanin said Thursday, was ‘to prevent disappearances, search for those who go missing and inform their families as soon as possible’.

To date, the bureau has been informed by both sides in the conflict that they had detained around 16,000 prisoners of war and civilians since the start of the full-scale conflict.

‘This is not equal to the number of PoWs currently detained,’ Vujasanin said, pointing out that several thousand prisoners had been released since the start of the war.

The CTA bureau plays the role of a neutral intermediary between the parties for information about missing persons, but it also works to search for the missing.

Vujasanin highlighted that much of the Red Cross network was working together to help find those who had gone missing.

‘Today, more than 80 Red Cross and Red Crescent National Societies and ICRC delegations around the world are working together to support families looking for their missing loved ones in relation to the Russia–Ukraine armed conflict and provide them with answers as soon as possible,’ Vujasanin said.​
 
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Kyiv, EU alarmed by prospect of ‘dirty deal’ after Trump-Putin call
REUTERS
Published :
Feb 13, 2025 21:48
Updated :
Feb 13, 2025 21:48

1739493687611.webp

A view shows residential buildings destroyed by Russian military strikes in the frontline town of Orikhiv, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine February 12, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Stringer

Kyiv and its European allies demanded on Thursday that they be included in any peace negotiations, after US President Donald Trump spoke by phone with Russia’s Vladimir Putin and said Ukraine could neither have all of its land back nor join NATO.

Russia’s financial markets soared and the price of Ukraine’s debt rose at the prospect of the first peace talks since the early months of Europe’s deadliest war since World War Two, soon to enter its fourth year.

But Trump’s unilateral overture to Putin, accompanied by apparent concessions on Ukraine’s principal demands, raised alarm for both Kyiv and the European allies in NATO who said they feared the White House might make a deal without them.

“We, as a sovereign country, simply will not be able to accept any agreements without us,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said.

He said Putin aimed to make his negotiations bilateral with the United States, and it was important not to allow that.

European officials took an exceptionally firm line in public towards Trump’s peace overture, saying any agreement would be impossible to implement unless they and the Ukrainians were included in negotiating it.

“Any quick fix is a dirty deal,” European foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said. She also strongly denounced the apparent concessions offered in advance.

“Why are we giving them (Russia) everything that they want even before the negotiations have been started?” said Kallas. “It’s appeasement. It has never worked.”

A European diplomatic source said ministers had agreed to engage in a “frank and demanding dialogue” with US officials - some of the strongest language in the diplomatic lexicon - at the annual Munich Security Conference beginning on Friday.

Trump, who made the first publicly acknowledged White House call with Putin since the February 2022 full-scale invasion, and then followed it up with a call to Zelenskiy, said he believed both men wanted peace.

But the Trump administration also said openly for the first time that it was unrealistic for Ukraine to expect to return to its 2014 borders or join the NATO alliance as part of any agreement, and that no US troops would join any security force in Ukraine that might be set up to guarantee a ceasefire.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Thursday the world was fortunate to have Trump, the “best negotiator on the planet, bringing two sides together to find a negotiated peace”.

‘POLITICAL WILL’

The Kremlin, for its part, said it was “impressed” by Trump’s position, which it contrasted with that of his predecessor Joe Biden.

“There is a political will, which was emphasised during yesterday’s conversation, to conduct a dialogue in search of a settlement,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

Russia seized Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula and its proxies captured territory in the east in 2014, before its full-scale invasion in 2022 when it captured more land in the east and south.

Ukraine pushed Russian troops back from the outskirts of Kyiv and recaptured swathes of territory in 2022, but its outmanned and outgunned forces have slowly ceded more land since a failed Ukrainian counter-offensive in 2023.

Relentless fighting has killed or injured hundreds of thousands of troops on both sides - there is no reliable death toll - and pulverised Ukrainian cities.

Through years of fighting there has been no narrowing of positions on either side. Moscow demands Kyiv cede more land and be rendered permanently neutral in any peace deal; Kyiv says Russian troops must withdraw and it must win security guarantees equivalent to NATO membership to prevent future attacks.

Ukrainian officials have acknowledged in the past that full NATO membership may be out of reach in the short term and that a hypothetical peace deal could leave some occupied land in Russian hands.

But Kyiv and its European allies made clear they were alarmed by Trump having opened negotiations with apparent concessions to Moscow, without first agreeing a common position.

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Kyiv remained committed to applying to join NATO, which he said was the simplest and least expensive way the West could provide the security guarantees needed to ensure peace.

“All our allies have said the path of Ukraine towards NATO is irreversible. This prospect is in our constitution. It is in our strategic interest.”

‘SURRENDER’

The mood in Ukraine’s capital on Thursday was downbeat.

Kyiv resident Myroslava Lesko, 23, standing near a sea of flags downtown honouring fallen troops, said: “It truly looks as if they want to surrender Ukraine, because I don’t see any benefits for our country from these negotiations or Trump’s rhetoric.”

However, Ukrainians have been worn out by three years of war, and many say they are prepared to sacrifice some aims to achieve peace.

Many were frustrated by US policy under former President Biden, who had vowed to help Ukraine win all its land back and provided tens of billions of dollars worth of military hardware, but with restrictions and delays that Ukrainian commanders say allowed Russian forces to regroup.

Trump, at least, is being more forthright about the limits of US support, said Tymofiy Mylovanov, president of the Kyiv School of Economics.

“The difference between Biden and Trump is that Trump says out loud what Biden was thinking and doing about Ukraine,” he said.​
 
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Zelensky says Russian drone damages Chornobyl plant's radiation shield
REUTERS
Published :
Feb 14, 2025 23:57
Updated :
Feb 14, 2025 23:57

1739579339230.webp


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Friday that a Russian drone had caused significant damage to the radiation containment shelter at the disused Chornobyl nuclear power plant overnight.

Zelensky and the UN's atomic energy watchdog both said that radiation levels remained normal after the incident, which came as top US, Ukrainian and European officials gathered at the Munich Security Conference to discuss the war in Ukraine.

Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for the Russian Foreign Ministry, accused Zelensky of orchestrating a drone attack to coincide with the Munich event as part of a lobbying effort to secure more weapons and money from the West.

Chornobyl was the site of the world's worst civil nuclear catastrophe when one of its four reactors exploded in 1986. That reactor is now enclosed by a shelter to contain the lingering radiation.

Chornobyl's last working reactor shut in 2000. Russia occupied the plant and the surrounding area for more than a month during its push to take the Ukrainian capital Kyiv at the beginning of the invasion.

The drone struck the radiation shelter, causing a fire that was then extinguished, Zelensky wrote on the Telegram app.

"According to initial assessments, the damage to the shelter is significant," he said.

Ukraine's emergency services said there were several areas of damage.

Ukraine's SBU security service showed pictures of what it said was the drone, which it said had been carrying a high-explosive warhead.

It said the drone was a Geran-2, the Russian name for the Iranian-designed Shahed-136, and had been intended to hit the reactor enclosure.

IMAGES SHOW FIRE AT TOP OF CHORNOBYL RADIATION ENCLOSURE

Marcel Plichta, Fellow at the Centre for Global Law and Governance at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, said the visuals released by Ukraine almost certainly showed a Shahed-136.

"The warhead of these drones is usually around 30 kg (66 lb), which is notable because it means Russia can grab headlines by launching the attack, but probably wouldn't cause large amounts of damage like you would see from a traditional missile," he said.

"Russia frequently uses attacks like this to regain control of the narrative."

Andriy Yermak, the Ukrainian president's chief of staff, posted photographs that appeared to show a small fire near the top of the shelter, known as the New Safe Confinement.

The hulking, arched steel and concrete structure was completed in 2019 to cover an earlier Soviet-built version, which had deteriorated.

It is 108 metres high (354 feet) and 162 metres long, spans 257 metres and has a lifetime of at least 100 years, according to the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development.

It cost 1.5 billion euros ($1.6 billion) and was financed by 45 donor countries and institutions.

Zelensky told reporters in Munich that the drone had flown in below radar range, at a height of 85 metres.

He was in Munich to meet US Vice-President JD Vance at a delicate moment for Ukraine, with the new US president, Donald Trump, pushing for rapid negotiations and an end to the war.​
 
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