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Wars 2022 02/24 Monitoring Russian and Ukraine War.

Wars 2022 02/24 Monitoring Russian and Ukraine War.
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Kremlin says agreed to halt strikes on Kyiv until Sunday
Agence France-Presse . Kyiv, Ukraine 31 January, 2026, 01:25

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Visitors use a flashlight as they visit an exhibition during a power outage at the National Art Museum in Kyiv on Friday, amid the Russian attack of Ukraine. | AFP photo

The Kremlin on Friday said president Vladimir Putin had agreed to stop striking Kyiv for a week — ending Sunday — following a request by his US counterpart Donald Trump.

Trump had said he asked Putin to halt strikes on the Ukrainian capital and the surrounding area due to extreme cold weather.

Moscow, meanwhile, said the US leader had made the appeal in order to help the Washington-driven negotiation process to end almost four years of war between the neighbours.

Russia’s battering of Ukraine’s energy grid has left whole districts without heating, with temperatures expected to plunge to around -30C in Kyiv in the coming days, raising fears of a humanitarian crisis.

‘I can say that president Trump did indeed make a personal request to president Putin to refrain from striking Kyiv for a week until February 1 in order to create favourable conditions for negotiations,’ Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

Neither the US leader nor Moscow clarified when Trump had asked Putin.

‘I personally asked president Putin not to fire into Kyiv and the various towns for a week,’ Trump told a cabinet meeting at the White House a day earlier, adding it was ‘because of the cold, extreme cold.’

This week, Ukraine has not reported the usual large-scale barrage of drones and missiles that Russia has launched at Kyiv throughout the war.

‘There were no strikes on energy facilities last night,’ Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky said on social media Friday.

He added, however: ‘But yesterday afternoon our energy infrastructure in several regions was hit.’

Zelensky had earlier welcomed Trump’s announcement.

‘If Russia does not strike our energy infrastructure — generation facilities or any other energy assets — we will not strike theirs,’ he told journalists, including AFP, in comments released Friday.

Still, Ukraine’s air force said Moscow launched dozens of drones and a missile at Ukraine at night.

The attacks damaged civilian infrastructure in the northern Chernigiv region and a residential building in the southern Zaporizhzhia region, officials said.

The worst of the cold spell in Kyiv is due to come after February 1, with Ukraine’s weather agency warning temperatures could dip to as low as minus 30C in the coming days.

Trump had said he had appealed to Putin ‘because of the cold, extreme cold.’

The Kremlin has been silent on Ukrainians left in the freezing cold amid warnings of a humanitarian crisis and has in the past blamed their suffering on Kyiv.

The pause in Russian strikes, due to end this weekend, comes before Russian and Ukrainian negotiators meeting for a second round of talks in Abu Dhabi.

This round of talks is expected to focus on the key unresolved issue of territory.

Moscow occupies large swathes of southern and eastern Ukraine and demands that Kyiv pull out of the parts of the Donetsk region that it controls — which Ukraine sees as unacceptable.

No breakthrough has been made on the issue.

‘So far, we have been unable to find a compromise on the territorial issue, specifically regarding part of eastern Ukraine,’ Zelensky told journalists.

He added: ‘We have repeatedly said that we are ready for compromises that lead to a real end to the war, but that are in no way related to changes to Ukraine’s territorial integrity.’

Putin has repeatedly said Russia intends to seize the rest of eastern Ukraine by force if diplomacy fails.

Moscow on Friday announced it had captured another three villages in the southern Zaporizhzhia region.

Zelensky also accused Moscow of halting prisoner swaps — one of the last remaining areas of cooperation between Moscow and Kyiv during the war.

‘They are not particularly interested in exchanging people, because they do not feel that it gives them anything,’ the Ukrainian leader said.​
 
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Russia's Medvedev says victory will come soon in Ukraine war

REUTERS
Published :
Feb 01, 2026 19:47
Updated :
Feb 01, 2026 19:47

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Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev attends an interview with Reuters, TASS and WarGonzo in the Moscow region, Russia Jan 29, 2026. Photo : Dmitry Medvedev's Secretariat/Handout via REUTERS

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia’s powerful Security Council, said that Russia will “soon” win military victory in the Ukraine war but the key thing was to prevent any further conflict.

“Soon,” Medvedev, who served as Russian president from 2008 to 2012, said, when asked by the WarGonzo Russian war blogger in an interview when Russia would win the war. “I would like this to happen as soon as possible.”

“But it is equally important to think about what will happen next. After all, the goal of victory is to prevent new conflicts. This is absolutely obvious,” Medvedev said in the interview with TASS, WarGonzo and Reuters.​
 
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Ukraine talks set for next week as cold sweeps country

REUTERS
Published :
Feb 01, 2026 18:22
Updated :
Feb 01, 2026 18:22

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People line up at a bus stop during sub-zero temperatures, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine January 31, 2026. Photo : REUTERS/Thomas Peter TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

US-backed trilateral talks involving Ukraine and Russia will take place next week in Abu Dhabi, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Sunday, as Ukrainians faced uncertainty over the fate of an energy ceasefire with Russia amid plunging temperatures.

Kyiv is under US pressure to secure peace in the nearly four-year war while grappling with a Russian campaign of air strikes that has ravaged its energy system during one of the coldest winters in years.

The first round of negotiations took place in late January, but led to no new movement on the vital question of territory, with Moscow still demanding Kyiv cede more land in its war-torn east, which it refuses to do.

Zelenskiy said the new talks would take place on February 4 and 5, and that Ukraine - struggling to stop grinding Russian advances on the battlefield - was ready for a "substantive discussion".

"Ukraine is ready for a substantive discussion, and we are interested in ensuring that the outcome brings us closer to a real and dignified end to the war," Zelenskiy wrote on X.

WORKERS RACE TO RESTORE POWER

In the capital Kyiv, 1,000 apartment buildings remained without heating on Sunday, said Mayor Vitali Klitschko, as a new wave of bitter cold swept across much of the country.

Temperatures in the city on Sunday hovered around -15 degrees Celsius, as workers raced to restore heating to hundreds out of the nearly 3,500 high-rises affected by a widespread grid malfunction on Saturday.

Officials did not directly link it to war damage, but the resulting blackouts - which spread to neighbouring Moldova - underlined the vulnerability of Ukraine's energy system after months of Russian attacks.

The Kremlin said two days ago it had agreed to halt strikes on energy infrastructure until Sunday at the request of US President Donald Trump, and Kyiv said it would reciprocate.

Ukraine said the suspension was supposed to last until the following Friday.

TWO PEOPLE KILLED OVERNIGHT

The countries have not reported major strikes on their energy systems in recent days, though Zelenskiy said on Sunday that Russia was attempting "to destroy logistics and connectivity between cities and communities" through ongoing air attacks.

In southeastern Ukraine, two people were killed overnight in a drone strike on a residential building in the city of Dnipro, and six people were wounded in an attack on a maternity hospital in Zaporizhzhia, regional officials said.

Temperatures are expected to drop even further on Monday to well below minus 20 degrees Celsius in Kyiv.

Ukrainian private energy firm DTEK said on Sunday it had restored power to 300,000 households in the southern coastal region of Odesa, which had been hit hard by the malfunction.

Grid operator Ukrenergo said late on Saturday that planned outages would be in force throughout the entire country.

Anatoliy Veresenko, a 65-year-old veteran who was out for a run at a Kyiv park, said he was warily anticipating new attacks and did not place much hope in the peace process.

"Talks are talks. We hope for peace, but we still need to fight and secure victory."​
 
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