Ukraine officials: Russian troops completed withdrawal from Sumy region
On Friday, the General Staff of Ukraine said stated that Russian forces have completed their withdrawal from Ukraine’s northern Sumy region, while continuing a buildup of forces in the country’s east.
“The Russian occupiers completely withdrew their troops from the Sumy region to the Russian Federation,” a General Staff statement on Facebook read.
Russia’s military announced previously it was withdrawing from northern Ukraine and around Kyiv to concentrate efforts in the eastern Donbas region.
The General Staff statement also noted that Russian troops continued a buildup in the southern Zaporizhzhia and eastern Donetsk regions, and continued an offensive in the direction of Popasna and Severodonetsk, in the eastern Luhansk region.
164 bodies have been found in Bucha: Ukrainian prosecutor general
Ukrainian Prosecutor General Iryna Venedyktovae revealed on Friday that 164 bodies have been found in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha, where a massacre of civilians was uncovered following the withdrawal of Russian troops.
“As of yesterday (April 7), 164 dead have been found in Bucha,” she said in televised remarks.
“Plus today 21 that we exhumated from the mass grave before heavy rain started,” she added.
Venedyktova warned that more bodies were likely to be found in destroyed buildings in the town.
Biden accuses Russia of ‘horrific atrocity’ at Ukraine rail station
US President Joe Biden has accused Russia of being behind a rocket attack on a train station in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk, deeming the incident a “horrific atrocity.”
At least 50 people were killed in the strike at the station, where those seeking to flee eastern Ukraine were awaiting evacuation.
“The attack on a Ukrainian train station is yet another horrific atrocity committed by Russia, striking civilians who were trying to evacuate and reach safety,” Biden wrote on Twitter.
Moscow: Kiev won’t escape responsibility for Kramatorsk attack
Kiev will not be able to evade responsibility for the Tochka-U tactical missile attack on Kramatorsk, the Russian Foreign Ministry said on Friday.
“We are confident that the Kiev authorities will not be able to evade responsibility,” the ministry announced.
“There is evidence of the guilt of the Armed Forces of Ukraine — it is they who are armed and use the Tochka-U missiles, the fragments of which were found at the site of the tragedy,” it added.
“Such inhuman actions of the Kiev regime confirm the validity of the tasks of the special military operation to demilitarise and denazify Ukraine,” the ministry stressed.
In connection with the strike of Ukrainian troops on Kramatorsk, Moscow calls for a halt in the supply of weapons to Kiev.
“We call on the international community to give an impartial assessment of the crimes of Ukrainian formations, to stop supplying them with weapons and to encourage Kiev to abandon unacceptable methods of warfare,” the ministry said.
Russia revokes registration of Amnesty, Human Rights Watch
The Russian Ministry of Justice has said in a statement that it revoked the registration of 15 foreign organisations, including those of Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
The Russian branches of the organisations, which also included the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “were excluded due to the discovery of violations of the current legislation of the Russian Federation,” the statement added.
Attack on Ukraine train station ‘crime against humanity’: France
The attack on the Kramatorsk rail station can be classified as a crime against humanity, France has stated.
“They hit a station where there are refugees, civilians and so this can be seen as a crime against humanity,” Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told France 5 television, calling for experts to head to the scene in Kramatorsk to gather evidence so the perpetrators can be held to account.
Putin’s approval rating soars: Poll
The proportion of Russians who trust President Vladimir Putin has risen to 81.6 per cent from 67.2 per cent before he ordered troops into Ukraine on February 24, according to a survey by a state-run pollster.
The conflict has displaced more than 10 million Ukrainians from their homes, killed or injured thousands, turned cities into rubble and led to sweeping Western sanctions that will push down Russian living standards.
Putin has crushed dissent since the invasion, shutting down media outlets who criticise his “special military operation”, restricting the internet and making mention of war or sanctions a serious criminal offence.
VTsIOM said 78.9 per cent of respondents in its latest survey said they approved of Putin’s actions, compared to 64.3 per cent in the last poll before the war. The proportion who disapproved of his actions fell to 12.9 per cent from 24.4 per cent.
It is similar to a survey published on March 30 by the independent Levada Center, in which 83 per cent of Russians approved, up from 71 per cent in February.
40 bodies in Bucha mass grave being inspected for war crimes
Kyiv regional police chief Andriy Niebitov said there were 40 bodies in the Bucha mass grave being inspected for war crimes, including two members of Ukraine’s military forces.
He added bodies in Kyiv commuter town bore gunshot wounds, backing claims they were explicitly targeted by soldiers rather than collateral damage from air strikes and artillery fire.
“I can define these events as a war crime,” he continued, noting, “International law defines killing of civilians during any kind of military conflict as a war crime.”
“These bodies will be extracted for the court investigation, they will be delivered to undergo forensic medical examination and an autopsy,” he stated.
The town of Bucha has become the growing focus of allegations of war criminality against troops ordered to invade Ukraine by Russian president Vladimir Putin on 24 February.
France is ready “to go further” and ban Russian oil: Finance minister
France is ready “to go further” and ban Russian oil, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told CNN on Friday.
Le Maire called the attack on a railway station in Kramatorsk, which left at least 50 people dead, “a massacre” and said those responsible must be “identified, prosecuted and possibly convicted for these crimes.”
France did not want to wait and a ban on oil would be a “game changer,” Le Maire stated, but added that European unity was needed to implement stricter sanctions on energy.
“As France is concerned we stand ready to go further and to decide a ban on oil and I’m deeply convinced that the next steps and the next discussions will focus on this question of the ban on Russian oil,” he continued.
Le Maire did stress that the current sanctions agreed by the EU were very effective and “the most heavy since the creation of the European union.”
UK sending more ‘high-grade’ weapons to Ukraine: Johnson
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said Britain is sending Ukraine more Starstreak anti-aircraft missiles and 800 anti-tank missiles after the “unconscionable” attack on Kramatorsk.
The “high-grade military equipment” is worth £100m ($130m), Johnson stated, with the UK anti-tank missiles seen as particularly potent against Russian forces.
The attack on the railway station at Kramatorsk “shows the depths to which Putin’s once-vaunted army has sunk”, he told reporters alongside German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
US to place Patriot missile system in Slovakia: Biden
President Joe Biden has thanked the Slovakian government for providing an S-300 air defence system to Ukraine, saying that Washington will place a US Patriot missile system in Slovakia to ensure the country’s “continued security”.
“As the Russian military repositions for the next phase of this war, I have directed my Administration to continue to spare no effort to identify and provide to the Ukrainian military the advanced weapons capabilities it needs to defend its country,” Biden stated.
Death toll from missile attack in Kramatorsk rises to 50: Governor
At least 50 people were killed, including five children, in a strike on a rail station in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk, regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko has stated.
In an online post updating an earlier preliminary death toll of 39, Kirilenko said the dead included victims who had died of their wounds after being taken to hospital or medical centres.
Nearly 400 people were wounded in the strike, according to Kirilenko, with many in critical condition.
Germany admits coming off of Russian gas isn’t easy
German chancellor Olaf Scholz said “we are doing all we can, and we are doing a lot” to reduce the country’s reliance on Russian energy, which accounts for around half of its natural gas imports.
He told the Downing Street press conference that “we are actively working to get independent of the necessity of importing gas from Russia”, but admits “this is not easy” because of the lack of infrastructure to support alternatives.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson noted that “this is not easy for any of us and I applaud the seismic decisions taken by Olaf’s government to move Germany away from Russian hydrocarbons. We cannot transform our respective energy systems overnight but we also know that [Vladimir] Putin’s war will not end overnight.”
Scholz said the UK and Germany have “close ties” despite Brexit, and expresses his “horror and indignation” at the “devastation” in Ukraine.
“Killing civilians is a war crime, and the Russian president bears responsibility for these war crimes,” he added.
He called upon Russia again to “finally agree to a ceasefire” and withdraw troops, stressing Germany will continue to deliver weapons to Ukraine.
He stated Germany is “not going to import coal anymore” and that “Germany is already starting to wean off its dependence, we’re diversifying our sources, we’re investing large-scale in order to establish the technical and physical infrastructure necessary to import natural gas via the northern German shores”.
“We’re also going to make sure with legal measures that there are no legal difficulties [to] implement our decisions quickly,” he said, vowing to continue sanctions.
Johnson: Putin ‘has forced Europe to begin to re-arm’
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the UK and its allies “cannot allow our energy security to be threatened by a rogue state” and that Russian President Vladimir Putin has “forced Europe to begin to re-arm, together, to guarantee our shared security”.
He added new measures will involve maximising potential of North Sea for energy, collaborating with Germany on renewables, and a further £100m worth of defensive military equipment to Ukraine’s forces.
He stated that this morning’s attack on a train station packed with thousands of civilians in the eastern city of Kramatorsk “the depths to which Putin’s once-vaunted army have sunk”, condemning the Russian “barbaric onslaught”.
“It is a war crime, indiscriminately to attack civilians, and Russia’s crimes in Ukraine will not go unnoticed or unpunished,” he continued.
Johnson added Putin cannot be trusted and questioned whether there is any use negotiating with him.
Confirming he had not spoken to Putin since the war began, the PM said, “Negotiating with Putin does not seem to me to be full of promise. I don’t feel that he can be trusted.”
“That’s not to say I don’t admire the efforts of people who try to find a way through, but my own view is that I am deeply, deeply sceptical and, I’m afraid, cynical now about his assurances,” he continued.
Russia declares 2 Bulgarian diplomats personae non gratae
Russia is expelling two Bulgarian diplomats from the country in a tit-for-tat response, the Foreign Ministry announced on Friday.
“On 8 April, Chargé d’Affaires of Bulgaria in Russia N. Trifonov was invited to the Russian Foreign Ministry, where he was presented with a note from the ministry declaring two employees of the Bulgarian embassy in Moscow persona non grata,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that Moscow’s decision is a response to the expulsion of two Russian diplomats from Sofia.
Russia expels 45 Polish diplomats
Moscow is expelling 45 Polish diplomats, Russia’s foreign ministry said Friday, in a tit-for-tat move after Warsaw last month expelled the same number of Russian diplomats for espionage.
The ministry added it was declaring “persona non grata” 45 employees of the Polish embassy in Russia and of Polish consulates in the cities of Irkutsk, Kaliningrad and Saint Petersburg “as a response to Poland’s unfriendly actions”.
Finland to expel two Russian diplomats
208 houses, 46 schools damaged in Kyiv: official
Russian shelling damaged 208 residential buildings and 46 schools, a city official has claimed.
The shelling, which began on the day Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, also damaged 29 kindergartens and one orphanage, Mykola Povoroznik of the Kyiv state administration said in a web-posted statement.
The figures don’t include the damage and destruction in the suburbs northwest and northwest of Kyiv, including Bucha, Irpin and Borodyanka that were severely pummeled for weeks.
NATO engaged in ‘proxy war’ against Russia in Ukraine: Moscow
NATO has been engaging in a “proxy” war against Moscow in Ukraine, the Russian Foreign Ministry’s spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.
She stressed that the alliance has been “strengthening the Kiev regime’s belief that its war crimes and cruelty towards civilians all across Ukraine will be left unpunished”.
“It is becoming more evident that, although dismissing its direct participation in the conflict, NATO is practically fighting against Russia on Ukraine’s side and by using Ukraine’s people,” she added.
Death toll in Kramatorsk rises to 40
The death toll from the Russian missile strike on a railway station in the southeastern city of Kramatorsk has risen to 40, police have announced.
Russia has denied it launched the strike.
Zelensky says “sanction cocktail, that would be remembered just like Molotov cocktails” is needed
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told Finland’s parliament on Friday that a “sanction cocktail, that would be remembered just like Molotov cocktails” is needed to halt Russian aggression.
Zelensky asked Finland to “show even more leadership” in the European Union, saying this will be “the biggest contribution in the security of Europe.”
He said that Ukraine needs weapons “that some of the EU partners have,” as well as “powerful efficient sanctions against Russia on a permanent basis.”
“We need to think about how to protect Europe from the Russian energy weapon,” Zelensky continued, adding, “How much longer can Europe ignore the introduction of embargo against oil supplies from Russia?”
Zelensky stated about 30 people have been killed in a missile strike at a railway station in the eastern city of Kramatorsk, and claimed nearly 300 have been wounded.
He described the railway terminal as an “ordinary” and “rank-and-file,” with “people crowded waiting for the trains to be evacuated to the safe territory.”
“Why do they need this war against Ukraine? Why do they need to hit civilians with missiles? Why this cruelty that the world has witnessed in Bucha and other cities liberated by the Ukrainian army?,” Zelensky asked.
Whilst saying that those “fighting for freedom” should be supported, Zelensky added that “ordinary people understand these things and this concept more than some influential leaders. Smaller countries understand it better than some of the bigger countries.”
EU has frozen 30bn euros in Russian, Belarusian assets
The EU has so far frozen nearly 30 billion euros in assets from blacklisted Russian and Belarusian individuals and companies under sanctions imposed for Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
A total of 29.5 billion euros ($32 billion) “including assets such as boats, helicopters, real estate and artwork” have been seized and another 196 billion euros of transactions have been blocked, the European Commission has said said in a statement.
Food prices soar to record levels
Prices for food commodities like grains and vegetable oils reached their highest levels ever last month because of Russia’s war in Ukraine and the “massive supply disruptions” it is causing, the United Nations has announced.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization said its Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in international prices for a basket of commodities, averaged 159.3 points last month, up 12.6 percent from February.
As it is, the February index was the highest level since its inception in 1990.
EU’s import ban on Russian coal will begin in August: Source
The European Union import ban on Russian coal will take effect in August, a European source told CNN Friday.
EU member states on Thursday evening approved a fifth package of sanctions against Russia.
The package includes an import ban on all forms of Russian coal. This affects one fourth of all Russian coal exports, amounting to around 8 billion euros in loss of revenue per year for Russia, according to the European Commission.
The EU source added that the ban will not be immediate but rather a gradual phase out. There will be “a four-month wind-down period,” according to the source.
The package also includes the closing of EU ports to Russian vessels and a ban on exports of high-tech products to Moscow.
Further details about the package are expected to be released later today in the Commission’s official journal.
Slovakia says it has given S-300 air defence system to Ukraine
Prime Minister Eduard Heger has said Slovakia has given its S-300 air defence system to Ukraine to help it defend against Russian attacks.
“I can confirm that the Slovak Republic has donated the S-300 air defence system to Ukraine, following Ukraine’s request for assistance,” Heger wrote.
Heger added the donation of the Soviet-made anti-aircraft batteries did not mean that the European Union and NATO member had joined the conflict with Russia.
700 civilian dead in Chernihiv: Mayor
At least 700 people have been killed by Russian troops in the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv, its mayor has claimed.
“I can give a preliminary figure – 700 people. It combines the servicemen and civilians,” Vladislav Atroshenko said during an online video briefing.
He added some 70 bodies can’t be identified, and there are some 40 missing persons. He added that if people were within 50 meters from a bomb explosion, their bodies burned completely.
Less than 95,000 people stayed in Chernihiv, whose pre-war population was 290,000, he noted.
Ukraine to nationalise Russia’s property: PM
Kyiv is getting ready to nationalise the property and other assets that belong to Russia or Russian businesses in Ukraine, the nation’s Prime Minister Denys Shmygal has said.
“We have already started the process. Undoubtedly, we will nationalise all Russia’s property to compensate for some of the damages Russia is inflicting on us,” he stated in televised remarks.
He added the assets would be nationalised “according to wartime conditions,” without trials.
Ukraine: Four children among those killed in Kramatorsk strike
The death toll from the Russian missile strike on a railway station in the southeastern city of Kramatorsk rose to 35, an intelligence official has announced.
Four of them are children, Artyom Dehtyarenko of the Ukrainian Security Service stated.
Officials said earlier that Russia “deliberately” struck the overcrowded railway station where thousands of civilians were awaiting evacuation trains.
Zelensky: Russia ‘evil’ with ‘no limits’
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called Russia an “evil” country with “no limits” after a deadly strike on a train station in Kramatorsk.
UK sanctions daughters of Russia’s Putin and Lavrov
The UK has announced sanctions on the daughters of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Foreign Office said it was targeting the “lavish lifestyles of the Kremlin’s inner circle”.
The move mirrored sanctions imposed by the US.
Ukraine claims Russia’s losses reach 19,000
About 19,000 Russian servicemen have been killed in Ukraine since the invasion started on February 24, Ukraine’s military has claimed.
Ukrainian forces destroyed some 700 tanks, 1,891 armored vehicles, 150 planes, 135 helicopters and 112 drones, the General Staff of the Armed Forces announced.
NATO said on March 24 that Moscow lost up to 15,000 troops in Ukraine – a figure compared to the USSR’s overall death toll during the 1979-1989 Soviet-Afghan war.
Russia denies strike on Kramatorsk railway station
Russia’s Defence Ministry has denied that Russian forces were responsible for a strike on a railway station in Kramatorsk in eastern Ukraine on Friday, the RIA news agency reported.
Ukraine’s state railway company had reported more than 30 people had been killed and over 100 wounded in the strike, which occurred as civilians were trying to evacuate to safer parts of the country.
The defence ministry announced the missile was of a type used only by the Ukrainian military, and similar to one that hit the centre of the city of Donetsk on March 14, killing 17 people.
The Russian Ministry of Defence issued a statement Friday calling the missile strike on a railway station in the Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk a “provocation.”
The statement mirrored recent denials of the indiscriminate killing of civilians in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha.
EU adopts new sanctions against Russia
The European Union has formally adopted its fifth package of sanctions against Russia, including bans on the import of coal, wood, chemicals and other products.
The measures also prevent many Russian vessels and trucks from accessing the EU, further crippling trade, and will ban all transactions with four Russian banks, including VTB.
Kramatorsk mayor says thousands at station at time of attack
The city’s mayor, Oleksander Honcharenko, has stated there were about 4,000 civilians at the city’s railway station when it was hit by what Ukrainian officials say were Russian rockets.
He added many were elderly, women and children.
Two missiles struck train station in Kramatorsk: Ukraine’s rail chief
Two missiles have struck the train station in the Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk, the head of Ukraine’s national rail system, Oleksandr Kamyshin, said on his official Telegram channel Friday.
There are reports that people have been injured but it is unclear at the moment how many, Kamyshin added.
The eastern city of Kramatorsk was one of the first places to be targeted by the Russian military when the invasion of Ukraine was launched on February 24.
Regional governor Pavlo Kirilenko said in televised remarks that the attack on the town of Kramatorsk deliberately targeted the railway where hundreds gathered to leave the town that has been heavily shelled for weeks.
Kamyshin noted that more than 30 died and over 100 were wounded.
“This is a deliberate strike at passenger infrastructure of the railroad and on the residents of Kramatorsk,” he wrote.
China: Ukrainian crisis caused by imbalance in European security system
An imbalance in Europe’s current security system is one of the main reasons behind the Ukrainian crisis, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in a telephone conversation with French Secretary of State for European Affairs Clement Beaune, the Chinese Foreign Ministry announced in a statement.
“The main cause of the Ukraine issue is an imbalance in the European security system,” Wang stated, as cited by the ministry.
“There is a need to follow the principle of indivisible security and recreate a balanced and effective security mechanism in Europe. This is the only way to establish lasting peace and stability in Europe,” the Chinese top diplomat emphasized.
Wang also pointed out that all parties should facilitate peace talks between Russia and Ukraine.
“You can’t call for a ceasefire and at the same time, continue the delivery of a large amount of weapons and ammunition, escalating hostilities,” he noted.
Ukrainian conflict unlikely to end soon: Macron
The conflict in Ukraine will not end soon, French President Emmanuel Macron told the RTL radio station on Friday.
“Unfortunately, the conflict will not end soon,” he said.
“I believe that we will see a very difficult situation in Donbass in the coming days and weeks,” Macron added.
“This is why, together with Turkey, Greece and the UN, we are doing everything to organize humanitarian operations in the cities of Mariupol and Dnepr,” the French president noted.
According to him, “Russia cannot be expected to make diplomatic concessions in the coming weeks.”
“It won’t happen until mid-May,” Macron said, adding that Russia would mark Victory Day on May 9. The French president also emphasized that every day of hostilities “makes tomorrow harder.” “There will be no peace in Europe if we don’t think about tomorrow,” he stressed.
Russian forces preparing for “massive breakthrough” attempt in Donbas region: Military governor
Ukraine sees preparations nearing completion for a “massive breakthrough” attempt by Russian forces in the eastern Donbas region, the military governor of the Luhansk region said on Friday.
“We sense the final preparations for a massive breakthrough, the great battle that will be in our Luhansk and Donetsk regions. There are constant attempts to break through the line of defense in certain directions,” Serhii Haidai, the head of the Luhansk region military administration, stated in televised remarks.
Ukrainian officials have urged residents of some cities in Donbas to evacuate in anticipation of what they say may be a major offensive.
“Since the beginning of evacuation in the Luhansk region, approximately 30,000 people have been taken out, that is only our official calculations, without including those who left voluntarily, without those people who left independently,” Haidai said.
China warns against politicization of human rights issue as Russia expelled from UN body
Beijing is opposed to the politicization of the human rights issue, said China’s Foreign Ministry in connection with Russia being suspended from its seat on the UN Human Rights Council.
“China strongly opposes… the electoral double standards and confrontation on human rights issues, and the use of the issue of human rights to pressure other countries,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Zhao Lijian, told reporters.
Following demands by the United States and the Group of Seven, the United Nations suspended Russia from the UNHRC in a vote on Thursday. The resolution to strip Russia of its seat passed with 93 votes in favor, 24 against and 58 abstentions.
Japan declares 8 Russian diplomats personae non gratae
Tokyo declared eight employees of the Russian Embassy and the trade representation personae non gratae, Japanese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hikariko Ono said on Friday.
“It was decided to expel from Japan eight employees of the Russian embassy and the trade representation in Tokyo,” the official added.
Japanese Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Koichi Hagiuda has also said Tokyo will reduce coal imports from Russia step by step.
“We will reduce imports. Finally, we will strive not to import [Russian coal],” Hagiuda told reporters on Friday.
Japan will look for a replacement for Russian coal in order to reduce the negative impact on the population and industry, Hagiuda added.
Japan has imposed several sanctions against Russia due to Russia’s military operation in Ukraine. Japan’s sanctions list includes 101 names and 130 organizations from Russia.
Ukrainian negotiator: Bucha deaths affect mood at talks with Russia
Ukraine and Russia are “constantly” holding peace talks online but the mood has been affected by events including the deaths of civilians in the town of Bucha, Ukrainian negotiator Mykhailo Podolyak has said in televised comments.
Ukrainian officials accuse Russian troops of carrying out extra-judicial killings in Bucha, outside Kyiv, where mass graves and hundreds of corpses have been discovered.
Moscow denies targeting civilians in Ukraine and has said the deaths in Bucha were a “monstrous forgery” staged by the West to discredit it.
Russia claims it destroyed training centre for ‘mercenaries’ near Odesa
Russia has announced it destroyed a training centre for “foreign mercenaries” near the city of Odesa as part of its military campaign in Ukraine.
“High-precision missiles of the Bastion coastal missile system destroyed a foreign mercenary assembly and training centre near the village of Krasnosilka, northeast of Odesa,” a defence ministry spokesperson said on Friday.
“Overall, the following targets have been destroyed since the beginning of the special military operation: 97 helicopters, 421 unmanned aerial vehicles, 228 long-and medium-range surface-to-air missile systems, 2,019 tanks and other combat armored vehicles, 223 multiple rocket launchers, 874 field artillery guns and mortars and also 1,917 special military motor vehicles,” Russian Defense Ministry Spokesman Major-General Igor Konashenkov added.
3 civilians tortured, burned in Kharkiv region: prosecutors
Three villagers have been tortured, killed and burned in the eastern Ukrainian region of Kharkiv, prosecutors have claimed.
Von der Leyen & Borrell head to Kyiv to meet Zelensky
European Commission President von der Leyen and the EU’s foreign policy chief Borrell are on their way to Ukraine’s capital to meet President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Von der Leyen is later set to attend a Stand Up For Ukraine event in Warsaw, Poland.
‘Evidence of Russian forces’ war crimes is at every turn’
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General said Russians had used cluster bombs and heavy multiple rocket launchers “that bring death and destruction”.
Iryna Venediktova stated rescue workers recovered 26 bodies from under two destroyed apartment buildings in Borodianka, northwest of Kyiv, accusing Moscow of attacking civilian areas.
“Only the civilian population was targeted: there is no military site here,” Venediktova continued, adding, “Evidence of the Russian forces’ war crimes is at every turn.”
“The enemy treacherously shelled residential infrastructure in the evenings, when there was a maximum amount of people home,” she said.
She accused Russian forces of engaging in “killings, torture and beatings” of civilians, as well as sexual assault.
Venediktova added Ukrainian law enforcement officers were collecting evidence from Borodianka for local and international courts.
Russian soldiers ‘forcibly’ conscripting Mariupol men
Russian soldiers have begun forcibly mobilising men in Mariupol to fight for Russia’s army, according to the Ukrainian Government.
Lyudmila Denisova, the ombudsman for Ukraine, said that “on the outskirts of Mariupol, which is temporarily controlled by Russian militants, the occupiers began forcibly mobilising men”.
“Forced mobilisation in Russian-occupied territories violates Article 51 of the Geneva Convention, which strictly prohibits the occupying power from forcing protected persons to serve in its armed or auxiliary forces,” Denisova stated.
She added that there had also been reports of forced conscription in the city of Vasylivka, in the Zaporizhia region, where men were being detained at a checkpoint.
Russian troops “fully withdrawn” from northern Ukraine: UK Ministry of Defense