Friday, March 24, 2023
A Russian
strike on a humanitarian support centre in an eastern Ukraine town has
killed five people, emergency services said, as Moscow's forces push to
capture the entire industrial Donetsk region.
"The town of
Kostyantynivka came under rocket fire during the night of March 24. One
of the rockets hit a one-storey building," the emergency services said
on Telegram, specifying that three women and two men had died.
Emergency services said the three women killed were internally displaced from Bakhmut, Chasiv Yar and Opytne.
Kostyantynivka
lies about 25 kilometres (15 miles) west of Bakhmut, an industrial city
that has seen the longest and bloodiest battle of the invasion.
Two
more people were killed in heavy Russian shelling of the Sumy region of
northern Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's office said.
0951 GMT — Zelenskyy tells EU victory will be gained with cooperation
Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said that his country will be
victorious in its war with Russia if there are no "delays" or
"stagnation" in cooperation between Kiev and the EU.
“No one knows
for sure how long the war will last and which battles will bring us
success faster… but what is clear is that if there are no delays or
stagnation in out cooperation, and if our joint efforts are resolutely
focused on Ukrainian victory, the victory will be gained this year,” he
said in a video address to the European Council.
Zelenskyy also
said that despite the growth in cooperation between Ukraine and the EU,
delays in the supply of long-range missiles and modern aircraft affected
Ukrainian military actions, especially in the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions.He sought reasons behind the delay, namely in the case of modern aircraft.
Zelenskyy
further said that Europe’s "procrastination" regarding new sanctions on
Russia is becoming “more and more unpleasant,” noting that global
efforts against Russia are not yet enough while the EU has not shown
that sanctions on Moscow will increase.
0924 GMT — Ukraine scrambles for 'game-changer' drone fleet
As
Ukraine seeks to narrow the yawning gap between its own military
capabilities and Russia's, Kiev says it is expanding its drone programme
for both reconnaissance and attacking enemy targets over an increasing
range.
It is hoping that domestic drone makers like AeroDrone will help it meet its ambitious goals.
AeroDrone,
which made crop-dusting drones prior to the war and now supplies
Ukraine’s armed forces, makes unmanned aircraft that can carry up to 300
kilograms or fly up to several thousand kilometres in certain
configurations.
The government is now working with more than 80
Ukraine-based drone manufacturers, Ukraine's Defence Minister Oleksii
Reznikov told Reuters.
He said Kiev needs hundreds of thousands of
drones, many of which it is looking to source from a rapidly-expanding
domestic industry. Currently, the military operates dozens of models of
domestic and foreign drones that fulfil a “wide spectrum” of roles,
Reznikov said, in written responses to questions.
0901GMT — Russia's Medvedev: We don't want direct conflict with NATO
Russian
ex-President Dmitry Medvedev has said that Russia was not planning to
enter into a direct conflict with NATO and was interested in resolving
the Ukraine crisis through talks, the Interfax news agency reported.
However,
he warned that any Ukrainian attempt to take the Crimean peninsula -
which Moscow annexed in 2014 - would be grounds for Russia to use
"absolutely any weapon" against Kiev in response.
0701 GMT — Ukraine prepares counteroffensive as Russia's assault flags
Ukrainian
troops, on the defensive for months, will soon counterattack as
Russia's offensive looks to be faltering, a commander said, but
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned that without a faster supply of
arms, the war could last years.
The Ukrainian military said early
on Friday that 1,020 Russian troops had been killed over the previous 24
hours as they launched unsuccessful attacks on the towns of Lyman,
Avdiivka, Mariinka, and Shakhtarske. But their main focus was still the
mining town of Bakhmut.
Russian forces have for months been trying to capture Bakhmut as they seek to extend their control over eastern Ukraine.
There was no immediate word from Russia on the latest fighting and Reuters could not verify the battlefield reports.
Ukraine's
top ground forces commander Oleksandr Syrskyi said earlier his forces
would soon begin a counter-offensive after withstanding Russia's winter
campaign.
0518 GMT — Moscow forces may go to Kiev or Lviv: ex-Russian president
Russian
forces may have to advance as far as Kiev or Lviv in Ukraine, Russia's
former president Dmitry Medvedev has said in an interview with Russian
news agencies.
"Nothing can be ruled out here. If you need to get
to Kiev, then you need to go to Kiev, if to Lviv, then you need to go to
Lviv in order to destroy this infection," RIA Novosti quoted Medvedev
as saying.
0107 GMT — Russia reacts to UK decision to send uranium-based ammo to Ukraine
Russia
has threatened to escalate attacks in Ukraine after the British
government announced it would provide Ukraine with a type of munition
that Moscow claims has nuclear components.
The British defence
ministry on Monday confirmed it would provide Ukraine with
armour-piercing rounds containing depleted uranium.
Such rounds
were developed by the US during the Cold War to destroy Soviet tanks,
including the same T-72 tanks that Ukraine now faces in its push to
break through a stalemate in the east.
Depleted uranium is a
byproduct of the uranium enrichment process needed to create nuclear
weapons. The rounds retain some radioactive properties, but they can't
generate a nuclear reaction like a nuclear weapon would, RAND nuclear
expert and policy researcher Edward Geist said.
23:12 GMT — Russia hits out at Council of Europe as Ukraine fight grinds on
Russia
understood the decision to quit the Council of Europe was right and
will not return to it in the future, a Russian senior diplomat has said,
accusing the council of being Russophobic [dislike or fear of Russia].
In
an interview with TASS news agency, Director of the Russian Foreign
Ministry’s Department of European Cooperation Nikolay Kobrinets said,
"Our 'divorce' with Strasbourg is not a whim, it’s a well-thought
decision that took a few years to ripe. The Council of Europe of the
present day is far from what it used to be back in 1996. Double
standards, hypocrisy and Russophobia are its distinctive traits now.
Clearly, with the Council of Europe of this kind, our ways have parted."
Kobrinets
went on to say that unification principles and democratic ideals,
proclaimed by the Council of Europe's Charter were "sacrificed to bloc
interests."
In his words, the West turned the organisation into
its ideological appendage and used it to "impose its dubious
'progressivist' values" on Russia and to put pressure on its government
and people.
"The page has been turned. There is nothing to regret," the Russian diplomat added.
2044 GMT — Russia takes a dig at 'biased' German media
A
report by the German government to the parliament, showing that the
country's media are not "just biased, but receive a salary from the
government," confirms what Russia "was aware of" long ago, the Foreign
Ministry spokesperson has said.
Speaking at a news conference in
Moscow, Maria Zakharova told the Anadolu Agency that the German
authorities "have done this [interfered in the work of the media]
historically and are doing it now."
"We learned nothing new, we've
been saying all the time that the German media ... are biased, paid for
by German political forces, prone to propaganda and self-censorship.
"Now
the German media themselves published relevant materials provided
officially by the German side, from which it follows that the German
government, contrary to the [previous] statements not only interfere but
pays and moderates the content," she said.
Zakharova said Russia
is open to "constructive settlement" of conflicts, but if its voice is
not heard, then "it learned to take mirror measures."
Source: TRTWorld and agencies
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