News
Putin Unwavered In His Aggression As He Puts Russia’s Nuclear Forces On Alert
February 27, 2022
August 24, 2022
As well as Crimea, Russian forces have seized areas of the south including the Black Sea and Sea of Azov coasts, and chunks of the eastern Donbas region comprising the provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk.
Almost 9,000 Ukrainian military personnel have been killed in the war, its military said this week.
Russia has not publicised its losses but U.S. intelligence estimates 15,000 killed in what Moscow describes as an operation necessitated by threats to its security. Kyiv says the invasion is an unprovoked act of imperial aggression.
In the latest assassination of an official installed by Moscow in areas under its control, the head of the town of Mykhailivka in the Russian-controlled part of Zaporizhzhia region, was killed by a car bomb. On Aug. 6 the deputy head of a town in neighbouring Kherson region was shot dead in his home.
Inside Russia, authorities have set jail terms of five years for anyone referring to its actions in Ukraine as an invasion.
Opposition politician Yevgeny Roizman was shown being detained at his home in a video published on social media on Wednesday, telling reporters he was being arrested "basically for one phrase, 'the invasion of Ukraine'".
Ukraine declared independence from the Soviet Union in August 1991 after a failed putsch by Communist hardliners in Moscow, and its population voted overwhelmingly for independence in a referendum that December.
NUCLEAR PLANT HOPES
Both sides have accused the other of firing missiles and artillery at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine, Europe's biggest, raising fears of a nuclear catastrophe.
International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said the U.N. nuclear watchdog hoped to gain access within days if negotiations succeeded. The United Nations has called for the area to be demilitarised.
Ukraine's allies offered more military support, with Norway saying it and Britain would supply micro drones to help with reconnaissance and target identification and the United States was set to announce a new security package of about $3 billion.
Advanced U.S. missile systems appear to have helped Ukraine strike deep behind the front lines in recent months, taking out ammunition dumps and command posts.
In the latest mysterious fire at a Russian military facility, Russian officials said ammunition stored in the south near the border with Ukraine spontaneously combusted on Tuesday.
Vyacheslav Gladkov, the governor of Belgorod region, blamed hot weather for the fire, drawing ridicule from Ukraine's defence ministry on Twitter.
"The five main causes of sudden explosions in Russia are: winter, spring, summer, autumn and smoking," it said.