October 24, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

October 24, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

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Video: Overnight Russian missile attack leaves Ukrainians in wreckage and uncertainty
03:09 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • US and other Western officials dismissed Moscow’s claims that Ukraine plans to use a so-called dirty bomb as a Russian false flag operation.
  • Ukraine’s counteroffensive is advancing in regions Russia claims it is annexing. Moscow is bringing new military units into the southern region of Kherson, the Ukrainian intelligence chief said.
  • Meanwhile, Russia-installed leaders in Kherson stepped up their evacuation effort, urging all residents to cross a key river. Ukraine says Russia is generating “hysteria” over the advancing counteroffensive.
  • US basketball star Brittney Griner is hoping that the Russian court will reduce her 9-year prison sentence at an appeal hearing Tuesday, her legal team said.
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UN nuclear watchdog to send inspectors to 2 sites in Ukraine after request from Kyiv

The UN’s nuclear watchdog said it will send inspectors to visit two nuclear locations in Ukraine after receiving a request to do so from authorities in Kyiv. 

The International Atomic Energy Agency said it was “aware of statements made by the Russian Federation on Sunday about alleged activities at two nuclear locations in Ukraine,” according to a news release on the agency’s website Monday

The agency did not give the location of the two sites. 

The decision follows allegations made by Russian officials in recent days that Kyiv planned to use a so-called “dirty bomb” in a false flag operation.

The weapon is designed to combine a conventional explosive, such as dynamite, with radioactive material, such as uranium, so as to disperse radioactive material over a large area.

Moscow claims without evidence that there are scientific institutions in Ukraine housing the technology needed to create the weapon and accuses Kyiv of planning to use it.

The allegations have been strongly refuted by the US, Ukraine and the United Kingdom who in turn accused Russia of trying to launch its own false-flag operation.

IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi received a written request from Ukraine to send teams to carry out verification activities at the two locations.

Grossi stressed that both sites are under IAEA safeguards.

US defense secretary discusses Russia-Ukraine with NATO's Stoltenberg

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Monday on a range of security issues, including Russia, according to a Pentagon readout.

“Both leaders agreed on the importance of maintaining strong deterrence and defense and emphasized that Russia’s actions have resulted in a stronger and more unified NATO,” the readout added.

Some background: Austin spoke Sunday with Russian defense minister Sergei Shoigu, who accused Ukrainians of planning to use a so-called dirty bomb – a claim US officials refuted as a Russian false flag operation.

It was the second call in three days between the top officials.

The Russian Ministry of Defense said the two discussed the situation in Ukraine but did not provide further details. It was Shoigu who initiated the phone call to Austin, according to a senior US administration official.

A second official familiar with the conversation said Shoigu made the claim about the planned usage of a dirty bomb, a weapon that combines conventional explosives and uranium. That claim, which the Kremlin has amplified in recent days, has been strongly refuted by the US, Ukraine and the United Kingdom as a Russian false flag operation.

Shoigu has made similar comments to his French and British counterparts as well.

Ukraine president continues to call for air-defense systems to combat Iranian-made drones

The aftermath of a Russian drone strike, which local authorities consider to be Iranian-made unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) Shahed-136, in central Kyiv, on October 17.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky is continuing to urge for more air-defense systems, saying that according to Ukrainian intelligence, Russia had ordered about 2,000 Shahed drones from Iran.  

Zelensky made the comments in a pre-recorded video address to the Haaretz Democracy Conference. Haaretz is an Israeli daily newspaper and news website.

Ukraine’s president said Russia might be offering Iran assistance with its nuclear program in exchange for Iranian-made drones that Russia has used to batter Ukraine in recent weeks, though he didn’t offer any evidence to support that claim, nor can CNN independently authenticate that.   

Zelensky also spoke about why Russia had resorted to using drones.  

Russia loses to us in a real confrontation on the battlefield. Putin’s army does not know how to fight. We beat them on our land in such a way that it is forced to withdraw its contingents even from other regions that they tried to destabilize,” he said.

Some background: Zelensky’s comments come about a week after Ukraine appealed to Israel for air-defense systems — like Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system — to counter Iranian ballistic missiles and long-range drones. 

Israel said it would help Ukraine develop an air defense alert system but did not plan to deliver any weapons systems. Israel has strategic ties with Russia, especially in its dealings with Syria, and while Israel has given Ukraine humanitarian aid, it has not offered any weapons support to date.   

Ukraine and US officials deny Russia's "dirty bomb" claims. Here are the key headlines to know

Moscow is bringing new military units into Kherson as it prepares to defend the southern city from any fresh Ukrainian offensive, according to a Ukrainian intelligence chief. Residents report growing tensions, one saying that people are “emotionally exhausted.”

Meantime, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov reiterated accusations that Ukraine is preparing to use a “dirty bomb” despite Kyiv and Western officials refuting the claims.

Here are the top headlines to know:

  • Nuclear watchdog requested to investigate “dirty bomb” claims: The European Union said it supports a request from Ukraine to have a representative from the International Atomic Energy Agency investigate Russia’s latest claims, the bloc’s chief diplomat told Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba. The Russian defense ministry is claiming that Ukraine is planning a provocation related to the detonation of the so-called “dirty bomb” or low-yield nuclear weapon in its own territory.
  • Rebukes of “dirty bomb” claim: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US officials dismissed Russia’s allegations. The White House also said on Monday it is “monitoring as best we can” any potential preparations for use of a dirty bomb in Ukraine but doesn’t currently see anything to indicate the imminent use of such a weapon.
  • Ukraine repelling Russian drone attacks, report says: Ukraine’s efforts to repel Russian attacks with Iranian-made drones are becoming “increasingly successful,” the UK Ministry of Defence said in its latest assessment. “Russia is likely expending a high number of Iranian Shahed-136 UAVs in order to penetrate increasingly effective Ukrainian air defences,” it said.
  • Grain grain in jeopardy?: Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov cast doubt on the future of a UN-backed grain deal, saying there is a “lot of work” to do before the agreement can be renewed next month. The agreement has allowed Ukraine – one of the world’s largest wheat producers – to export grain from its Black Sea ports since the beginning of August.
  • The US and the war: A group of 30 liberal Democrats called on President Joe Biden to negotiate directly with Russia to end the war. Separately, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi reiterated the US commitment to Kyv, saying that “Iran is making a big mistake” in providing help to the Russians, adding that support for Ukraine is bipartisan.
  • Detained Americans: Basketball star Brittney Griner is hoping that the Russian court will reduce her 9-year prison sentence at an appeal hearing Tuesday, her legal team said. At the same time, the State Department said the US has had active discussions “in recent days” with Russia on freeing Griner and other detained American Paul Whelan, ”but the discussions “have not gotten to the point where we would like them to be.”

Liberal Democrats call on Biden to shift Ukraine strategy and negotiate directly with Russia

More than two-dozen liberal House members are calling on President Joe Biden to shift course in his Ukraine strategy and pursue direct diplomacy with Russia to bring the months-long conflict to an end.

In a letter sent to Biden on Monday, the group of 30 Democrats praised Biden’s efforts to support Ukraine while avoiding direct US involvement on the ground. But they suggest a more forceful attempt at bringing the war to an end through diplomacy, saying it is necessary to prevent a long and slogging conflict.

The letter comes at a critical moment in the war, with Russia increasingly targeting civilian infrastructure with a particular focus on cutting power supplies ahead of winter.

In Congress, questions have grown about the willingness of lawmakers to sustain the massive financial and military support that has gone to Ukraine. Some Republicans have threatened to cut aid to the country if they take control of Congress in November.

The liberal Democrats, in their letter, say that more direct attempts at engaging Moscow were necessary.

John Kirby, the strategic communications coordinator at the National Security Council, said the White House had received the letter. He also said there were no indications that Russian President Vladimir Putin was willing to engage in serious diplomacy to bring the war to an end.

“When you see and you listen to his rhetoric, and you see the other things, be they atrocities, the war crimes, the airstrikes against civilian infrastructure that the Russians are committing, it’s clear Mr. Putin is in no mood to negotiate,” Kirby said.

He said it would be up to Ukraine and its president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to determine when the time is right to return to the negotiating table.

US still in discussions with Russia on Griner and Whelan, State Department says

The State Department said the US has had active discussions with Russia on freeing Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan, “including in recent days,” but the discussions “have not gotten to the point where we would like them to be.”

Asked about Griner’s hope that Russia would reduce her prison sentence on appeal, Price said that the US officials “have not weighed in on the various judicial proceedings and judicial steps because as we’ve made clear, we believe that these proceedings have been largely shambolic.”

Some background: A Russian court will hear Griner’s appeal arguments Tuesday, her legal team said on Monday. 

“She is prepared for the appeal and is very nervous. Brittney does not expect any miracles to happen, but hopes that the appeal court will hear the arguments of the defense and reduce the number of years,” her lawyers Maria Blagovolina and Alexander Boykov said. 

Her legal team expects there to be a verdict on the same day because appeal hearings normally happen within one court session. 

Brittney Griner was convicted in August of deliberately smuggling drugs into Russia and sentenced to nine years of jail time while Whelen has been held by Russia for alleged espionage since 2018.

EU supports Ukraine’s request for nuclear watchdog to investigate Russian bomb accusations

The European Union said it supports Ukraine’s decision to invite experts from the United Nations nuclear watchdog to investigate Russia’s “false allegations” that Kyiv plans to frame Russia for using nuclear weapons in Ukraine, the bloc’s chief diplomat told Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba on Monday. 

“(We) welcome Ukraine’s decision to request an IAEA expert mission to be dispatched. EU support to Ukraine continues unabated, including in countering disinformation,” EU’s foreign policy chief Joseph Borrell said in a tweet after his call with Kuleba. 

Borrell referred to Moscow’s claims as “Russia’s latest false allegations.” 

What Russia is saying: The Russian defense ministry said that it has information that shows Ukraine is planning a provocation related to the detonation of the so-called “dirty bomb” or low-yield nuclear weapon in its own territory.

The ministry didn’t provide any evidence to back its claim.  

Top US general spoke with Russian and Ukrainian counterparts on Monday

Top US Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke with his Russian and Ukrainian counterparts on Monday, his spokesperson said in brief readouts of each call.

Milley spoke with the Ukrainian Armed Forces Gen. Valery Zaluzhny about “the unprovoked and ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and exchanged perspectives and assessments,” the spokesperson said.

“The Chairman reaffirmed unwavering support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” according to the readout.

Yesterday, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke via telephone, the second call in three days between the two.

Brittney Griner hopes Russian court will reduce her sentence during appeal hearing tomorrow, lawyers say

American women’s basketball star Brittney Griner is hoping that the Russian court will hear her appeal arguments tomorrow and reduce her nine-year prison sentence, her legal team said on Monday. 

“She is prepared for the appeal and is very nervous. Brittney does not expect any miracles to happen, but hopes that the appeal court will hear the arguments of the defense and reduce the number of years,” her lawyers Maria Blagovolina and Alexander Boykov said. 

Her legal team expects a verdict on her appeal tomorrow because appeal hearings normally happen within one court session. 

“The appeal court can leave the verdict as is; it can overrule it and send back to the court of the first instance; it can reduce the number of years,” they said.

Griner’s lawyers see her often in Russia and said she is under mounting stress because of how long she has been detained.

Griner remains in the detention center where she has been during all these months and tomorrow she will attend the hearing through videoconference, the lawyers said.

Griner was convicted of deliberately smuggling drugs into Russia and sentenced to nine years of jail time in August in a case that has raised concerns she is being used as a political pawn in Russia’s war against Ukraine.

US House Speaker Pelosi says support for Ukraine is bipartisan and will continue

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi talks during a press conference in Zagreb, Croatia on Monday.

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi reiterated her country’s commitment to Ukraine as they fight Russian aggression, saying that “Iran is making a big mistake” in providing help to the Russians, and that support for Ukraine will continue even if Republicans take over the House following the November midterm elections. 

“Someone made a statement of ‘We’re not giving a blank check to Ukraine.’ We’ve never given a blank check to Ukraine,” she said. “So the inference to be drawn from that is we wouldn’t be giving them a help, that’s not true. And that there’s has been a blank check, that’s not true. This has been a relationship of great integrity for democracy and freedom throughout the world.”

Last week, US President Joe Biden said he’s concerned for the future of US aid to Ukraine if GOP wins the House.

“They said that if they win, they’re not likely to fund – to help – continue to fund Ukraine, the Ukrainian war against the Russians,” Biden said at a fundraiser in Philadelphia Friday, according to the press pool. “These guys don’t get it. It’s a lot bigger than Ukraine – it’s Eastern Europe. It’s NATO. It’s real, serious, serious consequential outcomes. They have no sense of American foreign policy.”

Putin ally dismisses reports that Russia is running low on weapons

Russia’s former President Dmitry Medvedev on Monday said Russian military production of weapons and equipment is increasing, in a statement on his Telegram channel.

Medvedev, a staunch ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, was reacting to recent reports by Western defense analysts suggesting that Russia is running low on missiles and armored vehicles it needs to continue its invasion of Ukraine.

“Reading enemy analytics, I have repeatedly come across statements that military equipment and weapons in Russia will soon run out. As if everything has already been used up,” Medvedev said. 

“Do not hope! The production of weapons and special equipment is increasing from tanks and guns to high-precision missiles and drones. Just wait!” he said.

Medvedev added that on Monday, following instructions given by Putin, there was a control check of the production of tanks at the Uralvagonzavod corporation in Nizhny Tagil, which is Russia’s largest manufacturer of armored vehicles.

“Issues of accelerating the supply of equipment to the troops for use during the special military operation were discussed,” Medvedev said.

Russian foreign minister casts doubt on the future of UN-backed grain deal

Russia’s foreign minister Sergey Lavrov attends a joint news conference with Secretary General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Moscow on Monday.

Russia’s foreign minister Sergey Lavrov has cast doubt on the future of a UN-backed grain deal, saying there is a “lot of work” to do before the agreement can be renewed next month.

The agreement has allowed Ukraine – one of the world’s largest wheat producers – to export grain from its Black Sea ports since the beginning of August.

Lavrov said that Moscow wanted the UN to provide evidence that the exports, which must pass through a monitoring center in Istanbul, are being directed to the world’s poorest countries. Speaking during a joint press conference with the Secretary General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Moscow on Monday, he said he had asked the UN for data on the final destinations of the grain.

Lavrov said Russia understands the poorest nations receive only five to seven percent of the exported grain, while the rest goes to the EU countries.

The data requested from the UN will inform Russia’s decision on whether to remain in the grain deal, he added.

Lavrov also complained that the second part of the agreement, which deals with the supply of Russian food and fertilizers to the world market, “is practically not implemented.” Lavrov argued that there was a need for clear legal exemptions from sanctions for Russian companies, as well as guarantees for the free entry of Russian ships into European ports and foreign ships into Russian ones. He said one of the key problems is the sanctions imposed against the Russian Agricultural Bank, the main financial institution servicing the supply of fertilizers and grain to world markets.

“There is a lot of work. The deal expires in November. And we proceed from the fact that before the issue of its extension is considered, all the issues mentioned will be resolved in a satisfactory way,” Lavrov said.

Ukraine invites nuclear experts to disprove unsubstantiated Russian "dirty bomb" claims

Ukraine has invited experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to the country to disprove unsubstantiated Russian claims that Kyiv plans to use a “dirty bomb,” Ukraine’s foreign minister has said.

In a tweet on Monday, Dmytro Kuleba said he had spoken by telephone to IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi.

“In my call … I officially invited IAEA to urgently send experts to peaceful facilities in Ukraine which Russia deceitfully claims to be developing a dirty bomb,” he said.

“He [Grossi] agreed. Unlike Russia, Ukraine has always been and remains transparent. We have nothing to hide.”

Some context: Kyiv, the US and other Western officials have dismissed Moscow’s claims that Ukraine is planning to use a so-called “dirty bomb” as a Russian false flag operation.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu had called his counterparts in the US, Britain, France and Turkey in a phone “merry-go-round” to claim Ukraine planned to explode a weapon combining conventional explosives and uranium.

Zelensky said on Sunday: “If Russia calls and says that Ukraine is allegedly preparing something, it means only one thing: Russia has already prepared all this.” 

It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

Civilians in occupied Kherson report growing tensions as Russia makes preparations for a potential Ukrainian counterattack, while Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has reiterated accusations that Ukraine is preparing to use a “dirty bomb” despite Ukraine and the US strongly refuting the claims.

Here are the latest headlines:

  • US officials debunk Russia’s “dirty bomb” claims: Russia’s defense minister Sergei Shoigu has accused Ukrainians of planning to use a so-called “dirty bomb” — a claim that was strongly refuted by US officials on Sunday as a Russian false flag operation. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky also dismissed the claims, which Kremlin spokesman Peskov repeated on Monday.
  • Russia prepares for Ukrainian counterattack in Kherson: Moscow is bringing new military units into Kherson as it prepares to defend the city from any fresh Ukrainian offensive, according to a Ukrainian intelligence chief. The Russian-installed regional administration in Kherson has announced that it is giving men remaining in the city an “opportunity” to join territorial defense units.
  • Civilians “emotionally exhausted” in Kherson: Russia is withdrawing its administrative services from the city, one resident told CNN, and the Russian-appointed administration in Kherson has ordered civilians to leave. Another Kherson resident described the situation in the city as tense, with people “emotionally exhausted,” the streets empty from mid-afternoon onwards, and Russian soldiers often seen in civilian clothes.
  • Russian TV host suspended: Russian state-controlled TV channel RT has suspended presenter Anton Krasovsky after he suggested on air that Ukrainian children in the 1980s who saw Russian forces as occupiers should have been “drowned.” RT’s editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan has denounced Krasovsky’s comments, calling them “wild and disgusting.”
  • Ukraine repelling Russian drone attacks: Ukraine’s efforts to repel Russian attacks with Iranian-made drones are becoming “increasingly successful,” the UK Ministry of Defence said in its latest assessment Monday. “Russia is likely expending a high number of Iranian Shahed-136 UAVs in order to penetrate increasingly effective Ukrainian air defences,” it said.

Russian state-controlled channel RT suspends presenter who said Ukrainian children should have been “drowned”

Anton Krasovsky attends a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in Saint Petersburg, Russia on June 16.

Russian state-controlled TV channel RT has suspended presenter Anton Krasovsky after he suggested on air that Ukrainian children in the 1980s who saw Russian forces as occupiers should have been “drowned.”

On Monday RT’s editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan denounced Krasovsky’s comments in a Telegram post, saying they were “wild and disgusting.”

Krasovsky is a commentator who hosts his own show on RT.

He made the comments in a broadcast last Thursday after author Sergei Lukyanenko said that, on a visit to Ukraine in the 1980s, children told him: “Ukraine is occupied by Muscovites.”

Krasovsky replied: “These children should have been drowned in the Tysyna [river].”

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba took to Twitter to call for a worldwide ban on RT, saying the comments amounted to “aggressive genocide incitement.”

“Governments which still have not banned RT must watch this excerpt. This is what you side with if you allow RT to operate in your countries,” Kuleba said, sharing a clip from the RT broadcast.

Krasovsky later apologized for his comments on Telegram, saying he “was really embarrassed” and “did not see the line.”

“It happens like this: You are on the air, you get carried away,” the anchor said.

“I apologize to everyone who was stunned by this. I apologize to Margarita, to everyone to whom this seemed wild, unthinkable and insurmountable. I hope you will forgive me,” Krasovsky added. 

Kremlin claims threat of using “dirty bomb” exists despite Western disbelief

The threat of Ukraine using a “dirty bomb” still exists whether NATO countries believe it or not, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on a conference call Monday.

“Their [the NATO countries’] disbelief of the information that was handed over by the Russian side does not mean that the threat of using a dirty bomb ceases to exist. The threat is clear,” Peskov told reporters during his daily press briefing.

“This information has been brought to the attention of the counterparts of defense minister [Sergei Shoigu]. Now it’s up to them whether to believe or not,” Peskov added.

Some context: Over the weekend Russia Defense Minister Shoigu accused Ukraine of planning to use a so-called “dirty bomb,” a claim that was refuted by US officials as a Russian false flag operation.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky mocked Shoigu’s claims to Western defense officials that Kyiv is planning to detonate a “dirty bomb.”

Zelensky said: “There’s only one individual who can use nuclear weapons in our part of Europe, and this person is the one who ordered Comrade Shoigu to call somewhere.”

Russian-installed authorities in Kherson invite men to join city’s territorial defense units

The Russian-installed regional administration in Kherson has announced that it is giving men remaining in the city an “opportunity” to join territorial defense units.

“For all men who wish to stay in Kherson, despite the increased security threat due to the actions of Ukrainian nationalists, the opportunity has been created to join the city’s territorial defense units,” the administration posted on Telegram on Monday.

Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree introducing martial law in Kherson and three other Ukrainian regions the Kremlin claims to have annexed, in violation of international law.

Russian law states that territorial defense should be maintained in areas where martial law has been declared.

Some context: Moscow is bringing new military units into Kherson as it prepares to defend the city from any fresh Ukrainian offensive, according to a Ukrainian intelligence chief.

Meanwhile, Russia is withdrawing its administrative services from the city, one resident told CNN, and the Russian-appointed administration in Kherson has ordered civilians to leave.

Another Kherson resident described the situation in the city as tense, with people “emotionally exhausted,” the streets empty from mid-afternoon onwards, and Russian soldiers often seen in civilian clothes.

Russia bringing new military units into Kherson as it prepares to defend city, says Ukrainian intelligence chief

Russia is bringing new military units into Kherson as it prepares to defend the city from any fresh Ukrainian offensive, the head of Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence Agency said in an interview with Kyiv-based news website Ukrainska Pravda.

Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov said that, while Moscow was moving injured people, cash and the Russian-installed administrative authorities and financial institutions out of the city, it was putting more troops in.

“[Russian bank] Promsvyazbank and other financial structures that the Russians brought there are being taken out,” Budanov said.

“They are taking out cash, [internet] servers, the so-called occupation authorities … All the non-walking, seriously injured are being taken out, they are trying to discharge those who can walk as soon as possible from hospitals … They create the illusion that everything is lost,” added Budanov.

“And at the same time, on the contrary, they bring new military units there and prepare the streets of the city for defense.”

Budanov said Moscow was acting out of fear that Ukrainian troops might retake the critical Kakhovka dam, which lies to the east of Kherson, and encircle its troops in the city. 

“They understand that if we take at least control over the Kakhovka dam … they will have to make a decision very quickly. Either [they will have to] very, very quickly leave the city and get out, or they risk ending up in the same situation that our units in Mariupol found themselves in earlier,” he said.

Budanov repeated allegations that the Russians had “partially mined” the dam.

He said he didn’t believe Russian forces would completely destroy it, because doing so would flood much of the Kherson region and cut off the water supply to annexed Crimea and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

“In other words, if you make a complete destruction, then the scenario is as follows. Are they ready for it? I don’t think so,” he said.

Kherson resident describes a ghost town of exhausted people, with acute shortages of medicine

A view of the damaged village located in the border of the Kherson region on October 7.

A resident of Kherson has described the situation in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian city as tense, with people “emotionally exhausted,” the streets empty from mid-afternoon onwards, and Russian soldiers often seen in civilian clothes.

The woman was reached by CNN through a third party, and was speaking shortly before the Russian-appointed administration in Kherson ordered civilians to leave, as Ukraine tries to retake the city in its counterattack to Moscow’s invasion.

The administration said Saturday that “due to the tense situation at the front, the increased danger of massive shelling of the city and the threat of terrorist attacks, all civilians must immediately leave the city and cross to the East bank of the Dnipro!”

Previously the authorities had recommended people leave; Saturday’s announcement appears to go beyond that.

Speaking on Friday, the female civilian in Kherson city said: “Unfortunately, many residents of Kherson had to consider leaving the city. Everyone had their own reasons, worries and fears. But I am 100% sure that no one wanted to go.”

CNN is not identifying the woman for security reasons.

She said Kherson had become a ghost town. Tens of thousands of its residents have left since the Russian occupation began in March.

Read the full story here.

READ MORE

US official says Russia’s purported fears of Ukraine using a dirty bomb are ‘transparently false’
Liberal Democrats call on Biden to shift Ukraine strategy
Kherson resident describes a ghost town of exhausted people, with acute shortages of medicine
Ukrainian military says 18 Russian cruise missiles destroyed amid attacks on energy infrastructure
First on CNN: Russian mercenary group constructs anti-tank fortification, satellite images show

READ MORE

US official says Russia’s purported fears of Ukraine using a dirty bomb are ‘transparently false’
Liberal Democrats call on Biden to shift Ukraine strategy
Kherson resident describes a ghost town of exhausted people, with acute shortages of medicine
Ukrainian military says 18 Russian cruise missiles destroyed amid attacks on energy infrastructure
First on CNN: Russian mercenary group constructs anti-tank fortification, satellite images show