Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has said the fate of the whole Donbas region is being decided in the fight for Severodonetsk.
A food crisis sparked by Russia’s blockade of Ukrainian grain threatens to “unleash an unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution” around the world, according to the UN secretary-general. Food has become part of Russia’s “arsenal of terror,” EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said.
Three men — two Britons and a Moroccan — were sentenced to death by a pro-Russian court in the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic. They served as foreign fighters for the Ukrainian military and were captured by Russian forces in mid-April in Mariupol.
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Ukrainian officials report dozens of civilians killed in Russian shelling
From CNN's Mariya Knight
Valentyn Reznichenko, head of Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region military administration, says the city of Kryvyi Rih, located in the central part of the country, is now under constant fire from Russian forces.
Reznichenko said villages and towns in Kryvyi Rih are “littered with cluster munitions due to shelling” and there is a problem with gas, electricity and water supply.
Meanwhile, in Kharkiv, five people were killed and 14 were injured in Russian attacks, according to Oleh Syniehubov, the head of Khakiv’s regional military administration.
“Today the enemy attacked Kharkiv region, in particular settlements in the northern and northeastern directions,” Syniehubov said, adding that attacks hit residential buildings in Zolochiv.
“Five houses were destroyed. The enemy also struck at Chuhuiv district today,’’ Syniehubov said Thursday in a live question and answer broadcast on Ukrainian national television.
Syniehubov said Ukraine’s armed forces “hold their positions in the northern and northeastern directions.”
When asked why the Russian military is shelling civilian infrastructure, even though there are no visible confrontations between Russian and Ukrainian armies in the Kharkiv region at the moment, Syniehubov replied that the Russian forces “concentrated their attention on the terror of the civilian population.”
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Fierce fighting continues in critical city of Severodonetsk, Ukrainian officials say
From CNN's Jonny Hallam
A damaged building is pictured in Lysychansk as black smoke and dirt rise from the nearby city of Severodonetsk during battle between Russian and Ukrainian troops in the eastern Ukraine region of Donbas, on Thursday.
(Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images)
Ukrainian forces say the battle for the city of Severodonetsk continues to rage late on Thursday.
“The situation is consistently difficult. Our defenders are holding the line of defense, leveling the line of defense,” Serhiy Hayday, head of Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region military administration, said on national television.
“The fiercest fighting continues in Severodonetsk,” Hayday said. The city has seen intense battles in recent days.
Hayday accused the Russians of using “lies and propaganda” in claiming victory in the Severodonetsk.
While “the Russians had already reported that they had taken the city,” the official said, Russian forces had withdrawn some of their units.
Oleksandr Striuk, head of Severodonetsk’s military administration, said on television on Thursday that there is “constant street fighting.”
“The humanitarian situation in the city is critical. The bridge is under fire, so it is impossible to deliver goods. There is no water supply,” Striuk said.
Hayday said there are no direct battles in the neighboring city of Lysychansk, but he accused Russian forces of heavily shelling the area. If Russian troops took control of Lysychansk and Severodonetsk, it would place all of the Luhansk region under Moscow’s control.
Here’s a look at the areas under Russian control:
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In call with Zelensky, Macron says France "will remain mobilized to meet Ukraine's needs"
From CNN's Xiaofei Xu and Elise Hammond
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and French President Emmanuel Macron discussed humanitarian and military support during a call Thursday, according to a statement from the French government, as troops continue to battle for a key eastern city.
Local Ukrainian officials say the city of Severodonetsk is now mostly controlled by Russian forces. Earlier in separate remarks, Zelensky said the region “remains the epicenter of the confrontation in Donbas.”
According to the statement describing the nature of the call between Zelensky and Macron, the French president said his country “will remain mobilized to meet Ukraine’s needs, including heavy weapons.”
Macron also asked Zelensky about his needs “in terms of military equipment, political support, financial support and humanitarian aid.”
The statement said the two leaders agreed to stay in touch, “especially in light of the opinion that the European Commission is going to deliver on Ukraine’s application to join the European Union.”
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UK government is "deeply concerned" by death sentences for British citizens by pro-Russian court
From CNN's Zahid Mahmood in London
The UK government is “deeply concerned” with the sentencing of British citizens by a pro-Russian court, the British prime minister’s deputy spokesperson said Thursday in a statement to CNN.
A court in the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic on Thursday sentenced to death three men — British citizens Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner and Moroccan national Brahim Saadoune — that it has accused of being “mercenaries” for Ukraine, according to Russian state media outlet RIA Novosti.
“We will continue to work with Ukrainian authorities to try and secure the release of any British national who was serving in the Ukrainian Armed Forces and who are being held as prisoners of war,” according to the spokesperson.
Britain’s Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said Thursday she “utterly condemns” the sentencing of Aslin and Pinner, calling them “prisoners of war.”
“This is a sham judgment with absolutely no legitimacy. My thoughts are with the families. We continue to do everything we can to support them,” she said on Twitter.
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Next year’s harvest could be slashed by 40%, Ukrainian agriculture official says
From CNN's Chris Liakos
A Ukrainian army officer inspects a grain warehouse earlier shelled by Russian forces on May 6 in Novovorontsovka, Ukraine.
(John Moore/Getty Images)
Next year’s harvest in Ukraine could be cut by up to 40% due to the ongoing Russian invasion, Ukraine’s Agrarian Policy and Food Deputy Minister Taras Vysotskyi told CNN Thursday.
“We have lost 25% of the arable area. In terms of volumes, of course, it is more. We anticipate that the harvest will be around 35% less than previous years, which means around 30 million tonnes less, 35-40% less, almost half of the previous year harvest,” Vysotskyi said.
The deputy minister also said that an estimated 500,000 metric tons of grain have been stolen by Russia in territories controlled by Russian forces.
On Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that issues related to grain exports from Ukraine could be resolved, but Ukraine needs to de-mine the waters to ensure the safe passage of the ships.
Vysotskyi said Lavrov’s remarks are not true.
The mines could be cleared quickly, but for that to happen, the war needs to end or there has to be some form of ceasefire, he added.
“If we receive the victory and the war is ended, of course we can clear it quite quickly,” he said, adding that the process physically is not complicated but it depends on other obstacles including the ongoing war.
“Ukraine is ready to fulfill all the obligations in order to supply necessary food for international food security. So the point is very clear, Russia should stop the war,” he said.
Ukraine has also accused the Russians of placing mines in the Black Sea.
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2 Britons and Moroccan sentenced to death by pro-Russian court in self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic
From CNN's Jonny Hallam, Uliana Pavlova and Anna Chernova
From left to right: Aiden Aslin, Brahim Saadoune and Shaun Pinner were sentenced to death on Thursday.
(Russian state news agency TASS)
A court in the pro-Russian self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic on Thursday sentenced three men to death that it has accused of being “mercenaries” for Ukraine, according to Russian state media outlet RIA Novosti.
British citizens Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner and Moroccan national Brahim Saadoune appeared in court on Thursday, where they were handed down the death penalty.
The three men — all foreign fighters for the Ukrainian military — were captured by Russian forces in mid-April in Mariupol.
Saadoune, Aslin and Pinner were sentenced to death and will be shot, according to RIA Novosti’s reporting from the court in Donetsk.
The “head of the judicial board” in Donetsk said that the convicted men “can appeal the decision within a month,” according to RIA Novosti.
One of the defendants’ lawyers, Pavel Kosovan, said that his client would appeal the verdict, Russian state media TASS reported after the death penalty was handed down.
On Wednesday, Pinner, Aslin and Saadoune pleaded guilty to acts of “seizing power by force,” state media reported at the time.
“The relevant article of the Criminal Code of the DPR provides for the death penalty,” according to RIA Novosti.
Aslin also pleaded guilty under the article “training in order to carry out terrorist activities,” according to state media.
The so-called Donetsk People’s Republic, a pro-Russian area in the east of Ukraine, is not an internationally recognized government; therefore, the court’s decisions are not considered legitimate by the international community.
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European Central Bank to hike rates for the first time since 2011 as inflation hits new record
From Chris Liakos and Julia Horowitz
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, right, speaks during a press conference in Amsterdam, Netherlands on June 9.
(John Thys/AFP/Getty Images)
The European Central Bank (ECB) plans to raise interest rates from historic lows in order to counter record high inflation fueled by the war in Ukraine.
ECB kept rates unchanged in today’s meeting but confirmed plans to hike rates when it next meets in July. It said today it is looking at a 0.25% increase next month.
The announcement comes as annual inflation among the 19 countries that use the euro reached 8.1% in May, an all-time high.
“High inflation is a major challenge for all of us. The Governing Council will make sure that inflation returns to its 2% target over the medium term,” said ECB.
The European Central Bank also significantly cut its eurozone growth outlook compared to its March projections. It now expects annual real GDP growth at 2.8% in 2022 and 2.1% in 2023. In its March meeting it had projected that the economy would grow at 3.7% in 2022 and 2.8% in 2023.
“Russia’s unjustified aggression towards Ukraine continues to weigh on the economy in Europe and beyond. It is disrupting trade, is leading to shortages of materials, and is contributing to high energy and commodity prices. These factors will continue to weigh on confidence and dampen growth, especially in the near term,” said ECB. “Once current headwinds abate, economic activity is expected to pick up again.”
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Russia has started paying Mariupol pensioners in rubles, according to Ukrainian official
From CNN's Julia Presniakova and Mick Krever
Russian forces in Mariupol have begun paying pensions in Russian rubles, using cash, an adviser to that city’s Ukrainian mayor said on Thursday.
“It is now known that the occupiers have already delivered trucks with cash,” Petro Andrushchenko said on national television. “Russian pensions are being handed to pensioners in Russian rubles – which shows very well what the Russian economy is, that such a sum of money can be stupidly brought in cash and start handing out.”
Andrushchenko is not in the city but has been a reliable conduit for information from Mariupol.
Russian state news agency RIA Novosti has reported that around 46,000 applications for pension payments have been received, and that the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic has begun paying out those benefits.
Andrushchenko said that those figures can “more or less” be trusted.
“But we must add another 20 to 30 percent of our elderly Mariupol people who do not accept the occupation and deliberately did not submit documents, and another 5 percent who could not physically come and submit documents. This is a critical amount for the city in which it is located,” he said.
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Zelensky calls for Russia to be expelled from UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization
From CNN's Mick Krever
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visits troops in Bakhmut, Ukraine on June 5.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has called for Russia to be expelled from the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization over the impact its war in Ukraine has had on global food insecurity.
The call is likely largely symbolic. All 193 UN member nations are also members of the FAO.
The war in Ukraine could increase the number of “acute food insecure people” around the world by 47 million this year, to a total of 323 million, according to new projections in a joint report by the FAO and World Food Programme.
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Russia says no agreement reached with Turkey or Middle East on grain exports, but "work is underway"
From CNN’s Anna Chernova
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, left, and Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, right, speak after a news conference in Ankara, on June 8.
(Adem Altan/AFP/Getty Images)
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Thursday that no agreement had been reached yet on exporting Ukrainian grain to Turkey or the Middle East.
“No agreements have been reached yet. Work is underway,” he said on a regular conference call with journalists, commenting on possible grain deals with Turkey or the Middle East.
Peskov couldn’t confirm to CNN that the first rail cars carrying Ukrainian grain from the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol have departed, saying he had “no information” about it.
A leader in the Russian-backed military administration of the occupied portion of Zaporizhzhia region said Wednesday that the first railway wagons with grain had left from Melitopol and went through Crimea “in the direction of the Middle East.”
The Ukrainian Agrarian Council accused Russia of stealing about 600,000 tons of Ukrainian grain, which Russia denies.
Global leaders have condemned a months-long blockade by Russian forces at key ports in Ukraine — including Mariupol on the Sea of Azov and Odesa on the Black Sea — which has left more than 20 million tons of grain stuck inside the country.
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EU announces another 205 million euros in humanitarian aid for Ukraine
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite in London
The European Commission has announced another 205 million euros ($220 million) in aid for Ukraine, due to the “soaring” humanitarian crisis in the country.
“This brings the total EU humanitarian assistance in reaction to the war to 348 million euro, of which 13 million is dedicated to Moldova to support displaced people arriving in the country,” according to Balazs Ujvari, the EU Commission’s spokesperson for budget and human resources, humanitarian aid and crisis management.
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Russia "continues to press by sheer mass," says Ukrainian defense minister
From CNN's Victoria Butenko, Yulia Kesaieva, and Mick Krever
Acknowledging that Russia has the wherewithal to continue advancing on some parts of the frontline, Ukraine’s defense minister on Thursday said that he is dissatisfied with the “tempo and quantity” of weapons arriving to Ukraine.
“The Kremlin continues to press by sheer mass. It stumbles and faces strong rebuff. It suffers huge casualties,” he said. “But yet still has forces to advance in some parts of the front.”
Ukraine, he said, had “already received, bought on the market, manufactured and handed over to the Armed Forces of Ukraine a significant number of weapons.”
“These numbers would have been enough for a victorious defence operation against any army in Europe. But not against Russia. The Russian Moloch still has a lot of means for devouring human lives for to satisfy its imperial ego,” said Reznikov.
“That is why we emphasize: Ukraine desperately needs heavy weapons, and very fast. We have proved that, unlike many others, we do not fear the Kremlin,” he said. “But as a country we cannot afford to be losing our best sons and daughters.”
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It’s mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here’s what you need to know
Russia has taken control of most of the strategic city of Severodonetsk, say Ukrainian officials, while concerns are growing over a looming global food crisis caused by the war.
Here are today’s latest headlines from the Russia-Ukraine war:
Key city largely under Russian control: The battle for the key eastern Ukrainian city of Severodonetsk continues to rage, and local officials say that Russia is now largely in control. “Our armed forces control part of the city – the industrial zone, and the surrounding neighborhoods,” said Oleksandr Striuk, head of Severodonetsk’s city military administration.
Russia integrating Kherson region: Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed leader of the region, claimed that “integration has begun and will continue intensively,” without providing any further details.
Global food crisis looms: The war threatens to “unleash an unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution” around the world, the United Nations Secretary-General said on Wednesday. The conflict may push 47 million people into acute food insecurity, according to a UN projection. And Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that millions of people around the world may starve if Russia fails to allow Ukraine to export grain from its ports.
Russia claims first grain exports: The first rail cars carrying Ukrainian grain from the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol have departed for Crimea, according to Eugeny Balitsky, a leader in the Russian-backed military administration of the occupied portion of Zaporizhzhia region. Balitsky said he hoped the grain would find its way to Turkey and the Middle East.
Russia making progress, says official: Russia’s ambassador to the UN said the country’s military is progressing according to plan in its so-called “special military operation” in Ukraine. “The progress is being made, that’s clear,” Vasily Nebenzya told the BBC in an interview broadcast Wednesday.
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War in Ukraine could push 47 million people into acute food insecurity, UN says
From CNN's Mick Krever and Ivana Kottasová in London
The conflict in Ukraine could increase the number of “acute food insecure people” around the world by 47 million this year, to a total of 323 million, according to new projections from the United Nations.
The war has disrupted vital agricultural production and exports, and increased energy prices, which all have an impact of the availability and price of food, according to a joint report from the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP).
Food prices have risen by 17% since January, according to the FAO price index. The price of cereals is up by more than 21%.
That 47 million would come on top of the 276 million people that WFP estimates were already facing acute hunger before the war. The largest increases are likely to be seen in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the report.
In the five years before the war, the two countries on average were responsible for 19% of global barley production, 14% of wheat and 4% of maize. Africa and the Middle East are particularly dependent on Ukrainian and Russian wheat exports.
“In March 2022, almost half of the area planted with winter wheat and about 40 percent of area planted with rye for the 2022 harvest were in occupied or war-affected areas. While areas affected by direct fighting have shifted, the uncertainty about damages, losses and the actual harvestable area remains. Between 20 and 30 percent of these areas may remain unharvested in 2022,” according to the report.
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Russian soldiers purportedly left propaganda messages for students after wrecking school
From CNN's Sanyo Fylyppov and Ivana Kottasová
A note that was been found on a blackboard in a school in Katyuzhanka after the Russian troops left the area.
(Volodymyr Runets)
When Ukrainian forces regained control of Katyuzhanka, a village north of Kyiv that had been under Russian occupation for more than a month in March, they found the local school wrecked. Any equipment that hadn’t been stolen was smashed, there was a makeshift cemetery in the school yard and deep trenches had been dug across the football pitch.
Inside one of the destroyed classrooms, written in chalk on a big, green blackboard hanging on the wall just below a portrait of Isaac Newton, was a letter addressed to the pupils and signed “the Russians.”
The note, written in Russian, as opposed to Ukrainian — the school’s language of instruction — was one of several left on blackboards and whiteboards scattered around the building. “We are for the peace in the whole world,” another one said.
CNN cannot independently verify who wrote the notes.
Mikola Mikitchik, the principal of the Secondary School of Katyuzhanka, told CNN last month he felt disgusted when he found the notes.
“They wrote ‘Russians and Ukrainians are brothers’ and at the same time they robbed the school … they ruined computers, they took out hard drives, they took away laptops, printers, they left nothing at the school! It’s barbarism and hypocrisy,” he said.
The integration of Kherson into Russia has started, claims Russia-appointed leader
From CNN's Julia Presniakova and Mick Krever
The integration of the Ukraine’s Kherson region into Russia is underway, the Russian-appointed leader of the region claimed on Thursday.
Saldo offered no further details on what “integration” means.
Russian troops guard an entrance of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Station, a run-of-the-river power plant on the Dnieper River in Kherson region, southern Ukraine, on May 20.
(AP)
The city of Kherson, in the south of Ukraine, has been under Russian control since the early days of the invasion.
But the Ukrainian military has in recent weeks stepped up its counterattacks on Russian positions in the Kherson region.
A senior official in Russia’s governing United Russia party, Andrei Turchak, visited Kherson last week.
“We feel that we are already together with Russia,” Saldo said. “There is confidence that in a common big family all problems will be solved systematically and we will adequately respond to all requests of the time.”
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Battle for Severodonetsk "developing quite dynamically" after "difficult" night, say officials
From CNN's Julia Presniakova and Mick Krever
The battle for the eastern Ukrainian city of Severodonetsk continues to rage as local officials say that Russia now controls most of the key city.
“The night was difficult,” said Oleksandr Striuk, head of Severodonetsk’s city military administration, on national television Thursday morning. “Our armed forces control part of the city – the industrial zone, and the surrounding neighborhoods.”
There were no casualties at the chemical plant overnight and “the bomb shelter also survived,” said Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk region military administration via Telegram on Thursday.
“The blasts damaged at least two plant shops in the chemical plant,” Hayday said. “One of them is a key one – for the ammonia production 1-B. However, no chemicals emissions were into the environment – all fertilizers and chemicals, according to the owner of the enterprise, were removed from the territory on the second day of the war.”
Earlier Thursday, in an interview on national television, Hayday said that “street fights” continue to rage in the city.
“Russia is constantly firing on the part that is controlled by the Ukrainians. They are constantly firing artillery, and very powerfully,” he added. “And they dismantle the houses floor by floor. In this sense, it is very difficult.”
Hayday said that he believed that Russia wanted to capture the whole city by the weekend, in time for Russia Day on Sunday, but that they would not achieve that goal.
“As soon as we have long-range artillery so that we can hold artillery duels with Russian artillery, our special forces can clear the city in two to three days,” he said.
A National Guard commander fighting for control of the city told national television on Thursday that his forces were “catastrophically short of artillery barrels.”
On Wednesday Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, said that his military is progressing according to plan in its so-called “special military operation” in Ukraine.
“You will see the liberation of all the Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts,” he said. “That will hopefully take place soon.”
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First rail cars with grain depart occupied Melitopol, says Russia-backed leader
From CNN's Olga Voitovych and Mick Krever
The first rail cars carrying Ukrainian grain from the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol have departed, headed towards Crimea, a leader in the Russian-backed military administration of the occupied portion of Zaporizhzhia region said on Wednesday.
Balitsky said he hoped the grain would find its way to Turkey and the Middle East in quotes cited by state-run broadcaster Russia-24.
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Ukraine war threatens "unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution," says UN Secretary-General
From CNN's Kristina Sguelia and Mick Krever
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres addresses reporters during a news conference to introduce the second report of the Global Crisis Response Group on June 8, at UN headquarters, New York.
(Mary Altaffer/AP)
The war in Ukraine threatens to “unleash an unprecedented wave of hunger and destitution” around the world, the United Nations Secretary-General said on Wednesday.
This year’s crisis is about “lack of access,” he said. “Next year’s could be about lack of food.
“Make no mistake: no country or community will be left untouched by this cost-of-living crisis.”
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Zelensky says "millions of people may starve" if Russia continues blockade of ports
From CNN's Mick Krever
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks via taped video address to the Time 100 Gala from Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 9.
(President of Ukraine)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is warning that millions of people around the world may starve if Russia fails to allow Ukraine to export grain from its ports.
Some context: Global leaders have condemned a months-long blockade by Russian forces at key ports in Ukraine — including Mariupol on the Sea of Azov and Odesa on the Black Sea — which has left more than 20 million tons of grain stuck inside the country. The Ukrainian Navy said Monday that approximately 30 Russian ships and submarines continued the blockade of civilian shipping in the Black Sea.
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Russian ambassador says "progress is being made" in its invasion of Ukraine
From CNN's Mick Krever
Vasily Nebenzya, Permanent Representative of Russia to the United Nations is seen on Thursday, May 19.
(John Minchillo/AP)
Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations said the country’s military is progressing according to plan in its so-called “special military operation” in Ukraine.
He claimed “the plan is developing according to the military plans that were initially envisaged — of course with minor tactical changes, because you cannot predict whatever happens on the front line.”
“You will see the liberation of all the Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts. That will hopefully take place soon,” he said.
Some context: More than three months into its bloody assault on Ukraine, Russia insists on referring to the Kremlin’s attack as a “special military operation,” effectively banning words such as invasion and war.
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Ukrainian forces "catastrophically short of artillery barrels" in Luhansk, commander says
From CNN's Julia Presniakova and Mick Krever
Ukrainian forces fighting for control of the twin eastern Ukrainian cites of Severodonetsk and Lysychansk are “catastrophically” short of artillery pieces, a commander in the national guard fighting in that region said on national television.
Smoke and dirt rise from shelling in the city of Severodonetsk in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on June 7.
(Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images)
Tactical retreat: The head of the Luhansk regional military administration, Serhiy Hayday, suggested on Wednesday that Ukrainian forces might stage a tactical retreat in Severodonetsk. Its sister city, Lysychansk, lies on strategic high ground across the Siverskyi Donets River. Later on Wednesday, Hayday said Russia now controls most of Severodonetsk.
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Ukrainian official accuses Russia of stealing 600,000 tons of grain
From CNN’s Mariya Knight
A satellite image shows an overview of bulk carrier ship loading grain at the port of Sevastopol, Crimea, on May 19.
(Maxar Technologies/Reuters)
A Ukrainian official on Wednesday accused Russia of stealing about 600,000 tons of grain from Ukraine that he claimed was later transported to the Middle East.
In a statement, Denys Marchuk, deputy chairman of the Ukrainian Agrarian Council Public Union claimed the grain was stolen from occupied regions in the south of the country.
He claimed the grain was transported to the port of Sevastopol in the Russian-occupied territory of Crimea before onward shipment to the Middle East.
Russia has not yet responded to Marchuk’s accusation.
Some context: CNN has previously reported that convoys of trucks have been seen carrying grain from farms and silos in southern Ukraine into Crimea. Ukrainian authorities estimated in May that Russian forces in occupied areas had seized more than 400,000 tons of grain.
CNN cannot independently verify how much grain Russia has transported out of Ukraine.
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South Korea pledges more than $1 million to support Ukraine's nuclear power plants
From CNN’s Gawon Bae in Seoul, South Korea
South Korea will provide $1.2 million dollars to support the safe operations of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants that are under military threats amid the ongoing war with Russia, the country’s Foreign Ministry said in a news release.
The support will be provided through the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to dispatch IAEA personnel and buy equipment needed to take safety measures at the facilities, it said.
The decision was announced during an IAEA board meeting in Vienna.
In Seoul on Wednesday, Foreign Minister Park Jin expressed regret over the war as he met with Ukraine’s Vice Foreign Minister Dmytro Senik, according to the ministry.
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Most of Severodonetsk is under Russian control, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's Jonny Hallam
Smoke and dirt rise from shelling in the city of Severodonetsk on June 7.
(Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images)
Most of the eastern city of Severodonetsk is now controlled by the Russians, Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk regional military administration, announced on Wednesday.
Earlier in the day, Ukrainian forces reported fierce battles taking place at several locations across the eastern city in Ukraine’s Luhansk region.
In an interview with news outlet RBC-Ukraine on Wednesday, Hayday said that earlier this week, Ukrainian special forces had managed to take control of almost half of the city.
But he said that when the Russian troops saw the Ukrainian advance, “they simply began to level it to the ground with air strikes and artillery.”
Hayday explained that Ukrainian forces had no choice but to make a temporary tactical retreat from the central parts of the city due to the intense Russian bombardment.
The official said that despite the pullback, Ukraine has retained control of Serverodonetsk’s industrial zone, a key area on the outskirts of the city.
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Zelensky: Fate of Ukraine's Donbas is being decided in Severodonetsk as "fierce battle" continues
From CNN's Mariya Knight
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during his evening video message on Wednesday June 8.
(Office of President of Ukraine)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the eastern city of Severodonetsk “remains the epicenter of the confrontation in Donbas.”
Zelensky also said that on Wednesday “the occupiers announced the absolutely crazy news that they are preparing to unite some football clubs from all occupied territories into one pseudo-championship — from Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, Melitopol, Crimea, and even part of Georgia.”
He called this decision “a mockery” of the Ukrainian people. Only the return of Ukraine, Zelensky stressed, will mean “a normal life for these territories, for these cities — again… Peaceful, safe, open to the world. And of course — new matches of world-class teams at the Donbas Arena,” he added.
Zelensky also thanked Polish President Andrzej Duda and Slovakian President Zuzana Čaputová for the joint initiative to start “a special trip to European countries to support the European perspective of our country.” He said all Ukrainian diplomats are working on this issue in full.
The Ukrainian President also mentioned that he addressed the representatives of the world’s largest investment funds at a private event on Wednesday and urged them to invest in Ukraine.
Zelensky talked to “members of the community of leaders of major American companies.” He prompted them “to leave the Russian market and not to support this war with their taxes.” He said it is very important for him to know that these leaders support strengthening the sanctions against Russia.
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Foreigners shown in court video charged with being "mercenaries" by pro-Russian separatists
From Oleksandra Ochman and Ivana Kottasová
Authorities in the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) in eastern Ukraine have released a propaganda video showing three foreigners in court over accusations they were mercenaries fighting for Ukraine.
The video, released Tuesday by the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti, showed British citizens Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner and Moroccan national Brahim Saadoune.
Russia is the only country that considers the DPR independent. The international community does not recognize DPR and its institutions and considers the territory to be part of Ukraine.
DPR authorities said the three were foreign fighters who had been captured in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol by Russian forces in April. Independent watchdog groups have long accused the separatists of a dismal human-rights track record and ill-treatment of prisoners.
The Ukrainian government said in a statement on Wednesday that it considers all foreign volunteers to be members of its armed forces and to be lawful combatants entitled to treatment as prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions.
The family of Aslin said Tuesday it was working with the UK Foreign Office and Ukrainian government to get him home, according to PA media. In a statement released through the UK Foreign Office, the family said Aslin was “a “much-loved man and very much missed.”
Pinner was previously a member of the UK Armed Forces, according to a statement released by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office in April. Several friends of Saadoune told CNN he initially came to Ukraine to study at a university and joined the Ukrainian armed forces in 2021.
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US Treasury bans Americans from buying Russian stocks and bonds
From CNN’s Matt Egan
US President Joe Biden’s administration has issued new investment restrictions that prohibit Americans from buying Russian stocks and bonds.
The ban is the latest step by US officials to crank up the financial pressure on Russia in response to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
According to new guidance issued Monday by the Treasury Department, US investors are prohibited from buying “both new and existing debt and equity securities issued by an entity in the Russian Federation.”
Up until now, Americans were able to buy Russian stocks and bonds that change hands in secondary markets.
Americans will still be allowed to sell Russian stocks and bonds, although only to a “non-US person,” the Treasury said. Americans are not “required” to divest Russian securities and may continue to hold them, according to the guidance.
And US investors can also still invest in US funds that own Russian securities, as long as those Russian holdings are not the bulk of the fund’s assets.
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Economic organization slashes global growth outlook due to the war in Ukraine
From CNN's Chris Liakos
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has sharply downgraded its global growth forecasts for 2022 warning that “the world is set to pay a hefty price for Russia’s war against Ukraine.”OECD now expects global growth to be 3% in 2022 — down from 4.5% in its December forecast — and to remain at similar pace for 2023.
The forecast is in line with the World Bank, which said yesterday that it expects global growth to be 2.9% in 2022.
Among the G20 countries, OECD expects the UK to be hit the most in 2023 besides Russia, projecting that the country will post zero growth in 2023 after growing by 3.6% in 2022.
Boone called for global cooperation to avoid a food crisis.
“Today, the world is producing enough cereals to feed everyone, but prices are very high and the risk is that this production will not reach those who need it most. Global cooperation is needed to ensure that food reaches consumers at affordable prices, in particular in low-income and emerging market economies,” Boone said.
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Food is now part of Russia's "arsenal of terror," says EU chief
From CNN’s Niamh Kennedy in London
Food has become part of Russia’s “arsenal of terror,” European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said Wednesday.
In an address to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, von der Leyen stressed the urgent need to restore Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, as a remedy to the looming global food crisis.
The EU’s sanctions against Russia “do not touch basic food commodities,” the EU Commission chief stressed.
Her remarks come as Russian and Turkish foreign ministers held meetings in Ankara on Wednesday to discuss issues related to grain exports from Ukraine.
Von der Leyen thanked the United Nations for its “efforts” to help restore Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, reiterating that the “majority of Ukrainian grain can only be exported” through these routes.
There is an expectation for the EU to show the “same solidarity” it has “shown to Ukraine when it comes to addressing the food crisis in the world,” she added, committing the bloc to this task.
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Ukraine files 8 more war crimes cases, says prosecutor general
From CNN's Oleksandra Ochman and Mick Krever
Ukraine has filed eight more war crimes cases involving Russian soldiers, Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova said on national television on Wednesday.
On May 23, a 21-year-old Russian soldier was sentenced to life in prison for killing an unarmed man in Ukraine’s first war crimes trial since Russia’s invasion.
Another two Russian soldiers were convicted for “violating the laws of war” by the Kotelevsky district court of Poltava region on May 31.
Venediktova said that prosecutors are investigating about 16,000 war crimes cases.
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Zelensky says he discussed "enhancing defense support" with German leader
From CNN's Mick Krever
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday that he had discussed improving his country’s defenses during a phone call with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
In recent months, the German government and Chancellor Scholz have come under pressure from Ukraine and politicians at home for not doing enough to help Ukraine defend itself against the Russian invasion.
But at the end of April, Germany agreed to deliver Gepard anti-aircraft tanks to Ukraine, and last week it said it will supply Ukraine with seven self-propelled howitzers.
While relations between the two countries have improved, ”we have to make sure that the positive dynamic is maintained and we all move forward and that right decisions are being taken,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said on May 12.