July 14, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

July 14, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

Russian State TV Vladimir Soloviev
Hear TV host lash out at viewers who defended fired Russian general
00:41 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • The United States is close to a decision on providing Ukraine with ATACMs, which are guided missiles with a range of up to 300 kilometers (about 186 miles), a top aide to President Volodymyr Zelensky said Friday.
  • President Vladimir Putin called the Wagner Group’s legal future into question and suggested a new commander for the private military force in remarks to a Russian newspaper.
  • Russian governors in regions near Ukraine are reporting fresh cross-border drone attacks, while Kyiv said a Russian drone strike hit the city of Kryvyi Rih.
  • Cannabis might soon be a legal form of treatment for wounded Ukrainian soldiers, as well as other people with serious illnesses after a bill to legalize its use for medical purposes passed its first hurdle in Ukraine’s parliament.
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Our live coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news here or read through the updates below.

Cluster munitions arrive in Ukraine, while Putin suggests a new Wagner commander. Catch up on the latest

The much-anticipated and controversial American-made cluster munitions are now in Ukraine, according to a Ukrainian general and the Pentagon.

“We just got them, we haven’t used them yet, but it can radically change (the battlefield),” Brig. Gen. Oleksandr Tarnavsky told CNN at an interview in central Ukraine on Thursday morning.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Ukrainian citizen charged with murder of Russian commander: Sergei Denisenko, a Ukrainian citizen, has been charged with the “premeditated murder” of Stanislav Rzhitsky and illegal arms trafficking, the Russian Investigative Committee said Friday. Denisenko was detained earlier this week in connection with the murder of Rzhitsky, a former submarine commander in Russia’s Black Sea fleet. Rzhitsky was killed early Monday morning as he was running through a park in Krasnodar.
  • Alleged Russian saboteur gets 10-year prison sentence: The Security Service of Ukraine said an alleged Russian saboteur has been given a 10-year prison sentence for a foiled plot to blow up transportation infrastructure in the western Ukrainian region of Rivne. Ukrainian investigators identified him as a former militant who fought against Ukraine’s Anti-Terrorist Operation in eastern Ukraine before Russia’s full-scale invasion began.
  • Putin proposes new Wagner commander: Russian President Vladimir Putin proposed to Wagner fighters that a senior mercenary named Andrey Troshev command the private military group, according to comments the Russian leader made to the Kommersant newspaper published Friday. Going by the call sign “Sedoy,” meaning “Gray Hair,” Troshev is a retired Russian colonel and a founding member and executive director of the Wagner Group, according to sanctions documents published by the European Union and France. He has also been sanctioned by Ukraine.
  • Belarus and the Russian military: Ukraine recorded around 2,000 Russian military personnel stationed at Belarusian training grounds until recently, but at the moment “almost all Russian troops have been withdrawn from the territory of Belarus,” said Andrii Demchenko, a spokesperson for the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine. Earlier, the Belarusian Defense Ministry announced that Wagner private mercenary group fighters are training Belarusian fighters near the town of Osipovichi, about 90 kilometers (56 miles) south of the capital Minsk.

US is “very close” to a decision on providing guided missiles to Ukraine, Zelensky aide says

An early version of an Army Tactical Missile System is tested on December 14, 2021, at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

One of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s most senior aides has expressed optimism Kyiv might soon be adding Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMs) to its arsenal of weapons. The US-manufactured guided missile has a range of up to 300 kilometers (about 186 miles).

Andriy Yermak told journalists in Kyiv he believed the Biden administration was “very close” to making a decision on approving the transfer of the missiles to Ukraine, though he stressed that a final decision had not yet been made.

Ukrainian leaders have had ATACMs close to the top of their wish list since the early months of the war. The missiles’ longer range would bring more Russian targets into view, including some in occupied Crimea, as well as in Russia itself, a fact that has worried the US.

Key among the Russian targets Ukraine is looking to hit are ammunition dumps and fuel depots, as well as buildings housing Russian soldiers far behind the frontlines.

In recent months, Ukraine has stepped up these strikes in what are described as shaping operations, aimed at disrupting and degrading enemy supply lines ahead of ground offensives. Reports suggest Ukraine has begun to make effective use of Storm Shadow missiles, which were donated by the UK in May and have a range of about 250 kilometers (155 miles).

Yermak’s comments follow a report in The New York Times that described a “quiet debate” inside the Biden administration over whether to send the missiles to Ukraine, thereby reversing the US position that Ukraine does not need them.

Russia “investing everything” to stop Ukrainian forces in the south and east, Zelensky says

President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia is applying its maximum efforts to stop Ukraine’s advancements in the southern and eastern parts of the country.

“Our full focus is on the frontline,”  Zelensky said.

Zelensky also said there will be further negotiations with international partners after returning from the NATO summit in Vilnius.

Russia charges Ukrainian citizen with murder of Russian commander

Sergei Denisenko has been charged with the “premeditated murder” of Stanislav Rzhitsky and illegal arms trafficking, the Russian Investigative Committee said in a statement Friday.

Denisenko, a Ukrainian citizen, was detained earlier this week in connection with the murder of Rzhitsky, a former submarine commander in Russia’s Black Sea fleet. Rzhitsky was killed early Monday morning as he was running through a park in Krasnodar.

Russia’s Investigative Committee previously posted a video showing the suspect, who they have now named as Denisenko, being walked through the scene of the murder. It is not clear whether Denisenko was under duress as he spoke at the scene, in a Krasnodar park.

South Africa should follow international law if Putin visits, ICC's chief prosecutor says

International Criminal Court (ICC) Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan speaks during a UN Security Council meeting at the United Nations headquarters on July 13, in New York City.

South Africa should do “the right thing” and follow international law if Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the BRICS bloc summit in Johannesburg next month in person, International Criminal Court (ICC) Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan told CNN on Friday. 

The term BRIC was coined by Goldman Sachs economist Jim O’Neill in 2001 to describe the rise of Brazil, Russia, India and China. The BRIC bloc had its first summit in 2009 in Russia, and South Africa joined in 2010.

Some background: ICC issued an arrest warrant for Putin and Russia’s children’s rights commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova in March over the war crime of unlawful deportation of children. Russia – like the US, Ukraine and China – is not a member of the ICC.

As the court does not conduct trials in absentia, Putin would either have to be handed over by Moscow or arrested outside of Russia. Most countries on Earth – 123 of them – are parties to the treaty, and the ICC statute states that all state parties have the legal obligation to cooperate with the court. It means that they’re obliged to execute arrest warrants.

However, South Africa — the host for this year’s BRICS summit — has issued diplomatic immunity to all officials attending a summit in August, meaning Putin might be able to travel to the country despite the ICC warrant for his arrest.

South African officials insist that this is standard protocol and it may not override the ICC arrest warrant. South Africa has not received any confirmation as to whether Putin would attend the summit, according to Naledi Pandor, South Africa’s Minister for International Relations.

“South Africa has felt a crime against humanity for decades, the crime of apartheid, I don’t think they need lessons from me,” he said. “They are voluntarily a state party to the ICC, they know what the law is, and I think they would do the right thing. And we will assess what actually happens at the BRICS summit and respond accordingly,” Khan, the ICC prosecutor, told CNN.

“I am a prosecutor, I need to be prudent and prepared for different scenarios with the tools I have available,” he added. “South Africa, and I’ve said it before, and I mean it, is a respective state party. Whenever I look at South Africa, I recall the greatness of the great Mandela. And I think all South Africans will look to him, not to me, about what would the great Nelson Mandela do.”

Putin has proposed a potential new Wagner commander. Here's what we know

Russian President Vladimir Putin during the Future Technologies Forum in Moscow on July 13.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has proposed to Wagner fighters that a senior mercenary named Andrey Troshev now command the private military group, according to comments the Russian leader made to the Kommersant newspaper that were published Friday.

Putin appears to have created a split between senior fighters from the mercenary group and its leader Yevgeny Prigozhin — whose whereabouts are currently publicly unknown — at least in terms of the narrative emerging from his comments to Kommersant. The paper was reporting on a meeting held by the Russian president five days after Wagner’s short-lived rebellion collapsed at the end of June – a meeting also attended by Prigozhin and several dozen senior Wagner combatants.

Responding to a question from Kommersant, Putin said Wagner “does not exist” under Russian law, adding that the Russian government needs to determine how to handle the organization legally.

According to the paper, Putin outlined a number of options for the future of Wagner mercenaries, including continuing to fight under their direct commander, a man going by the call sign “Sedoy,” meaning “Gray Hair.”

So who is “Gray Hair”? Sedoy is the call sign of Andrey Troshev, a retired Russian colonel and a founding member and executive director of the Wagner Group, according to sanctions documents published by the European Union and France. He has also been sanctioned by Ukraine.

Troshev served as the group’s chief of staff for its previous operations in Syria, according to EU sanctions from December 2021.

“He was particularly involved in the area of Deir ez-Zor,” sanctions documents state, referring to an eastern city where Wagner fighters have had direct encounters with the US military during the Syrian civil war. “As such, he provides a crucial contribution to (Syrian President) Bashar al-Assad’s war effort and therefore supports and benefits from the Syrian regime.”

United Kingdom sanctions from June 2022 also identify Troshev as a chief executive with the private military group who “has repressed the civilian population in Syria.” 

Troshev is associated with top Wagner Group leaders, including founder Dmitriy Utkin, a former Russian GRU military intelligence officer, according to EU sanctions.

“Gray Hair” is a veteran of the wars in Chechnya and Afghanistan, for which he was awarded several medals, according to Russian media. 

Troshev was among those invited to a reception at the Kremlin in December 2016. A photograph, believed to be from that 2016 reception, emerged in Russian media and shows Putin alongside Troshev and Utkin, who are both wearing several medals. 

Troshev was born in April 1953 in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) in the former Soviet Union, according to sanctions documents. 

CNN’s Andrew Carey and Josh Pennington contributed reporting to this post.

Russia has increased intensity of shelling on Ukraine's northern border, Ukrainian border guard says

A view of debris of apartment complex, where 54 people were killed by Russian shelling, in Izium, Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine on July 9.

Russia has greatly increased the intensity of shelling of Ukraine’s northern border, the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine said on Friday.

The intensity of shelling near the Chernihiv-Sumy region “tripled” in June compared to May, according to Andrii Demchenko, a spokesperson for the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine.

“Since the beginning of this year, Chernihiv, Sumy, and Kharkiv regions have been shelled by the enemy more than 1,000 times,” Demchenko said, adding that Russia continues shelling the border areas on a daily basis. 

“The Sumy and Kharkiv regions have been the most frequently shelled,” he added. 

Some background: The Ukrainian military had earlier advised residents of the northern Sumy region’s border area to leave their homes in light of increased Russian shelling. Serhiy Naiev, commander of the Joint Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, encouraged residents to evacuate, saying, “The Sumy direction remains the most dangerous in the Northern operational zone.”

Number of Russian military personnel in Belarus has decreased, Ukraine says

The number of Russian military personnel in Belarus has greatly decreased, according to the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine on Friday. 

Ukraine recorded around 2,000 Russian military personnel stationed at Belarusian training grounds until recently, but at the moment “almost all Russian troops have been withdrawn from the territory of Belarus,” said spokesperson for the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine Andrii Demchenko.

“However, we cannot rule out the possibility that in some time, as part of the rotation, regular units may be brought back to the territory of Belarus,” Demchenko noted in a media briefing while emphasizing that the situation on the border with Belarus “remains fully under control.”

Ukraine’s Border Guard Service also said they have not observed “the organized deployment of Russian mercenaries” in the territory of Belarus.

However, that comment follows the Belarusian Defense Ministry announcing on Friday that Wagner private mercenary group fighters are training Belarusian fighters near the town of Osipovichi, about 90 kilometers (56 miles) south of the capital Minsk.

Alleged Russian saboteur gets 10-year prison sentence for foiled plot to blow up Ukrainian infrastructure

The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said an alleged Russian saboteur has been given a 10-year prison sentence for a foiled plot to blow up transportation infrastructure in the western Ukrainian region of Rivne, according to a statement on Friday. 

The SBU said a Ukrainian court found the person guilty of “committing crimes against the state security of Ukraine.” 

According to the SBU, the unnamed saboteur was preparing to blow up two transport infrastructure facilities in the Rivne region when he was detained by security service officers carrying out a “multistage operation” in February.

Ukrainian investigators identified him as a former militant who fought against Ukraine’s Anti-Terrorist Operation in eastern Ukraine before Russia’s full-scale invasion began.

The saboteur was a member of “terrorist groups” and the Russian military intelligence apparatus before the war, according to the SBU statement.

After the war broke out, the saboteur allegedly took an “active part” in fighting against Ukrainian troops in the southern regions of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson before receiving “an assignment from a Russian GRU to covertly arrive in Rivne region to commit sabotage at transport infrastructure facilities.”

Ukraine’s parliament moves to legalize medical cannabis to treat wounded fighters

Cannabis might soon be a legal form of treatment for wounded Ukrainian soldiers, as well as other people with serious illnesses, after a bill to legalize its use for medical purposes passed its first hurdle in Ukraine’s parliament. 

Previous efforts to legalize cannabis in Ukraine have failed.

“Exactly two years ago, the vote on a similar initiative unfortunately failed. Today, the war dictates new realities and the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine’s parliament), by a majority vote, is responding to them appropriately,” senior lawmaker David Arakhamia wrote on Telegram.

Myhalo Bakalyuk, a member of Ukraine’s 47th Brigade, is one of the soldiers who has appealed for a change in the law. He posted a written appeal on Facebook explaining how he had been seriously injured by an anti-personnel mine on the southern front, which resulted in him having his left leg amputated. 

The painkillers he received were only able to dampen the physical pain, he wrote, but could not relieve it. They also had an adverse effect on his cardiovascular system, central nervous system and internal organs, he said. 

Medical cannabis would also be used to treat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder, according to Olha Stefanishyna, a lawmaker who sits on the parliament’s health committee. Altogether, some 6 million people in Ukraine would benefit from the treatment, she said on Ukrainian television.

The bill needs one more vote in favor of it in parliament before becoming law.

If passed, it could also play a role in the country’s post-war regeneration, supporters say. Crimean officials in exile say cultivation of the cannabis plant on the peninsula — which has the warmest climate in Ukraine — could be part of the territory’s economic recovery in the event of its liberation from Russian occupation.

US secretary of state: NATO's long-term commitments show Putin that he can't outlast Ukraine

From left, Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, French President Emmanuel Macron, Japan's Prime Minster Fumio Kishida, President Joe Biden, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stand on stage during an event on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 12, to announce a joint declaration of support for Ukraine.

The long-term commitments made at the NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, this week might be the most effective way to convince Russian President Vladimir Putin that he cannot win his war in Ukraine, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday.

The NATO pledges “may be the best way to disabuse Vladimir Putin of the idea that he could somehow outlast Ukraine, and outlast the dozens of countries that are supporting Ukraine,” Blinken said at a news conference in Jakarta, Indonesia.

“That’s the quickest way, probably, to bring this war to an end,” Blinken said. The top US diplomat predicted Putin will try to drag out the war “indefinitely,” despite the “horrific costs that he’s incurred on Russia itself.”

“The question now is exactly where and how this ends. Fundamentally, these decisions need to be up to Ukraine, because it’s about its future,” Blinken said, repeating a common US refrain about leaving it up to Kyiv how and when to handle any peace negotiations with Russia.

“We haven’t seen any signs from Russia that it’s actually willing to engage in meaningful diplomacy and end the war that it started,” he added.

What NATO countries pledged to give Kyiv: While Ukraine, as expected, did not leave the Vilnius summit as a member of the military alliance, leading NATO nations gave Kyiv security guarantees and assurances that its future is in the alliance.

A joint declaration agreement from G7 countries committed to long-term investments in Ukraine’s fighting forces, both to fend off Russia now and deter attacks in the future. The agreement also vowed to invest in Ukraine’s economy and to provide immediate “technical and financial support” for pressing needs brought on by the war.

That came alongside assurances — in writing and in engagements with news media — from leading countries that Ukraine will eventually join NATO.

Remember: The Group of Seven, or G7, is an organization of leaders from some of the world’s largest economies: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Russian foreign minister showed no signs of compromise on Ukraine at meetings with Asian leaders, Blinken says

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks to the media during a press conference in Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 14.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken slammed Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s position in meetings with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, saying that the minister remained immovable in regard to his country’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

At a press conference in Jakarta, Indonesia, Blinken said nothing he heard from Lavrov “suggested any change in direction when it comes to what Russia is doing in Ukraine.”

Blinken also criticized Russia for threatening the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Thursday Russia could quit if his country’s demands are not met. If the initiative is allowed to expire on Monday, it would affect food prices across the globe, Blinken said.

Blinken said Lavrov’s engagements were “not constructive or productive on any issue.”

“He focused, unlike the United States and unlike many other countries, on a totally negative presentation, an agenda in which he effectively described every problem in the world to the United States,” said Blinken.

Turkish president says he hopes Black Sea grain deal will be extended

The first UN-chartered vessel MV Brave Commander loads more than 23,000 tonnes of grain to export to Ethiopia, in Yuzhne, Ukraine, on the Black Sea coast, on August 14.

Turkey is preparing to host Russian President Vladimir Putin in August and both countries agree the Black Sea grain deal should be extended, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said during a press conference in Istanbul on Friday, despite Russia’s threats that it may quit the deal.

The United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres “sent a letter to Mr. Putin. I hope that with this letter and the joint effort by us and Russia, the grain corridor will be extended,” Erdogan added.

Remember: The deal is due to expire Monday. Putin said Thursday that Russia may quit the Black Sea grain deal if its demands are not met. A key Russian demand has been to allow access to international payments mechanisms currently out of bounds to Russian banks as part of an international sanctions regime.

Wagner is training Belarusian fighters, country's defense ministry says

Russian private military group Wagner’s fighters are training Belarusian fighters near the town of Osipovichi, about 90 kilometers (or about 56 miles) south of the capital Minsk, according to the Defense Ministry of Belarus.

“Conscripts learn the skills of moving on the battlefield and tactical shooting, gaining knowledge in engineering training and tactical medicine,” the ministry said Friday, adding that Wagner fighters “acted as instructors in a number of military disciplines”

Following the Wagner group’s failed mutiny, the mercenary fighters were given the option to sign contracts with the Russian Ministry of Defense, go to Belarus or return home.

US official on timing of cluster munitions' use in Ukraine: Russia will be "the first to know"

US-supplied cluster munitions got into Ukraine so quickly because they were already prepositioned in Europe, a US official told CNN.

Now that the munitions are in Ukraine, when will they be used? “We’ve made a decision to let the Russians be the first to know,” the official said.

The Pentagon confirmed Thursday the weapons were in Ukraine, after a Ukrainian commander told CNN in an earlier interview that they had been received and could “radically change” the battlefield situation.

The controversial cluster munitions are banned by over 100 countries around the globe.

Joint Staff Director for Operations Lt. Gen. Douglas Sims said Thursday during a press conference that the Ukrainians don’t have “any interest in using the cluster munitions anywhere near the civilian population, unlike the Russians.”

No threat of invasion from Belarus, Zelensky says in meeting with military leaders

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference on the sidelines of the NATO Summit in Vilnius, Lithuni on July 12, 2023. (Photo by

There is “no threat” of invasion from Belarus, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a meeting Friday with military leaders, according to a report given by Ukraine’s military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov.

The remark comes as Belarus’ defense ministry this week said it was expecting the arrival of the next Russian military units as well as fighters from the Wagner mercenary group, who will take part in joint training with Belarusian forces. The country’s leader Alexander Lukashenko, a staunch ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, late last month claimed to play a key role in stopping the Wagner march toward Moscow and also said tactical nuclear weapons that Russia plans to station in Belarus had arrived.

In a Telegram post Friday, Zelensky also said that the protection of nuclear power plants and Ukraine’s northern border were discussed in the staff meeting. 

Ukraine is steadily sealing off and fortifying its northern border with Belarus and Russia, also encouraging civilians in some regions who still live close to the border to leave for safer places. On Thursday, Commander of the Joint Forces Lt. Gen. Serhii Naiev said Ukraine continues to “create engineering barriers directly along the state border; we dig anti-tank ditches and mine the area,” adding that the goal is to make that area “impassable.”

What else they spoke about: The leaders also discussed the situation on the front lines, new defense aid after this week’s NATO summit, the current offensive and improving the Ukrainian military’s supply logistics.

Ukraine’s Minister of Strategic Industries Oleksandr Kamyshin gave a report on increasing domestic production of certain weapons, including unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and ramping up the volume of equipment repairs. Kyiv was a target of three consecutive overnight airstrikes this week, and there was a drone strike in the city of Kryvyi Rih this morning.

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

A Russian drone strike showered over the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih on Friday, as cross-border attacks between Moscow and Kyiv ramped up overnight.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Shelling in Kryvyi Rih: Key infrastructure, including two residential buildings, was destroyed and a 56-year-old man was injured in Kryvyi Rik in Dnipropetrovsk, a regional official said. Elsewhere in the region, a warehouse and a power line in the village of Velykomykhailivka were damaged in artillery shelling.
  • Fighting along the border: Russian governors in charge of regions close to Ukraine said a drone crashed in the town of Kurchatov in Kursk oblast, causing partial damage to an apartment building. Three drones were also intercepted Thursday over the neighboring Voronezh region. Officials reported no injuries.
  • Arman Soldin: France posthumously awarded its most prestigious honor, the Legion d’Honneur (Legion of Honor), to Arman Soldin, a French journalist killed covering the war in Ukraine. The Agence France-Presse video coordinator died in May near the eastern city of Bakhmut. Soldin was awarded the order of Knight.
  • Weapons in Ukraine: The much-anticipated and controversial American-made cluster munitions that the United States agreed to supply to Kyiv are now in Ukraine, according to a Ukrainian general and the Pentagon. Meanwhile, Ukrainian forces shot down 23 drones overnight into Friday, the country’s air force said.
  • “Wagner does not exist”: Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that Wagner, the mercenary group which led a failed insurrection against Russian President Vladimir Putin last month, was never a legal entity and its legal status needs further consideration. “Such a legal entity as PMC Wagner does not exist and never existed,” Peskov said on Friday.
  • Kremlin-Wagner tensions: Meanwhile, Putin suggested he’s created a split between senior Wagner fighters and the group’s chief Yevgeny Prigozhin following their meeting in June, the Kommersant newspaper reported. The story suggests a fresh attempt by Putin to weaken Prigozhin.

EU and WHO announce commitment to strengthen medical evacuation operations in Ukraine

The European Union and World Health Organization are working to further bolster medevac operations in Ukraine to ensure the country’s people get timely medical care, according to an EU statement released Friday. 

“Medical evacuations are an essential part of the European Union’s emergency support to Ukraine. Russia’s full-scale invasion leaves military and civilians heavily wounded while also ruining healthcare infrastructure,” said Peter M. Wagner, the head of the European Commission’s Service for Foreign Policy Instruments. 

Since the start of the full-scale invasion, more than 2,350 Ukrainian patients have been transferred to hospitals in 21 European countries to receive treatment for “severe war wounds or conditions that cannot currently be easily treated inside Ukraine, such as specialized cancer treatments and rehabilitation support,” according to the EU. 

More than 370 patients have requested and been supported to return to Ukraine following their treatment. 

WHO European Region Emergency Director Dr. Gerald Rockenschaub added: “Safe transfer of patients across borders requires all partners to work together effectively and efficiently to ensure that people can get the life-saving treatment they desperately need. We welcome this opportunity to build on our relationship with our partners, both in the European Union and other institutions.”

Kremlin says Wagner private mercenary group was never a legal entity

Members of Wagner group sit atop of a tank in a street in the city of Rostov-on-Don, on June 24.

The Kremlin has said that the Wagner private mercenary group, which led a failed insurrection against Russian President Vladimir Putin last month, was never a legal entity and its legal status needs further consideration.

“Such a legal entity as PMC Wagner does not exist and never existed. This is a legal issue that needs to be explored,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Friday.

Peskov refused to disclose any further details on the meeting between Wagner head Yengeny Prigozhin and Putin, which reportedly took place several days after the aborted rebellion, in late June.

Separately, Peskov also refused to comment on Russian general Ivan Popov, who said this week that he was suddenly fired after accusing Moscow’s defense ministry leadership of betraying its soldiers by providing insufficient support.

Peskov said Popov’s dismissal is a “military topic” for the Ministry of Defense to comment on.

CNN’s Tim Lister and Anna Chernova contributed reporting.