September 23, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

September 23, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

clapper on russia tsr
'He's in trouble and I think he knows it': Clapper weighs in on Putin's current mindset
01:33 - Source: CNN

What we covered

  • Four Russian-occupied areas began voting in referendums on joining Russia, according to their separatist leaders. The referendums are illegal under international law and dismissed as “a sham” by Western governments and Kyiv.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “partial mobilization” orders were followed by protests, tearful goodbyes and long lines of traffic trying to leave the country.
  • 436 bodies were exhumed from a mass burial site in Izium, with most showing signs of violent death and at least 30 with traces of torture, a local official said as the work was completed Friday.
  • At least 1,300 anti-war protesters were detained across Russia earlier this week, with some directly conscripted into the military, according to a monitoring group.
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Our coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news here or read through the updates below.

436 bodies exhumed from a mass burial site in Izium and most showed signs of violent death, official says

Unidentified makeshift graves are seen at the Pishanske cemetery in Izium, on Friday.

A total of 436 bodies have been exhumed from a mass burial site in Izium, according to Oleh Syniehubov, head of the Kharkiv region military administration, who said the work was completed Friday.

Most of the bodies showed signs of violent death, and 30 had traces of torture, Syiehubov said in a post on Telegram.

Syniehubov vowed to find out the circumstances of each of the deaths “so that their relatives and friends know the truth and the killers are punished.”

He thanked the 200 people — forensic experts, police officers, and employees of the State Emergency Service — who had been working at the site in the Kharkiv region, which had been recently recaptured from Russian forces.

Syniehubov added that there were at least three more mass burial sites in other liberated areas of the Kharkiv region.

“All crimes of the occupiers will be documented, and the perpetrators will pay for what they have done,” Syniehubov said.

Some background: Izium was subject to intense Russian artillery attacks in April. The city, which sits near the border between the Kharkiv and Donetsk regions, became an important hub for the invading military during five months of occupation. Ukrainian forces took back control of the city on Sept. 10, delivering a strategic blow to Russia’s military assault in the east.

Top US general spoke with Ukraine's commander-in-chief on Thursday and Friday

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley spoke with the Commander-in-Chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces Gen. Valery Zaluzhny on Thursday and Friday, according to a US official. 

The information provided in a readout by Joint Staff spokesperson Col. Dave Butler did not go into any detail about the discussions, other than that they talked about the “unprovoked and ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and exchanged perspectives and assessments.”

Some background: Earlier this month, CNN reported the Pentagon is working out how to support Ukraine’s military in the medium and long term, including after the war with Russia has ended. The efforts are being led by Milley and would build on the billions of dollars in military aid the US has given to Ukraine since Russia invaded in February.

Zelensky urges people in Russian-controlled areas to help weaken the occupation

A service member of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic (LPR) casts his vote during a referendum on joining LPR to Russia, at a military unit in Luhansk, on Friday.

The ongoing referendums in the Russian-occupied regions and Russian mobilization in those areas are crimes, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a nightly address on Friday.

Four Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine began voting in referendums on joining Russia, according to their separatist leaders, in a move that raises the stakes of Moscow’s invasion seven months after fighting began.

“The world will react absolutely fairly to the pseudo-referenda — they will be unequivocally condemned, as well as to the criminal mobilization that the occupiers are trying to carry out in Crimea and other parts of Ukraine that they still control,” Zelensky added.

Ukraine’s president urged people in the Russian-run areas to help to weaken the occupation.

Counteroffensive: Meanwhile, Ukrainian forces have recaptured about 9,000 square kilometers of territory (3,500 square miles) “since the beginning of active actions in the east of our country,” Zelensky said.

“Nearly 400 settlements have been liberated. This tangible result has been achieved due to the fact that our people in the temporarily occupied territory help us. Please do everything to increase such assistance,” Zelensky added.

It's nighttime in Kyiv. Catch up here on the latest headlines

If you’re just joining us, here’s what you need to know about Friday’s developments in the war in Ukraine.

  • Ukraine and its allies dismiss referendums: Russian-backed leaders in four Ukrainian regions organized referendums on joining Russia Friday, violating international law. Ukrainian officials claimed some residents ignored the voting, but acknowledged that some were forced to participate. Western leaders, including US President Joe Biden, said the results will never be recognized.
  • UN experts report disturbing war crimes evidence: A UN panel of experts said it found evidence of war crimes committed during Russia’s invasion, including cases of rape and torture of children. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Thursday the international justice probe was “undoubtedly a put-up job.”
  • Captured Americans back on US soil: Two Americans who went to fight for Ukraine were back on US soil Friday after being held by Russian-backed forces for more than three months. Alexander John-Robert Drueke and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh arrived in New York City after they were released in a prisoner swap between Russia and Ukraine that was brokered by Saudi Arabia. 
  • Evidence of Russians trying to flee mobilization: Social media video from Russia’s land borders with several countries shows long lines of traffic trying to leave the country on the day after President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization.” There were queues at border crossings into Kazakhstan, Georgia and Mongolia.
  • This map shows the latest frontlines in the conflict:

Biden says US will never recognize Russia’s referendums in Ukraine

President Joe Biden said the United States will never recognize Russia’s referendums in occupied parts of Ukraine. 

The President said the US will continue to work with allies to “impose additional swift and severe economic costs on Russia.

“The United States stands with our partners around the world — and with every nation that respects the core tenets of the UN charter — in rejecting whatever fabricated outcomes Russia will announce,” the statement said.

Some background: Four Russian-occupied areas began voting Friday in referendums on joining Russia, according to their separatist leaders, in a move that raises the stakes of Moscow’s invasion.

The referendums, which are illegal under international law and dismissed as a sham by Western governments and Kyiv, could pave the way for Russian annexation of the areas, allowing Moscow to frame the ongoing Ukrainian counteroffensive as an attack on Russia itself.

Ukraine removes accreditation of Iranian diplomat after military says Iranian-made drones were used in Odesa

Ukraine has withdrawn the accreditation of the senior Iranian diplomat in Kyiv, citing the supply of Iranian-made weapons to Russia.

The move follows a spate of attacks by Russian forces using Iranian-made drones, according to the Ukrainian military. Several of the drones were used in an attack on Odesa Friday in which one person was killed.

In a statement, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said that following the attacks, the Iranian charge d’affaires was summoned to the ministry.

The charge d’affaires was told that the supply of Iranian weapons to Russia and their use against civilians “contradicts the publicly declared position of neutrality, respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.”

The statement added:

A statement from President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office said that “samples collected on the battlefield confirmed that Russia is using Iranian-made weapons in Ukraine.”

“Such actions of Iran are considered as a step against the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, as well as against the life and health of Ukrainian citizens,” a spokesman for Zelensky said.

European Council president says Russia should be suspended from UN Security Council

European Council President Charles Michel speaks during the United Nations General Assembly in New York, on Friday, September 23.

European Council President Charles Michel called out the United Nations Security Council Friday for allowing Russia to continue participating despite its invasion of Ukraine.

“When a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council starts an unprovoked and unjustifiable war, a war condemned by the UN General Assembly, its suspension from the Security Council should be automatic,” Michel said during his address to the UN General Assembly on Friday, adding that the Kremlin is trying to “mobilize the entire world against an imaginary enemy.”

Michel urged reform, which he said is “necessary and urgent.”

2 Americans captured by Russian-backed forces are back in the US after prisoner swap

Americans Alexander John-Robert Drueke, right, and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh, left, after arriving back in the US after being freed from Russian captivity.

Two Americans who had been held by Russian-backed forces in Ukraine for more than three months were back on US soil on Friday.  

Alexander John-Robert Drueke and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh arrived in New York City after they were released earlier this week in a prisoner swap between Russia and Ukraine that was brokered by Saudi Arabia. 

CNN obtained a selfie of the two men. Their families said they believe they are in good health.

“We know that they are speaking, they are breathing, they are ambulatory, and they sound like themselves,” said Darla Black, the mother of Huynh’s fiancée Joy Black, told CNN on Friday.

The Americans were captured in June while fighting for Ukraine in a battle near Kharkiv. Their pro-Russian captors, the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic, have governed a breakaway portion of Ukraine’s Donetsk region since 2014.

Even after being captured, their families said the men told them they have no regrets about going over to fight with the Ukrainians.

Ukraine releases dramatic images of a soldier from before and after his time in Russian captivity

Ukrainian soldier Mykhailo Dianov before and after his time in Russian captivity. CNN is unable to independently verify the authenticity of these images.

The Ukrainian defense ministry tweeted pictures Friday of a soldier Mykhailo Dianov, one which showed him before he was captured by Russia and one after his release from captivity.

He looks visibly weaker in the latter image.

“Ukrainian soldier Mykhailo Dianov is among the fortunate ones” in comparison to some of his fellow prisoners of war, the ministry claimed on Twitter.

CNN is unable to independently verify the authenticity of these images.

More than 6,400 Russians traveled to Finland by land on Thursday, Finnish official says

Cars queue to enter Finland from Russia at Finland's most southern crossing point Vaalimaa, on Thursday.

More than 6,400 Russians traveled into Finland on Thursday by land — a number comparable to weekend traffic, Matti Pitkäniitty, the head of the International Affairs Unit at Finnish Border Guard, tweeted Friday. 

About 3,227 Russians exited Finland, he added.

Comparing this data with the numbers from August and September, Pitkäniitty said Finland saw around 6,000 Russians arriving in Finland on Saturdays.

Earlier on Friday, Finland’s Border Guard tweeted that vehicle queues at Vaalimaa and Nuijamaa — two border crossings in south east Finland — were longer than they were Thursday.

The queue for Vaalimaa border crossing was approximately 500 meters long at approximately 9 a.m. local time (2 a.m. ET).

Port of Odesa struck by Iranian-made drones, Ukrainian military says

The Ukrainian military said that Iranian-made attack drones have been used to strike the port of Odesa, the main outlet for the export of Ukrainian grain under an agreement reached in July. 

The Ukrainian military’s Operational Command South said on Telegram that “Odesa was attacked by kamikaze drones from the sea.”

US officials have previously said that Russia bought Iranian-made drones.

According to the military, “two drones destroyed the administrative building in the port area, rescue services are extinguishing a fire.”

Serhii Bratchuk, spokesperson of the Odesa region civil military administration, confirmed that two of the drones hit the administrative building near the port, killing at least one person.

Operational Command South said the blast damaged several surrounding buildings.

One Shahed-136 drone was shot down over the sea by air defense forces, according to the military.

In a second attack Friday, four Iranian-made drones approaching the city of Odesa were shot down, Operational Command South said.

The military also said air defenses had shot down a Russian Su-25 attack aircraft in the Beryslav district of the Kherson region.

Some background: CNN reported late last month that the United States assessed Russia was in possession of weapons-capable Iranian drones that they would likely deploy on the battlefield in Ukraine.

Russian operatives began training on the drones in Iran late in July. Russia then purchased and transferred the Mohajer-6 and Shahed-series drones — the Shahed-129 and Shahed-191— to Russia, according to US officials. 

Residents of occupied areas are ignoring referendums called by pro-Russian officials, Ukraine says

Vehicles drive past advertising boards, including panels displaying pro-Russian slogans, in a street in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict in Luhansk, Ukraine on September 20.

Ukrainian officials say residents of Russian-occupied areas are ignoring the referendums organized by local Kremlin-backed authorities, but they acknowledged that in some instances, residents are being forced to vote.

The referendums, called on Tuesday in four parts of Ukraine under Russian control, have been widely denounced by western governments as a sham and are being conducted with few or no international observers beyond delegations from Russia.

The Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) said it had uncovered documents showing that the Russian-backed separatist-held Donetsk People’s Republic planned to expand the electorate by involving teenagers younger than 18 in the vote.

In order to enhance control over the “turnout,” Donetsk officials decided that minors should be accompanied to the polling stations by their parents, guardians or representatives of so-called orphanages, SBU added.

Pro-Russian officials in the occupied areas have been enthusiastically pushing the referendums as a historic change.

“Today is a day that happens in history once every few centuries. I personally knew it would happen, always. I always felt I was part of a huge family called Russia. Dreams have come true,” Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-backed head of the Kherson region administration, said on his Telegram channel.

As he cast his ballot, Saldo said he was sure that as part of the Russian Federation, “our Kherson region and most importantly its people will be protected. Protected in every way.”

The leader of the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic, Denis Pushilin, also cast his vote, saying, “I feel a sense of awe and confidence that what we have fought for so long is finally coming true. This is Homecoming. Return to the great Russia. History is being made today.”

The voting continues until Tuesday.

"The truth is the truth": ICC prosecutor vows to determine if war crimes are being committed in Ukraine

The bodies of civilians killed by russian soldiers were found near the village of Myrotske in Bucha, Ukraine on June 13.

International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan reiterated that the ICC will continue to investigate allegations of Russian war crimes, as Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov continued to dismiss images of atrocities in Ukraine at the United Nations this week.

“The truth is the truth. Parties can make their own statements but I’ve been to Bucha. … I saw those bodies in the body bags and they were real people. We have to investigate how did they die, if crimes were committed and if so, who is responsible,” Khan told CNN’s Kate Bolduan. 

He said he has written to Russia to have a meeting with Lavrov, but there has been no response.

Khan has been to Ukraine three times now, and he said he is “staggered” by both the destruction in the country and also the hope and determination of its people.

Being in Ukraine in the midst of war allows “access to evidence before it is interfered with,” he added.  

Priorities for the ICC includes allegations of crimes against children targeted in hospitals and schools, as well as allegations of children being transferred into Russia, he said.

“All of your viewers will know ‘never again’ that we’ve heard since the Holocaust, and yet we see — to our great chagrin — yet again, yet again, and yet again, these crimes are taking place. So this is the moment where I think we need to re-galvanize our efforts to show that the law can be active on the front lines. We’re trying to act more nimbly,” he said.

Ukraine says it's taken more territory in Donetsk and improved positions around Bakhmut

Ukraine has taken another settlement in the Donetsk region, the Ukranian military says as it continues the consolidation of an offensive in the “tri-border” area where Donetsk, Kharkiv and Luhansk regions meet.

As a result of assault actions, the village of Yatskivka in Donetsk region was now in Ukrainian hands, said Oleksii Hromov, deputy head of the Operations Directorate of the General Staff.

Yatskivka is to the east of the Oskil river. Large areas west of the river, including the city of Izium, were captured by the Ukrainians in a sudden offensive earlier this month.

The situation further south around Bakhmut was “difficult but controlled,” Hromov said in a briefing in Kyiv on Friday, adding that Russia “continued offensive actions in order to expel our units” from their positions around Bakhmut and elsewhere along the front lines in Donetsk.

Ukrainian troops had improved their positions around Bakhmut, which has been under siege for several months, Hromov said.

“Thanks to the timely regrouping of units of one of the mechanized brigades and high-quality organization of the battle, we managed to restore the previously lost position and ensure control over the positions south to Bakhmut,” he said. 

Elsewhere in Donetsk, near Avdiivka and Novopavlivka, Russian forces were conducting offensive actions with the goal of taking the settlements of Nevirske and Novomykhailivka, Hromov said.

Russia could use "sham" referendums to escalate war, NATO's secretary general tells CNN

The world should prepare for Russia to use “sham” referendums in Ukraine to claim Russian territory is being attacked with NATO weaponry, according to the alliance’s chief.

“That’s exactly what we need to be prepared for, that Russia will use these sham votes to further escalate the war in Ukraine,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told CNN’s Julia Chatterley on Friday as Ukrainian officials allege citizens in partially occupied regions are coerced into voting in referendums on joining Russia.

“But these votes have no legitimacy, and of course don’t change anything,” he said, echoing several Western leaders.

“I support the message from [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelensky that they [people] should not take part in these referendums,” Stoltenberg said. 

Russia knows there will be severe consequences if nuclear weapons are used in Ukraine, NATO chief says

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg looks on ahead of a meeting with US President Joe Biden during the NATO summit at the Ifema congress centre in Madrid, Spain, on June 29.

Russia knows there will be “severe consequences” if nuclear weapons are used in Ukraine, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told CNN’s Julia Chatterley on Friday.

“They know that there will be severe consequences. I will not elaborate exactly on how we will react, that depends on what kind of weapons of mass destruction they may use,” he said.

His comments come after Russian President Vladimir Putin raised the specter of using nuclear weapons in a speech on Wednesday.

“The thing is,” he continued, “the likelihood of any use of nuclear weapons is still low, but the potential consequences are so big, so therefore we have to take this seriously. And the rhetoric, the threats that President Putin [is] putting forward again and again increase tensions, are dangerous and are reckless.”

Germany says it's open to accepting Russians who want to flee their country 

German officials are indicating that the country is open to accepting Russians who are trying to flee the country. 

EU members states must find a “viable solution” on how to deal with Russian conscientious objectors to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “partial mobilization” orders, he added, saying motives of each such objector must be examined before asylum is granted.

On Thursday, Germany’s foreign and interior ministries indicated that citizens fleeing Russia could apply for asylum in Germany.

”Deserters threatened with serious repression can - as a rule - obtain international protection in Germany,” Germany’s interior minister Nancy Faeser was quoted saying in the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. 

Germany had taken in 438 people from Russia through a program that is supposed to offer protection to dissidents, journalists and scientists, adding that procedures had already been changed in April so that “as a rule, conscientious objection is a reason for protection,” interior minister spokesperson Maximilian Kall said.

Exact number of Russians applying for asylum is not yet available.

UN experts say evidence shows war crimes, including torture of children, committed in Ukraine

A United Nations panel of experts says their investigation has found evidence that war crimes have been committed during Russia’s war in Ukraine, including cases of rape and torture of children.

The panel said that it had identified two incidents of ill-treatment of Russian soldiers in Ukrainian captivity.

The three human rights experts on the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine traveled to Kyiv, Chernihiv, Kharkiv and Sumy, visiting 27 towns and interviewing more than 150 people.

Speaking at the UN Security Council on Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov dismissed the “increased activity of international justice,” calling it “undoubtedly a put-up job.”

The Commission said “some Russian Federation soldiers” have been responsible for sexual and gender-based violence.

“These acts amounted to different types of violations of rights, including sexual violence, torture, and cruel and inhuman treatment. There are examples of cases where relatives were forced to witness the crimes,” it added. 

Møse also noted that a number of attacks investigated by the panel “had been carried out without distinguishing between civilians and combatants, including cluster munition attacks and airstrikes on populated areas.”

Commission members “were struck by the large number of executions in the areas that we visited,” Møse added.

“Common elements of such crimes include the prior detention of the victims as well as visible signs of executions on bodies, such as hands tied behind backs, gunshot wounds to the head, and slit throats,” he reported. “Some of the victims reported that after initial detention by Russian forces in Ukraine, they were transferred to the Russian Federation and held for weeks in prisons. Interlocutors described beatings, electric shocks, and forced nudity, as well as other types of violations in such detention facilities.”

Western countries slam the Russian-backed "sham" referendums in Ukraine

A woman votes during a referendum in a mobile polling station in Mariupol, Donetsk People's Republic, Ukraine, on September 23.

Four Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine began voting in referendums on joining Russia, according to their separatist leaders. The referendums are illegal under international law and dismissed as “a sham” by Western governments and Kyiv.

Here’s what governments around the world are saying:

United Kingdom:

The outcome of “sham” secession referendums in four Russian-occupied Ukrainian regions is “almost certainly already decided,” the UK ambassador to Ukraine said on Friday.

“There will be results publicised of something that didn’t happen. I wonder whether anyone will even be called to vote. They won’t need to. The outcome is almost certainly already decided,” Melinda Simmons said on Twitter

Switzerland:

”Switzerland condemns sham referendums in parts of Ukraine” the Swiss Federal Council said in a statement on Friday, adding that ”the referendums currently taking place in Ukrainian territories partially occupied by Russia do not conform with the law and are illegal under international law.”

Condemning the violation, the Federal Council also said it “will not recognize the results of any of these sham referendums.”

The President of the Swiss Confederation Ignazio Cassis clearly stated this position to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in New York on Wednesday when representatives from countries around the world met for the 77th session of the UN General Assembly, the statement added.

NATO (A US-led alliance)

“We condemn in the strongest possible terms the plan to hold so-called ‘referenda’ on joining the Russian Federation in the Ukrainian regions partly controlled by the Russian military,” the North Atlantic Council, NATO’s principle decision-making body said in a statement.  

“Allies do not and will never recognize Russia’s illegal and illegitimate annexation of Crimea. Sham referenda in the Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson regions of Ukraine have no legitimacy and will be a blatant violation of the UN Charter. NATO Allies will not recognize their illegal and illegitimate annexation,” the council added.  

Go Deeper

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Go Deeper

Lavrov walks out of UN meeting as allies slam Russia over Ukraine war
Tearful scenes and protest as mobilization gets underway in Russia
Sharp rise in demand for flights – and in fares -- out of Moscow after Putin announces ‘partial mobilization’