Sabtu, 06 Mei 2023

Sudan’s warring sides to begin talks in Saudi Arabia as fighting rages on - The Guardian

Direct talks between the warring Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces will start in Jeddah on Saturday, the US and Saudi governments have confirmed, even as fighting showed little signs of abating in the Sudanese capital.

A joint US-Saudi statement welcomed the “start of pre-negotiation talks” and urged sustained global support to quell the fighting.

“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United States urge both parties to take in consideration the interests of the Sudanese nation and its people and actively engage in the talks toward a ceasefire and end to the conflict,” the statement said.

Hundreds of people have died in nearly three weeks of fighting between forces aligned with Sudan’s de facto leader, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who leads the regular army, and his deputy turned rival Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

Multiple truces have been reached since the fighting erupted on 15 April, but none has been respected.

The army confirmed late on Friday that it had sent envoys to Saudi Arabia to discuss “details of the truce in the process of being extended” with its paramilitary foes.

Burhan had given his backing to a seven-day ceasefire announced on Wednesday, but early on Friday, the RSF said it was extending by three days a previous truce brokered under US-Saudi mediation.

The US-Saudi statement noted the efforts of other countries and organisations behind this weekend’s talks, including Britain, the United Arab Emirates, the League of Arab States, the African Union and other groups.

In Khartoum, witnesses reported continued airstrikes and explosions on Friday, including near the airport.

The fighting raged despite a threat of sanctions from US president, Joe Biden, against those responsible for “threatening the peace, security and stability of Sudan” and “undermining Sudan’s democratic transition”.

The north African country suffered decades of sanctions during the rule of autocrat Omar al-Bashir, who was ousted in a palace coup in 2019 after mass street protests.

Biden said: “The violence taking place in Sudan is a tragedy – and it is a betrayal of the Sudanese people’s clear demand for civilian government and a transition to democracy. It must end.”

The conflict has killed about 700 people, mostly in Khartoum and the western Darfur region, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project.

People who crossed from Sudan are seen at a refugee camp in Renk county, South Sudan

The UN children’s agency, Unicef, warned on Friday that “the situation in Sudan has become fatal for a frighteningly large number of children”.

Spokesperson James Elder said Unicef had received reports from a trusted partner – not yet independently verified by the UN – that 190 children were killed and 1,700 wounded during the conflict’s first 11 days.

He said the figures had been gathered from health facilities in Khartoum and Darfur since 15 April, meaning that they only cover children who actually made it to facilities in those areas.

“The reality is likely to be much worse,” Elder said.

Aid workers have struggled to get much-needed supplies to areas hit by violence. According to the International Medical Corps, at least 18 aid workers have been killed amid the fierce urban fighting.

Nearly 450,000 civilians had already fled their homes since the fighting began, the International Organisation for Migration said, including more than 115,000 who had sought refuge in neighbouring countries.

The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said it was preparing for an outflow of 860,000 people, adding that $445m would be needed to support them just until October.

The UN warned that if the fighting continued, it could raise the already large number of Sudanese threatened by hunger and malnutrition by as many as 2.5 million.

“That raises the number to a total of 19 million people in the next three to six months,” said Farhan Haq, a spokesperson for the UN chief, António Guterres.

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2023-05-06 04:11:00Z
2010873491

Jumat, 05 Mei 2023

Key moments from E Jean Carroll's civil rape trial against Donald Trump - BBC

E Jean Carroll attends New York rape trial against Mr TrumpGetty Images

A former columnist's civil rape trial against Donald Trump has featured tense exchanges with lawyers and controversial remarks about women's bodies.

E Jean Carroll is suing the ex-US president, alleging he raped her in a Manhattan department store nearly 30 years ago.

Mr Trump has consistently denied the accusation.

Here are the key moments from the closely watched two-week trial in New York, which Mr Trump himself has so far not attended.

Graphic detail

One of the most pivotal moments of the trial came during Ms Carroll's opening testimony, when she described in graphic detail what she alleges happened in the Manhattan Bergdorf Goodman store in 1996 and the trauma she says she has endured as a result.

"I'm here because Donald Trump raped me and when I wrote about it, he lied and said it didn't happen," she said.

She then proceeded to walk the court through the day of the alleged assault, explaining how she bumped into Mr Trump and exchanged flirtatious banter with him before things quickly turned violent. She said Mr Trump asked her to come with him into a dressing room, where he closed the door, held her against the wall and raped her.

"As I'm sitting here today I can still feel it," she told the court.

She added that Mr Trump's denial of the assault had shattered her reputation, costing her her job and romantic relationships. "I'm here to try to get my life back," she said.

Tense cross-examination

During several hours of cross-examination over two days, Ms Carroll faced challenging questions about the assault from Mr Trump's lawyer, Joe Tacopina, who attempted to cast doubt on her details of the alleged rape.

During a particularly tense exchange, Mr Tacopina repeatedly asked Ms Carroll why she did not yell when the alleged assault occurred.

"I'm not a screamer", she told Mr Tacopina, adding that some women do not come forward about sexual assaults because they are asked why they did not scream.

"I'm telling you he raped me whether I screamed or not," she told Mr Tacopina at one point.

The veteran Trump lawyer also pressed Ms Carroll on why she did not report the assault at first to the police.

The former Elle magazine columnist replied that she was a member of the "silent generation", saying women her age were taught to keep quiet.

Mr Tacopina also questioned Ms Carroll on why she could not recall the specific date of the assault. The writer later conceded that certain parts of her story were "difficult to conceive of".

Mistaken identity

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During the trial, Mr Trump did not mount his own defence at all, calling no witnesses and appearing to defend himself only in a video of his deposition, excerpts of which Ms Carroll's lawyer played for the court.

Facing questions from Ms Carroll's lawyer Roberta Kaplan, Mr Trump continued to deny the allegations he raped Ms Carroll, calling them a "big fat hoax" and repeating previous remarks that Ms Carroll was "not his type in any way".

But at one point, he appeared to confuse Ms Carroll for his ex-wife Marla Maples, a mistake Ms Carroll's lawyers claimed undermined his argument that the writer was not his type.

In the video, Mr Trump is shown an old black-and-white photo of him speaking to a man and two women at an event. "It's Marla," he said, before his own lawyer told him the woman he referenced in the photo was indeed Ms Carroll.

E Jean Carroll, Donald Trump, Ivana Trump and John Johnson in the photograph

The Access Hollywood tape

In another excerpt from Mr Trump's video deposition played for the court, Ms Kaplan replayed for Mr Trump a controversial Access Hollywood recording from 2005 featuring a conversation between him and the show's co-host about women.

"When you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything," Mr Trump said in the recording, which was leaked to the public just one month before the 2016 presidential election. "Grab them by the [expletive]. You can do anything," he added.

Asked about the clip by Ms Kaplan, the former president seemed to double down on the remarks, claiming: "Historically, that's true with stars".

When Ms Kaplan pressed him on his comments about grabbing women "by the [expletive]", Mr Trump said: "Well, I guess if you look over the last million years, that's been largely true - not always true, but largely true, unfortunately or fortunately."

In other tense moments during the questioning, Mr Trump appeared to grow agitated with Ms Kaplan, attacking her appearance, claiming that, like Ms Carroll, "you wouldn't be a choice of mine either, to be honest".

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'Too ugly to live'

During her second day on the stand under questioning from her own lawyers, Ms Carroll described the backlash she encountered after coming forward with her rape allegation.

After Mr Trump released a statement in social media denying the accusation and calling Ms Carroll's first lawsuit against him a "con job", Ms Carroll said she faced a "wave of slime".

She said many extrapolated on Mr Trump's remarks that she was "not his type", telling her she was "too ugly to go on living".

Mr Trump's social media comments also sparked a rebuke from the judge in the case, Lewis Kaplan. The former president has called the suit a "made-up scam" and claimed Ms Carroll's lawyer was a political operative, remarks Mr Kaplan called "entirely inappropriate".

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2023-05-05 22:06:16Z
2005115056

'It's Marla': Donald Trump confuses rape accuser with ex-wife, trial told - Sky News

Donald Trump appeared to mistake writer E Jean Carroll, who has accused him of raping her, for his ex-wife Marla Maples in a deposition played to jurors in a civil rape suit against him.

During the October deposition, Mr Trump was shown a black-and-white photo of himself speaking to people at an event.

He said: "It's Marla," referring to his second wife Ms Maples, before his lawyer corrected him saying: "No, that's Carroll."

Writer Ms Carroll, 79, claims that Mr Trump raped her in a department store changing room in Manhattan in the mid-1990s, and then tarred her reputation by lying about it online - which he denies.

Ms Carroll's lawyers have argued that the episode, made public in January, undermines Mr Trump's argument that she was not his type.

The front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, has said he could not have raped Ms Carroll, because "she's not my type" and called the case politically motivated.

Ms Carroll, a former advice columnist at Elle magazine, is seeking unspecified damages.

A social media and marketing expert hired by Ms Carroll told jurors on Thursday that the cost to repair the reputational damage of Mr Trump's statements could range from $368,000 (£292,000) to $2.8 million (£2.2m).

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Trump: 'She's a fake!'

Trump will 'probably attend' trial

Mr Trump, 76, will not testify at the trial and has not been in the Manhattan courtroom so far.

But on Thursday, he said he "will probably attend" the trial when asked by Sky News.

Speaking at his Trump Doonbeg resort in Ireland's Co Clare, he said: "I will probably attend [the trial] and I think it's a disgrace that it's allowed to happen, false accusations against a rich guy, or in my case against a famous, rich and political person."

Marla Maples and Donald Trump in 1991. Pic: AP
Image: Donald Trump and Marla Maples in 1991. Pic: AP

US District Judge Lewis Kaplan warned last week that Mr Trump could face more legal problems if he kept discussing the case.

Ms Carroll claimed after running into Mr Trump at Manhattan's Bergdorf Goodman, they teased one another to try on a piece of lingerie.

Read more:
Trump defends golf trip amid rape trial
Donald Trump greeted by hat-waving workers

She alleged they ended up alone together in a changing room, where Mr Trump pushed her against a wall and raped her before she fought him off and fled.

E Jean Carrolla arriving at court
Image: E Jean Carroll arriving at court

Two of Ms Carroll's long-time friends have testified that she told them about the attack shortly after it occurred and said they believed her.

Since she first made her accusations in a 2019 memoir, Mr Trump has denied that a rape ever occurred or that he even knew Ms Carroll.

The trial is expected to run into next week after a day off on Friday.

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2023-05-05 01:34:08Z
2005115056

Kamis, 04 Mei 2023

Donald Trump mistook rape accuser E Jean Carroll for ex-wife, trial told - BBC

Court sketch showing E Jean Carroll and Donald Trump deposition videoReuters

Donald Trump appeared to mistake E Jean Carroll for his ex-wife Marla Maples in a deposition played for jurors in Ms Carroll's civil rape suit against him.

In the video, Mr Trump was shown a photo of himself speaking to other people at an event. "It's Marla," he says, before his lawyer corrects him.

"No, that's Carroll," the lawyer says.

Ms Carroll, 79, has accused Mr Trump, 76, of attacking her in a New York City department store in the mid-1990s, an allegation Mr Trump has denied.

Lawyers for Ms Carroll have argued that Mr Trump's confusion over the photo undermines his claim that Ms Carroll is "not my type", a comment he has repeated since she first came forward with the allegation in 2019.

Mr Trump has not yet attended the civil trial, now drawing to a close after two weeks of proceedings in Manhattan. Both sides rested their case on Thursday, though Mr Trump's team called no witnesses in his defence.

He had told reporters he might cut his ongoing golf trip to Ireland short to "confront" Ms Carroll in court.

"I'll be going back early because a woman made a claim that is totally false, it's fake," Mr Trump said.

E Jean Carroll arrives for her civil trial against former Donald Trump at Manhattan Federal Court on May 04, 2023 in New York City
Getty Images

Mr Trump's suggestion that he would return to New York comes after his lawyer, Joseph Tacopina, told the judge Mr Trump would not testify in court.

Referring to Mr Trump's comments, the judge said he would give Mr Trump until Sunday afternoon to decide. After that, the judge said, "that ship has irrevocably sailed".

The nine-member jury was shown the video of a combative deposition between the former president and Roberta Kaplan, one of Ms Carroll's lawyers, filmed last October.

Mr Trump continued his emphatic denials of Ms Carroll's accusation, that Mr Trump manoeuvred her into a dressing room at the Bergdorf Goodman store in Manhattan and raped her.

"If it did happen, it would have been reported within minutes," Mr Trump said in the deposition, suggesting that others at the "very busy store" would have heard an ongoing attack.

Jurors in the nearly two-week trial heard days of graphic testimony. Ms Carroll told jurors she was left "unable to ever have a romantic life again" after the alleged attack.

Marla Maples and her daughter Tiffany Trump
Getty Images

Her account was supported in court by her friend, Lisa Birnbach, who testified this week to receiving a call from Ms Carroll minutes after she says she was raped.

And two other women - Jessica Leeds and Natasha Stoynoff - were called by Ms Carroll's team and described alleged sexual assaults committed by Mr Trump - claims he has denied.

A former columnist for Elle magazine, Ms Carroll was able to bring the civil case against Mr Trump after New York passed the Adult Survivors Act in 2022.

The act allowed a one-year period for victims to file sexual assault lawsuits in the state over claims that would have normally exceeded statute limitations.

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2023-05-04 21:38:41Z
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Navy scrambles ship to Russian warship spotted stalking the UK coast - Daily Mail

Navy scrambles ship to Russian warship spotted stalking the UK coast

  • Type 23 frigate - described as 'core of the front-line Fleet' - set sail for North Sea
  • Tail five Russian warships, spotted leaving the Baltic on course for UK waters
  • All equipped with Kalibr cruise missiles, capable of carrying nuclear warheads

A Royal Navy warship has been scrambled to tail Russian warships capable of carrying nuclear weapons spotted stalking the UK coast.

The Type 23 frigate - described by the Navy as the 'core of the front-line Fleet' - has set sail for the North Sea.

It will tail the five Russian vessels, which have been spotted leaving the Baltic on course for UK waters.

The flotilla includes five warships, with two extra support vessels arriving in waters off the UK today.

All are equipped with deadly Kalibr cruise missiles, which are capable of carrying nuclear warheads and have been used frequently in Ukraine.

Pictured: Type 23 Frigate HMS MONTROSE protecting international shipping lanes in the Gulf
Pictured: Royal Navy Type 23 frigate HMS Portland docked at Portsmouth Naval Base in Hampshire

A Ministry of Defence spokesperson told MailOnline: 'We monitor activity within UK waters and its Economic Exclusion Zone, routinely providing a suitable presence to counter and deter threats.'

They added that they are aware of a small number of Russian vessels exercising around the UK and are monitoring the situation closely. 

It comes amid preparations for King Charles' Coronation this Saturday and a record number of world leaders descendng on London.

The Russian flotilla includes Black Sea Fleet frigate the Admiral Grigorovich alongside Baltic Fleet corvettes Sbrazitelnyy, Stoikiy, Sovetsk and Odintsovo, tug Grebelsky and Northern Fleet tanker Kama.

Guided-missile destroyer Vice Admiral Kulakov was also pictured saling towards the North Sea yesterday.

Poseidon P-8 maritime patrol airctraft were scrambled by the RAF yesterday to track the Russian ships. 

It comes just weeks after British and German warplanes intercepted Russian jets and a spy plane over the Baltic.

UK and Germany sent Eurofighter Typhoon jets from Amari Air Base in Estonia to identify the two Sukhoi Su-27 fighter aircraft escorting an Ilyushin Il-20 Coot-A intelligence plane, the RAF said.

Guided-missile destroyer Vice Admiral Kulakov is among the group, pictured saling towards the North Sea yesterday
Pictured: Russia warns the West by releasing chilling new footage showing the launch of an 'unstoppable' Zircon nuclear-capable Mach 9 hypersonic missile from the Admiral Gorshkov frigate in Barents Sea on May 28, 2022.
The Russian flotilla includes frigate the Admiral Grigorovich, corvettes Sbrazitelnyy, Stoikiy and Odintsovo, tug Grebelsky and tanker Kama (pictured)

The Type 23 frigate despatched by the Royal Navy is equipped with harpoon anti-ship missiles, which can fly just above the surface of the water to evade defences.

Based in Portsmouth and Devonport, the Duke Class frigates have a crew of 185 and a top speed of 28 knots (32 miles per hour).

A versatile ship first developed to deal with the Soviet submarine threat, they are usually found east of Suez, safeguarding Britain's trade routes or the country's interests in the South Atlantic.

The Kalibr missile is a cruise missile capable of supersonic speed which can carry a warhead of up to 1,100 pounds of explosive or a thermonuclear warhead.

It has a range speculated to be more than 1,500 miles - the distance from London to Moscow.

Among the Russian flotilla is the Admiral Grigorovich frigate -which has previously been used as part of Russian military intervention in Syria.

In 2016, it destroyed IS and Al-Nusra targets including ammunition warehouses and training centres with Kalibr cruise missiles.

Frigates of the same class are also said to have fired Kalibr missiles against targets in the Ukraine war. 

The group also includes corvettes - the smallest class of vessels still said to be warships.

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2023-05-04 17:57:41Z
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Ukraine war: US denies masterminding Moscow drone attack - BBC

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The US has denied Russian claims it masterminded an alleged drone attack on the Kremlin on Wednesday aimed at assassinating President Vladimir Putin.

A day after accusing Ukraine of carrying out the alleged attack, Mr Putin's spokesman said it had been done with Washington's support.

US National Security spokesman John Kirby called it a "ludicrous claim".

Ukraine has said it had nothing to do with the alleged attack. Mr Putin was not in the building at the time.

Ukraine has accused Moscow of staging the incident in order to escalate the war.

Even though Russian attacks have continued unabated - 21 people were killed on Wednesday in the Kherson region in the south - there is no sign yet of an intensification on Moscow's part. However, on Sunday evening a drone was shot down over the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, not too far from the presidential office.

According to President Putin's spokesman, the attack on the Kremlin - a large government complex in central Moscow - occurred early on Wednesday. Footage on social media showed smoke rising over the complex. A second video showed a small explosion above the site's Senate building, while two men appear to clambered up the dome.

On Thursday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the US was "undoubtedly" behind the alleged attack, without providing evidence.

"Decisions on such attacks are not made in Kyiv, but in Washington," Mr Peskov said.

In his response, Mr Kirby told US media: "Peskov is just lying there, pure and simple."

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"The United States has nothing to do with it. We don't even know exactly what happened here, but I can assure you the United States had no role in it whatsoever."

The US official said Washington did not encourage or enable Ukraine to strike outside its borders, and did not endorse attacks on individual leaders.

Ukraine has said that the alleged attack was a false flag operation by Moscow.

On the other hand, though, many argue that Russia would have little interest in staging an attack that made the Kremlin look vulnerable.

Volodymyr Zelensky delivers a speech in The Hague
Reuters

The latest Kremlin claims came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague in the Netherlands.

In a speech afterwards, he called for the creation of a special tribunal to hold Russia's "crimes of aggression" to account.

He said Mr Putin "deserves to be sentenced for criminal actions in the capital of international law", the Ukrainian president said.

He listed alleged war crimes by Russia - including the "millions" of strikes in the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine and those killed during the occupation of Bucha, near the capital Kyiv, at the onset of the full-scale Russian invasion last year.

The ICC has issued an arrest warrant for President Putin for alleged war crimes in Ukraine. It says he is responsible for war crimes during the Ukraine war, which includes the unlawful deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia. But it has no mandate to prosecute the crime of aggression.

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2023-05-04 16:00:10Z
1979682819

Russia-Ukraine war live: drones hitting Odesa daubed with ‘for the Kremlin’; Zelenskiy to visit The Hague - The Guardian

There’s been another night of substantial Russian missile attacks and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities, which has become something of a pattern in the last week or so after a period of relative calm. In the aftermath of Russia’s claims that Ukraine targeted the Kremlin with its own drones and tried to assassinate Vladimir Putin, Moscow launched a wave of kamikaze drones mainly targeting Kyiv and Odesa.

While all of the 18 drones launched against the Ukrainian capital were reported shot down, three drones landed in the area of a school dormitory building in Odesa although there were no casualties reported. Tail fragments for two of the drones had “for Moscow” and “for the Kremlin” scrawled on them.

Finland has received a diplomatic note from Russia complaining over vandalism at a Russian consulate on the demilitarised Aland island located in the Baltic Sea between Finland and Sweden, the Finnish foreign ministry said on Thursday.

Finland’s foreign ministry said the incident is “regrettable” and that the damage consists of the consulate mailbox being torn down, and a window being broken after a bottle of beer was thrown at the consulate.

There continues to be intermittent air alerts in Ukraine. Kherson oblast has just declared another one.

Tamara Cohen, political correspondent at Sky News, has tweeted that she has spoken to a senior UK defence source about the Kremlin drone incident. She reports they told her:

Anything is possible, but there is no benefit to Ukraine doing it, there is no military advantage, everyone knows Putin doesn’t stay in the Kremlin and the motives are all really in Russia’s favour – the public to rally round; excuse for more random and reckless bombardments; trying to gain sympathy for Russia over Ukraine.

The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, will have a meeting at the international criminal court (ICC) in The Hague during a visit to the Netherlands on Thursday, the court has said without giving further detail, Reuters reports.

In March, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, for alleged deportation of children from Ukraine, a war crime.

Zelenskiy arrived in the Netherlands overnight after his visit to Helsinki yesterday.

The Guardian reporter Peter Beaumont is in southern Ukraine and visited Kherson on Tuesday. Today he managed to talk to two residents in the city who described a night of very heavy shelling. Peter says:

When we were in Kherson on Tuesday there was intermittent shelling. Because the city fell without a fight at the beginning of the war, most of the damage you see has been from Russian shelling since the liberation on 11 November.

To give a sense of what it’s like, the most dangerous areas have been close to the Dnieper River, which has recently been in a red zone forbidden to journalists and non-locals.

While there were people moving around the city on Tuesday, that’s changed with residents telling us they plan to stay indoors even before the strict weekend long curfew that starts tomorrow night. If people are going out at all it is to stock up on food and water.

Some people told us they were sleeping in their clothes to be ready to go to the shelters.

Andriy Vanin, 54, is a local camera operator, although he has been unemployed since the war started. Here’s what he had to say.

We live in the north of the city, as far from the river as you can get. We couldn’t sleep last night. Until 1am it was very noisy with a lot of shelling. After 1 there was a break and we tried to sleep, then at 4.30 m the Ukrainian artillery started shelling the Russian positions on the left bank.

Yesterday I had to go out around city I drive along city. I was near one of the places that was shelled. It felt like walking on a razor blade. Now I don’t want to leave the house.

From tomorrow night we’ll be under a strict curfew announced by the authorities. First thing is safety but we assume this has something to do with the counter offensive.

Right now it’s quiet in my district. We are going out to buy drinking water and bread. There’s a couple of small markets nearby but we are going do it fast, like in half an hour, because of the shelling.

I also spoke to Kateryna Symonova, who owned a bar before the war, and now works at the technical university.

It was really loud. We heard a lot bombing. Big and close and we could hear it all the time. It was bad enough that the whole apartment was shaking. We went down to basement for a time after it started at 10pm.

We assume they’ll start again today. Now they’re closing the city and I guess it means something big is coming. We have enough food and water and I’ve sent my parents out of Kherson, so it’s just me my husband.

Now even though the curfew doesn’t start until tomorrow evening, most people have decided to stay at home. It’s really scary to go outside. But it’s also really scary staying at home.

Anton Gerashchenko, the former deputy minister of internal affairs and a current adviser to the interior ministry, has posted to social media what he claims is a video clip of air defences in Ukraine being launched against the overnight drone attack.

The Guardian has not independently verified the location and timing of the video.

Russia’s state-owned news agency Tass has published overnight quotes from Anatoly Antonov, the Russian ambassador to the US. It quotes him as saying:

How would the Americans react if a drone hit the White House, the Capitol or the Pentagon? The answer for any politician, and even the layman, is obvious: the punishment will be tough and inevitable. Russia will respond to a daring and arrogant terrorist attack.

In criticism of the US response to the incident, he said Washington “did not find it possible to recognise the obvious – a terrorist act planned by the regime of Zelenskiy and an attempt on the life of the president of the Russian Federation”.

Putin is not thought to have been in the Kremlin at the time of the incident.

Antonov went on to say:

Blasphemous and deceitful were the theses that this terrorist attack was allegedly an ‘operation under a false flag’. That is, it was Russia itself that organised the provocation against the heart of our statehood?

The world remembers how, in 2001, the Russian president was the first to reach out to the American people, who were then subjected to a terrorist attack. Everything is forgotten. Today, the US defends Kyiv criminals.

Suspilne, Ukraine's state broadcaster, has this report on its Telegram channel for the partly occupied Donetsk region:

On the night of 4 May, the Russian military launched a rocket attack on Kramatorsk, damaging the building of the educational institution and nearby residential buildings. There are no dead or injured, reported the head of the Donetsk region Kirylenko.

Also, Avdiivka came under fire from artillery – the city was also hit by an air missile – houses and the territory of the enterprise were damaged.

During the past day, the Russian military shelled Kurakhivska, Kostyantynivska and other communities of Donetsk region. On 3 May, two residents were killed and nine others were injured in Donetsk region.

The claims have not been independently verified.

Here are some of the latest images sent to us from Ukraine over the news wires, showing Ukraine’s border guards in military exercises.

A Ukrainian border guard participates in a military exercise in central Ukraine.
Ukrainian service personnel test a drone prior a military exercise.
Units have been training ahead of the much-anticipated Ukrainian counter-offensive.

There’s been another night of substantial Russian missile attacks and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities, which has become something of a pattern in the last week or so after a period of relative calm. In the aftermath of Russia’s claims that Ukraine targeted the Kremlin with its own drones and tried to assassinate Vladimir Putin, Moscow launched a wave of kamikaze drones mainly targeting Kyiv and Odesa.

While all of the 18 drones launched against the Ukrainian capital were reported shot down, three drones landed in the area of a school dormitory building in Odesa although there were no casualties reported. Tail fragments for two of the drones had “for Moscow” and “for the Kremlin” scrawled on them.

If you’re just joining us, this is what happened overnight in Ukraine:

  • Ukrainian air defences said they downed 18 out of 24 kamikaze drones that Russia launched in a pre-dawn attack on Thursday. In a statement, Kyiv city administration said that all missiles and drones targeting the Ukrainian capital for the third time in four days, have been destroyed. No casualties were reported.

  • The US embassy in Ukraine has warned US citizens in the country of that there is an “ongoing heightened threat of missile attacks, including in Kyiv and Kyiv oblast”. It said, “In light of the recent uptick in strikes across Ukraine and inflammatory rhetoric from Moscow, the Department of State cautions US citizens of an ongoing heightened threat of missile attacks, including in Kyiv and Kyiv oblast.”

  • Russian emergency services extinguished the fire at a large oil refinery in Russia two hours after it was hit in a drone attack, TASS news agency reported early on Thursday. TASS said the incident occurred at the Ilsky refinery near the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk in the Krasnodar region. A day earlier, a fuel depot further to the west caught on fire near a bridge linking Russia’s mainland with the occupied Crimea peninsula.

  • Dutch media are reporting that Zelensky arrived at Amsterdam’s airport late Wednesday, with a trip to the international criminal court in The Hague on his agenda. Zelenskiy is expected to deliver a speech in The Hague entitled “No peace without justice for Ukraine”, according to public broadcaster NOS.

  • Zelenskiy has denied Russian claims that Ukraine was involved in a drone attack on the Kremlin that was intended to kill the Russian president, Vladimir Putin. The Ukrainian president said on Wednesday: “We don’t attack Putin, or Moscow, we fight on our territory and defend our towns and cities.” The Kremlin said on Wednesday that two drones had been used in the attack, but that they had been disabled by Russian defences. It has vowed to take retaliatory measures.

The Guardian’s Pjotr Sauer and Dan Sabbagh reported earlier that Volodymyr Zelenskiy has denied Russian claims that Ukraine was involved in a drone attack on the Kremlin that was intended to kill the Russian president, Vladimir Putin.

The Ukrainian president said on Wednesday: “We don’t attack Putin, or Moscow, we fight on our territory and defend our towns and cities.”

“We leave it to the tribunal,” he added.

The Kremlin said on Wednesday that two drones had been used in the attack, but that they had been disabled by Russian defences. It has vowed to take retaliatory measures.

The Kyiv city administration says that the only damage done by drones in the capital last night was to cars from falling debris.

“Debris fell on various streets around approximately 10 buildings. As a result of falling debris, parked cars (quantity to be determined) and road surface were partially damaged,” the administration wrote on Telegram.

More on this morning’s drone strikes, from Reuters:

Ukrainian air defences said they downed 18 out of 24 kamikaze drones that Russia launched in a pre-dawn attack on Thursday.

In a statement, Kyiv city administration said that all missiles and drones targeting the Ukrainian capital for the third time in four days, have been destroyed.

“The Russians have attacked Kyiv using Shahed loitering munitions and missiles, likely the ballistic type,” the administration said.

Out of 15 Shahed kamikaze drones fired at the Black Sea coastal city of Odesa, air defences destroyed 12, while three struck a university compound. There were no casualties, the Ukrainian southern military command said.

Russia has regularly bombarded Ukraine since October last year, striking at a variety of targets. The latest blasts were reported less than 24 hours after Kyiv said 21 people died in a Russian strike on the city of Kherson.

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2023-05-04 07:35:25Z
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