Jumat, 25 Februari 2022

'No one needs this except Putin': Russians take to streets to protest against Ukraine war - Financial Times

Hours after architect Anna Gnedovskaya shared a Facebook post condemning her country’s invasion of Ukraine and calling for Russians to take to the streets in protest, the police came knocking on her door. She fled, but was detained on Friday.

“Two policemen waited for her outside the building all night,” her son Viktor Tatarskii, a 37-year-old biologist from Moscow, told the Financial Times. They told Gnedovskaya — who did not attend the protest — to accompany them “as a witness of a fraud”, adding “but you understand everything yourself”, Tatarskii said.

His mother — one of 1,500 opponents of the conflict detained across Russia in the hours following the invasion, according to official data — now faces a court hearing for allegedly threatening public order.

Russia’s launch of what President Vladimir Putin called “a special operation” to “demilitarise and de-Nazify” Ukraine has dismayed many of its own citizens. Following his early-morning address to the nation on Thursday as the incursion began, people in Moscow and other cities were reported to be panic-buying food and withdrawing dollars from banks.

As yet it is hard to accurately gauge public opinion of Putin’s plans. Ahead of the invasion, a Levada poll indicated that 60 per cent believed the west was responsible for escalating the crisis.

The protests are far from the largest in Russia in recent years, where an intensifying crackdown on dissent has outlawed demonstrations without a permit and made taking to the streets almost impossible without the threat of jail. Russia also lacks the dissident tradition of Ukraine, where protests are a core part of political culture and many have criticised what they see as their neighbours’ passivity.

But on Friday social media in Russia continued to teem with calls to halt the aggression and protesters plan another rally in Moscow next week.

Tatarskii was one of thousands of mainly young people who took to the streets of Moscow, St Petersburg, Novosibirsk, Ekaterinburg and other major Russian cities on Thursday night to make their opposition clear.

“I’m very much against war. I believe it’s a crime to have a fratricidal war,” he said, referring to Ukraine’s deep cultural and historical ties to Russia. “I’m against war in general, but this one is . . . an aggressive and criminal war.”

Pavel Akimov was among those detained after he protested outside the Kremlin on Thursday carrying a poster reading “Putin=War.” The 32-year-old neurological scientist, who was released and faces a $200 fine for violating Russia’s restrictions on protests, compared the events to those in Germany at the dawn of the second world war.

“There is a real feeling [as if] we are in the Berlin of 1939 . . . that this is a historical moment,” he told the FT, speaking by phone from the police station. “This is real madness. On one hand, maybe it was expected, but on the other it is unimaginable.

“No one needs this except Putin, so he can hold on to power,” he added. “It . . . means decades of degradation for Russia.” 

Pavel Akimov holds a sign reading ‘Putin = War’
Pavel Akimov, who was arrested in Moscow for protesting against the war, compared the events to those in Germany at the dawn of the second world war © Nastassia Astrasheuskaya/FT

Dmitry, a student from Belgorod, a southern Russian town at the Ukrainian border, said he wanted the world to distinguish between Russians and Putin.

“The Russians did not start the war . . . It was started by Putin and his criminal group, hiding behind the name of the Russians for their dirty actions,” he wrote on social media. “They have only two goals — money and power. They don’t care about refugees, the lives of civilians.

“I know what the overwhelming majority of Russians are feeling — pain, fear, powerlessness and . . . shame,” he added. “Shame that the leader of the country you live in can doom millions of people to the horror of war with the snap of his finger.”

Dmitry Muratov, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and editor of Novaya Gazeta, one of Russia’s few remaining independent papers, also expressed a sense of shame. The paper was published in both Russian and Ukrainian on Friday to express solidarity with Russia’s neighbour.

“We do not recognise Ukraine as an enemy and the Ukrainian language as the language of an enemy. And we never will,” he said.

Meanwhile, dozens of celebrities posted anti-war statements on social media, including singers Kristina Orbakayte, Zemfira and Valery Meladze and television hosts Ivan Urgant and Maxim Galkin.

Such a move is risky in an environment where the culture industry is largely state-funded and heavily censored. Russia’s interior ministry has also issued a statement warning against online calls for people to join non-sanctioned demonstrations, saying it would “take all necessary measures to maintain order”.

Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s spokesman, said on Friday that the protesters “had no legal rights to [protest], to put forward their point of view, without going through the relevant procedures”.

Putin “listens to everyone’s opinion and understands [how many] have a different point of view, as well as how many understand [why Russia was] forced” to attack Ukraine, he told reporters.

“Of course, there are citizens who have their own point of view. Clearly we should do a better job explaining things to them,” he added.

Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, thanked the Russian protesters.

“Russian citizens who come out to the protests, we see you,” he said in a video address on Friday. “That means you have been heard. That means you believe us. Fight for us. Fight against war.”

​​Additional reporting by Max Seddon in Moscow 


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2022-02-25 15:27:33Z
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Ukraine invasion: President tells his troops 'you are all we have' as he accuses Europe of not doing enough - Sky News

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has told Ukrainian troops "you are all we have" as he accused European countries of not doing enough to stop the Russian invasion.

He said the Russian attack in Ukraine was like a repeat of the Second World War and called on European citizens to protest to force their governments to act more quickly and forcefully.

Mr Zelenskyy said tougher sanctions need to be imposed on Moscow as his troops battled Russian forces closing in on the capital.

Kyiv hit by 'horrific rocket strikes' as Russian invasion enters second day - live updates

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Ukraine leader: 'I am target No 1'

Key developments:
• Russian invasion reaches Kyiv
• Russian Grand Prix cancelled after country stripped of Champions League
• UK flights banned from Russia in retaliation after British sanctions slapped on Aeroflot

He said ongoing Russian aggression showed that the current measures were not enough.

Tougher sanctions he suggested included banning Russians from entering the European Union, cutting Moscow off from the SWIFT global payments system and an oil embargo.

More on Russia

"The invasion of Russia into Ukraine is not just an invasion, it's the beginning of the war against Europe," Mr Zelenskyy said. "Against the unity of Europe. Against basic human rights in Europe. Against all rules of coexistence on the continent. Against the fact that European states refuse to divide borders by force."

"What are you going to do about it?" he asked in a televised address.

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Kyiv city centre 'empty and tense'

"How are you going to defend yourselves if you are so slow helping us in Ukraine?"

He said Europe "has enough strength to stop this aggression".

Cutting Russia off from the SWIFT global payments system would be one of the toughest sanctions the West could impose - but it would also involve pain for foreign banks and other creditors that do business with the country.

The system, which has its headquarters in Belgium, is used by more than 11,000 financial institutions in more than 200 countries and territories to send money and information to each other.

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How Russia invaded Ukraine

The UK is also now backing such a measure but it would require unanimity - the lack of which US President Joe Biden is blaming on Europe.

The move would have a major impact, damaging Russia's economy immediately and in the long term.

It would cut Russia off from most international financial transactions, including international profits from oil and gas production, which in all accounts for more than 40% of the country's revenue.

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Reporter ducks during 'barrage'

EU leaders agreed on Thursday to impose new sanctions on Russia's financial, energy and transport sectors, introduce
export controls, and blacklist more Russians - but these have yet to be implemented.

Countries that sell their products to Russia will see trade revenues fall - but top EU financial officials said the bloc is ready to bear the economic pain.

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Tanks seen in southern Ukraine

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said 70% of the Russian banking market and key state-owned companies would be targeted.

European assets held by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will be frozen, according to an EU official.

Plans are being drafted to reduce Europe's reliance on Russian gas - but both the EU and US have made it clear that they would not stop imports of the natural resource.

The UK hit Russia with what Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the "largest set of sanctions ever imposed anywhere by the UK government" - targeting more than 100 businesses and individuals.

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US President Joe Biden said "strong limitations" will be imposed on what can be exported from the US to Russia.

Read more:
What is Putin thinking?
What is happening in Ukraine?

How does Ukraine's military compare to Russia's?

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2022-02-25 13:41:15Z
1286145867

Kamis, 24 Februari 2022

SWIFT sanctions could hurt Russia - but pain would also be felt by the West - Sky News

Cutting Russia off from the SWIFT global payments system would be one of the toughest sanctions the West could impose.

But it would also involve pain for foreign banks and other creditors that do business with the country.

The system, which has its headquarters in Belgium, is used by more than 11,000 financial institutions in more than 200 countries and territories to send money and information to each other.

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Armoured vehicles believed to be crossing Ukraine border

It is an important cog in the world's financial system and overseen by central banks in the United States, Japan and Europe.

Ukraine's foreign minister has called for Russia to be cut off from SWIFT and that call has been backed by other governments including the Czech Republic.

The UK is also now backing such a measure but it would require unanimity - a lack of which US president Joe Biden is blaming on Europe.

In fact it is Germany in particular that looks like the main obstacle, with chancellor Olaf Scholz arguing that cutting off Russia from SWIFT should not be part of the current round of sanctions.

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The move would have a major impact, damaging Russia's economy immediately and in the long term.

It would cut Russia off from most international financial transactions, including international profits from oil and gas production, which in all accounts for more than 40% of the country's revenue.

Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks during a meeting of the U.N. General Assembly on the situation between Russia and Ukraine, at the United Nations Headquarters in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., February 23, 2022. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Image: Ukraine's foreign minister has called for SWIFT sanctions

But it would also make it tough for creditors to get their money back.

Among Western countries, the United States and Germany would stand to lose the most from such a move, as their banks are the most frequent SWIFT users with Russian banks, according to Maria Shagina at the Carnegie Moscow Center, a think-tank.

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey told MPs this week that British banks had very limited exposure to Russia.

Read more: Inside Putin's mind - Why is he invading Ukraine and what does he want?

In 2012, SWIFT disconnected Iranian banks as international sanctions tightened against Tehran over its nuclear programme.

Iran lost half its oil export revenue and 30% of its foreign trade, according to the Carnegie Moscow Center think-tank.

Russia has developed an alternative payments system that could be expanded to banks in foreign markets that have more friendly relations with Moscow.

It was developed after there were calls to cut its SWIFT access in 2014 when it annexed Crimea.

But the system has struggled to establish itself in international transactions.

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2022-02-24 20:11:20Z
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Vladimir Putin orders start of ‘military operation’ in eastern Ukraine - Financial Times

Vladimir Putin’s forces stormed Ukraine and mobilised for an overwhelming assault on Kyiv as Russia unleashed one of Europe’s largest military offensives since the second world war.

After air and missile strikes, Russian troops launched attacks from Ukraine’s northern border with Belarus, across its eastern frontier with Russia and in the south from Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula that Russia invaded and annexed in 2014.

Columns of Russian tanks and armoured vehicles later rolled into the country from all three fronts, while fighter jets, airborne troops and dozens of helicopters attacked a key airport outside Kyiv. Senior western officials warned that Russia was assembling an “overwhelming force” to take the capital, potentially within days.

Shocked by the ferocity of Russia’s assault, world leaders addressed their nations to condemn what they cast as the most momentous challenge to the postwar order in Europe for 80 years. “He has much larger ambitions than Ukraine,” said Joe Biden, US president. “He wants to, in fact, re-establish the former Soviet Union. That’s what this is about.”

Biden said the US and its allies would impose new sanctions on Russia in response to Russia’s aggression. “Putin chose this war and now he and his country will bear the consequences.”

Roads out of Kyiv were gridlocked with civilians fleeing the capital, while city authorities ordered residents to seek refuge in basements and bomb shelters.

Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, called on “everyone with battle experience” to take up arms and resist forces that had invaded the country “just as fascist Germany did”.

Alarm over the conflict ripped through international markets, with the price of European natural gas contracts jumping as much as 70 per cent to €142 per megawatt hour. Russia is a key producer of raw materials, with Europe relying on the country for about a quarter of its oil and more than a third of its gas.

Map showing how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine may play out   Initial cruise missile strikes on military sites, airfields and troop depots in Kyiv, Kharkiv and Dnipro. Alongside artillery shelling along line of control in eastern Ukraine  Ground advance (troops and tanks) south from Belarus to encircle Kyiv  Advance north from Crimea and east through Donbas in a bid to encircle bulk of Ukrainian forces in the east and cut them off from Kyiv  Advance from Crimea along Black Sea coast to Odesa. Central column moves west to Dnipro river, ultimate target Kyiv  Ukraine attempts strategic retreat west from current line of control evading Russian pincer movement. At some point, Ukrainian troops will need to hold the line, but unclear when that may be

Brent crude prices rose to more than $105 a barrel, the first time the international oil benchmark has crossed the $100 threshold since 2014. But the price dropped back to about $99 after the Biden administration announced a raft of sanctions that focused on Russia’s financial sector, rather than its energy industry, which is an important supplier to many western countries.

The pattern of Russian incursions suggested that its forces aim to advance south towards Kyiv, while simultaneously moving to encircle Ukraine’s forces in the east by cutting through the country from the Russian border to the Black Sea. Ukrainian authorities reported scores of casualties in fierce fighting across the country.

One senior US defence official said the initial campaign was “clearly designed to take key population centres”, with the intention of ultimately “decapitating the government” in Kyiv.

Russian forces pushed for control over territory around the regions of Chernihiv in the north, Kherson in the south, and around the major north-eastern city of Kharkiv, which saw some of the heaviest fighting on the first day of clashes.

Jens Stoltenberg, Nato secretary-general, condemned Russia for shattering the peace in Europe with a “brutal act of war”. In an emergency meeting, the US-led military alliance decided to deploy additional land, air and sea forces to bolster its eastern flank with Russia.

A US defence official said the Pentagon would send 7,000 more US troops to Germany. The purpose of the new deployment was to “reassure Nato allies, deter Russian aggression and be prepared to support a range of requirements in the region”.

In an address on state television on Thursday morning, Putin said that Moscow would “de-Nazify” Ukraine and “defend” victims of “genocide”, despite there being no evidence of such crimes.

After referring to Russia’s nuclear arsenal, Putin warned other countries against “the temptation of meddling” and said the country’s response would “lead you to consequences that you have never encountered in your history”.

Western leaders responded to the events with outrage. Boris Johnson, UK prime minister, promised sanctions to “hobble” Russia as he called on the west to ensure that “this hideous and barbaric venture” ends “in failure”.

Europe braced for a humanitarian crisis in the aftermath of the invasion. Slovakia said that its border with Ukraine was open for “all persons fleeing this war”. The US has warned that as many as 5mn Ukrainians could be displaced.

Volodymyr Zelensky during his address to the nation on Thursday
Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, gives a televised address to the nation on Thursday © Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Reuters

The Russian assault began with missiles, launched from land and sea, hitting about a dozen airfields across the country, including Kyiv’s airport Boryspil and facilities in the Black Sea port city of Odesa. US defence officials estimate that 100 missiles were fired in the initial assault.

By late morning, dozens of Russian helicopters had begun attacking Hostomel airport in a suburb north of Kyiv.

Ukrainian authorities said the country’s armed forces were resisting the invasion, making unconfirmed claims that they had destroyed tanks, aircraft and helicopters. Russia has denied such losses.

Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser in Zelensky’s office, said more than 40 Ukrainian army servicemen had been killed defending territory and critical infrastructure.

Brussels will present “massive and targeted” measures to EU leaders for their approval at an extraordinary summit later on Thursday, said Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission president.

Russia claims, based on little or no evidence, that Ukraine is attacking the separatist-held territories in the Donbas, where more than 14,000 people have died in a conflict that broke out after the annexation of Crimea.

Nato will hold an emergency summit of its members’ 30 leaders on Friday to discuss what the alliance’s head described as Russia’s “deliberate, cold-blooded and long-planned invasion” of Ukraine.

The US has for weeks warned that Putin was preparing for an invasion, after he deployed more than 150,000 troops on the Ukraine border. Until as recently as this week, Russia rejected claims that it had any such plans.

At an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council shortly before the Russian attacks, Sergiy Kyslytsya, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UN, told his Russian counterpart: “There is no purgatory for war criminals. They go straight to hell.”

Vassily Nebenzia, Russia’s ambassador, replied: “This isn’t called a war. This is called a special military operation in the Donbas.”

Additional reporting by Demetri Sevastopulo and Aime Williams in Washington

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2022-02-24 20:21:23Z
1312849362

European gas prices soar and oil hits $105 after Russia attack on Ukraine - Financial Times

European natural gas prices soared by almost 70 per cent and crude oil exceeded $105 a barrel for the first time since 2014 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered fresh worries about global energy supplies.

Fears that a war could disrupt global energy supplies sent Brent crude jumping as much as 9 per cent to $105.79 a barrel. Futures linked to TTF, Europe’s wholesale gas price, surged as much as 69 per cent to €142 per megawatt hour before trimming their gains to 40 per cent. The European gas price has risen from just €16 a year ago.

Russia is a key producer of raw materials, with Europe relying on the country for about a quarter of its oil and more than a third of its gas. It is also the world’s biggest supplier of wheat.

While no new restrictions have been placed on Russian energy companies other than the operator of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, US president Joe Biden met G7 leaders on Thursday to co-ordinate “severe” further sanctions to punish Russia.

Analysts at S&P Global Platts said the impact of “physical disruption” to Russian gas flowing to Europe via Ukraine would be “extreme” and potentially similar to the price spike witnessed in December when European wholesale gas prices rose above €180 MWh in response to cold weather and problems at French nuclear power plants. 

“Any disruption to Ukrainian transit flows would immediately tighten gas supply to Europe and drive spot prices higher,” they said.

Ben Luckock, co-head of oil trading at Trafigura, one of the world’s biggest commodity traders, said the market was waiting to see the extent of further western sanctions on Russia expected later in the day.

“If there’s a threat to energy flows, the oil price can go substantially higher,” he said. “If there’s not, we probably don’t come off very far because the risk skew is all to the upside.”

Russian crude had already been trading at a discount in the past 48 hours in a sign that buyers, wary of the possible impact of sanctions, had started to avoid Russian cargoes, Luckock added.

Oil prices from 2013 to 2022

Opec, the oil producers’ cartel, is already struggling to meet its output targets as demand for crude rebounds following the easing of lockdown restrictions. This has pushed up prices, with analysts warning there is limited capacity to increase supplies if flows from Russia are affected by sanctions.

The same is true in gas markets, where no single country can replace the kind of volume that Russia can supply.

Russia’s state-owned gas producer Gazprom said on Thursday that exports through Ukraine to Europe were continuing. Gas in storage across the continent is already at a five-year low.

“Oil and natural gas prices have become the crisis’ fear barometer,” said Norbert Rücker of Julius Baer. “Any disruption of flows between Russia and Europe, due to damage or sanctions, would drastically add to the already present supply scarcity.”

European gas prices

Other commodity markets were also whipsawed by the Russian onslaught on Ukraine.

Wheat futures in Chicago rose almost 6 per cent to $9.26 a bushel, the highest level since July 2012. Russia and Ukraine are leading exporters of grain, producing 14 per cent of global wheat and accounting for just under 30 per cent of all wheat exports. The two countries are also large exporters of corn and sunflower oil.

Fears heightened over supply flows after news that Russia had blocked off the Azov, an inland sea connected to the Black Sea. Both Ukraine and Russia have key loading ports, and the ban on commercial vessels from the Azov to the Black Sea would likely cause havoc on grain and steel markets.

“This is a really serious situation for agricultural markets,” said Dave Whitcomb at commodity specialist Peak Trading Research. “There are fundamental concerns around whether grains will flow out of the Black Sea states, and both wheat and corn markets are just on fire.”

Wheat prices hit highest level since 2012

Metals prices also climbed on Thursday, with aluminium, used in everything from beers cans to cars, rising more than 3.5 per cent to a record high of $3,449 a tonne. Russia is a key producer of aluminium as well as copper, nickel, platinum and palladium.

In 2018, the aluminium market was plunged into turmoil after the US slapped sanctions on Rusal and other companies linked to oligarch Oleg Deripaska.

“Russia is a significant producer of commodities so overnight developments in eastern Europe could have material implications for global supply chains,” said Dominic O’Kane, analyst at JPMorgan.

Elsewhere, gold rose more than 3 per cent to $1,974 a troy ounce, a 17-month high, as nervous investors scoured the market for havens.

The rising gold price, however, offered little support to Polymetal. The Russian miner, which is a FTSE 100 constituent, saw 38 per cent sliced off its market value on Thursday as investors dumped the stock on concern about potential sanctions.

“Polymetal believes that targeted sanctions on the company remain unlikely,” the group said in a statement.

Another big loser was Evraz, the steelmaker controlled by Roman Abramovich, the owner of Chelsea football club, and Alexander Abramov. Its shares fell almost 30 per cent.

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2022-02-24 15:56:50Z
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Heavy fighting breaks out near Chernobyl nuclear waste storage - Metro.co.uk

There are fears that an accidental hit on a reactor could pose a major radioactive risk (Picture: Getty)

Russian troops have entered an area near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, an adviser to Ukraine’s interior minister has claimed.

The Ukrainian President believes Vladimir Putin’s forces are attempting to capture the plant itself as fears grow of a nuclear catastrophe.

Volodymr Zelensky said his troops are fighting to prevent a repeat of the radioactive disaster which struck the area in 1986.

‘Russian occupying forces are trying to take over the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Our soldiers are giving their lives so that the tragedy of 1986 does not happen again,’ he tweeted.

Mr Zelensky branded the attack ‘a declaration of war on all of Europe’.

Fighting is already believed to be raging in Chernobyl, near the facility which went into meltdown nearly 40 years ago.

Forces from Russia are said to have entered the area from the Belarusian side.

METRO GRAPHICS Chernobyl, Ukraine locator
Russian forces are thought to have entered from Belarus (Picture: Metro.co.uk)

There are fears that the clashes could disturb a nuclear waste store or other dangerous substances left in the exclusion zone.

Earlier today, an airstrike hit an area near Chernobyl around 26 miles from the exclusion zone.

It comes after a security expert in Kyiv claimed that an accidental hit on a reactor would pose a risk of radioactive pollution to Europe.

Radiation could contaminate air, soil and waterways, affecting Russia and much of Europe the head of safety analysis at the State Scientific and Technical Centre for Nuclear and Radiation Safety, Dmytro Gumenyuk, told i news.

CHERNOBYL, UKRAINE : View of the Chernobyl Nuclear power after the explosion on April 26 1986 in Chernobyl:,Ukraine. (Photo by SHONE/GAMMA/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
The Chernobyl Nuclear reactor after the disaster in 1986 (Picture: Getty Images)

Chernobyl was the scene of the worst nuclear disaster in history, and an exclusion zone has been set up around the area ever since.

The reactor spewed radioactive waste across Europe from around 80 miles north Kyiv.

The exploded reactor has been covered by a protective shelter to prevent radiation leak and the entire plant has been decommissioned.

Elsewhere, parts of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region were no longer under Kyiv’s control, the regional administration said, as Russian forces attacked by land, sea and air.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

MORE : How Ukraine’s military compares in size to Russia’s

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2022-02-24 14:55:00Z
1313616693

Rabu, 23 Februari 2022

Ukraine prepares to impose state of emergency and calls up reserve troops - Financial Times

Ukraine’s parliament approved a call by President Volodymyr Zelensky to declare a state of emergency in the country late on Wednesday, with a majority 335 MPs voting in favour.

“We put off this decision for a long time,” the national security chief Oleksiy Danilov said, “ . . . the situation is complicated but under control.” He added that the Russian threat would be greater if the domestic ‘destabilisation’ pursued by Moscow were allowed to be a factor.

The government earlier told its citizens to leave Russia, amid growing signs that Ukraine was veering closer to a full-blown war with its northern neighbour.

Kyiv’s move to introduce emergency rule comes after Zelensky called up reserve troops and his administration pleaded with the west to impose tougher sanctions on Russia.

The measures underlined the gravity of the situation facing Kyiv after Russia’s president Vladimir Putin ordered Russian “peacekeeping” forces into the breakaway eastern Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.

The US announced sanctions against Russia on Tuesday, accusing Putin of beginning an invasion of Ukraine. These followed similar moves from the EU and the UK, which cast the measures as part of a first wave of economic curbs on Russia.

But Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraine’s foreign minister, called on the west not to delay tougher sanctions if it wanted to deter Moscow from “further aggression”.

“First decisive steps were taken yesterday, and we are grateful for them. Now the pressure needs to step up to stop Putin. Hit his economy and cronies. Hit more. Hit hard. Hit now,” Kuleba said on Twitter.

UK prime minister Boris Johnson announced on Wednesday that additional defensive weapons were being sent to Ukraine “in light of the increasingly threatening behaviour” displayed by Russia.

The Ukrainian president urged calm and said he did not believe Russia would launch a major assault, although he said preparations were being made should one occur.

A Ukrainian serviceman checks a woman’s documents
A Ukrainian serviceman checks a woman’s documents as she crosses into a government-controlled region in Luhansk from territory controlled by pro-Russia separatists © Vadim Ghirda/AP

Zelensky said the deployment of reserve troops was not a mass mobilisation, stating: “We must increase the readiness of the Ukrainian army for all possible changes in the operational environment. We are talking exclusively about citizens assigned to the operational reserve.”

The state of emergency approved by parliament on Wednesday will have powers that fall short of martial law, putting Zelensky in charge of all decisions but allowing for measures to be implemented by special commissions composed of central and regional government authorities.

The emergency order will apply to all of Ukraine except for the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, which have been under a separate regime since 2014 when Russia fomented a proxy separatist war there after annexing Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula.

Danilov said the emergency measures would include enhanced security procedures in public places, restrictions and inspections on transport, and document checks.

“These are preventive measures imposed so that calm is preserved in the country, so that our economy continues to operate, so that our country continues to operate,” he said.

“The main aim of the Russian Federation is to reach their goals through domestic destabilisation,” he added. “Today’s decision was adopted to prevent this.”

As lawmakers were meeting, several Ukrainian government websites including that of its parliament, went down and some banking services were disrupted by denial of service cyber attacks. Netblocks, a group that tracks internet disruptions and shutdowns, said that among those targeted were Ukraine’s ministries of defence, foreign affairs, and internal affairs, and state banks PrivatBank and Oschadbank.

Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister in charge of digitalisation, said the attack began at about 4pm. This was the third big cyber attack targeting Ukraine this year.

Separately, Ukraine’s government told its citizens on Wednesday to avoid travelling to Russia, while Ukrainian citizens residing in Russia should “leave its territory immediately”.

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2022-02-23 20:24:04Z
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