Selasa, 29 Maret 2022

Ukraine claims Russian forces driven back ahead of ceasefire talks - Financial Times

Ukraine claimed it had driven out Russian forces from some key areas around its capital Kyiv and the country’s north-east, as fierce fighting set the backdrop for the first face-to-face ceasefire talks in almost a fortnight.

Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, used a late-night address on Monday to praise his forces retaking Irpin, a suburb of Kyiv and an important gateway to the capital, the latest in a series of counter attacks that pushed back Russian forces.

“The occupiers are pushed away from Irpin. Pushed away from Kyiv,” Zelensky said. “However, it is too early to talk about security in this part of our region. The fighting continues. Russian troops control the north of Kyiv, have the resources and manpower.”

While Ukraine’s precise gains have not been independently verified, the UK said Zelensky’s forces had made progress in “localised counter attacks” to the north-west of Kyiv, including at Irpin, Bucha and Hostomel. “These attacks have had some success and the Russians have been pushed back from a number of positions,” said the Ministry of Defence in an intelligence update on Tuesday.

Zelensky’s remarks came as Russian and Ukrainian envoys gathered in Istanbul for the fourth round of talks to end the war in Ukraine. While negotiators have sketched the outlines of a potential ceasefire and moves towards a political settlement, diplomats in Kyiv, Moscow and the west say they remain sceptical about any imminent breakthrough.

The two sides are discussing a pause in hostilities and humanitarian corridors as part of a possible deal that would involve Ukraine abandoning its drive for Nato membership in exchange for security guarantees and the prospect of joining the EU, according to people familiar with the talks.

With Russia’s month-long ground offensive largely stalled, Moscow has signalled its willingness to pull back from some of its most difficult initial demands. But Ukraine and its western backers fear Russian president Vladimir Putin may be using the talks as a ruse to resupply his forces in preparation for a fresh offensive.

Draft ceasefire documents do not include reference to “denazification”, “demilitarisation” and legal protection for the Russian language in Ukraine, according to four people briefed on the discussions. Moscow is also prepared to let Kyiv join the EU if it remains militarily non-aligned, the people said.

David Arakhamia, head of Zelensky’s party in parliament and a member of Kyiv’s negotiating team, told the FT the parties were close to agreement on the security guarantees and Ukraine’s EU bid but urged caution about prospects for a breakthrough.

“All the issues” have been “on the table since the beginning” of negotiations, he said, but cautioned that there were “lots of points — like in every single item there are unresolved points”.

Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraine’s foreign minister, said the country’s negotiators would “not trade people, land and sovereignty” during talks.

With the war in its second month, Russia has increasingly concentrated on making advances in the east, aiming to envelop Ukrainian forces there while throwing troops into the grinding battle for the port city of Mariupol on the Sea of Azov.

Zelensky chided European countries on Tuesday for still financing Putin’s war through purchases of Russian oil, saying it was pointless to hold back further sanctions until more deadly weapons might be used.

“Doesn’t everything that the Russian military is doing and has already done deserve an oil embargo?” he said.

In addition to the counter attacks around Kyiv, Ukraine claimed battlefield momentum in the Sumy region north-west of its second city Kharkiv, and near the city of Izyum in the east, claiming to retake the settlements of Kamyanka and Topolske. Ukrainian forces are also making advances in the southern Kherson region.

Most of the territorial gains are limited in scale and cannot be independently verified. But as well as the UK noting Ukraine had “some success” around Kyiv, the Pentagon on Monday confirmed Ukrainian forces had recaptured the town of Trostyanets, north-west of Kharkiv.

Vadym Denysenko, an adviser to Ukraine’s interior minister, said on Tuesday that although Ukrainian forces were “pushing the enemy back a little”, Kyiv “still remains one of the main goals of this war for Putin”.

If confirmed, the recapture of Irpin would mark a significant moment for Ukraine’s forces, since the suburb north of Kyiv has been the scene of heavy fighting since the war began.

In an update on operations on Tuesday, Ukraine’s military claimed Russia’s troops were “weakened” and “disoriented”, with some units cut off from supply lines and the main forces. It said Russia was resorting to “indiscriminate artillery fire and rocket-bomb attacks” to offset the “decline in the combat potential of enemy units”.

On Tuesday morning, a Russian rocket wrecked the building of the Mykolayiv regional administration, said governor Vitaliy Kim.

According to a UK intelligence briefing, the Wagner Group, the private military organisation whose mercenaries have fought in Ukraine and Syria and are established in Mali and the Central African Republic, has been “deployed to eastern Ukraine” and is expected to send more than 1,000 fighters.

“Due to heavy losses and a largely stalled invasion, Russia has likely been forced to reprioritise Wagner personnel for Ukraine at the expense of operations in Africa and Syria,” it said.

Through fierce street-by-street fighting, mainly against the battle-hardened Azov troopers, Russian troops are continuing to advance on the centre of the devastated port of Mariupol, which Ukraine claimed remained under its control.

Mariupol’s mayor Vadym Boichenko told CNN on Monday that 160,000 people remained in the city, where “it is impossible to live because there is no water, no electricity, no heat”. “It’s really scary,” said Boichenko, adding: “We need a complete evacuation from Mariupol.”

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2022-03-29 08:11:44Z
CAIiEArpfJMtgrtlVvX_hjPJl2EqFwgEKg8IACoHCAow-4fWBzD4z0gwwtp6

Ukrainian troops 'regaining territory' as peace talks resume amid 'poisoning' claim - Sky News

Ukrainian troops are regaining territory around the capital and pushing back Russian forces, the country's president has said.

Speaking in his latest evening message, Volodymyr Zelenskyy heralded the "liberation" of Irpin, a key town on the northwest fringe of Kyiv.

The UK's Ministry of Defence confirmed that Ukrainian forces have had "some success" in their counterattacks in Irpin, as well as Bucha and Hostomel, which are also northwest of the city.

Ukraine live news: Biden denies calling for Russian regime change

Key updates

• Peace talks to begin in Istanbul
Zelenskyy says Ukraine is willing to consider neutrality and offer security guarantees
US casts doubt on Abramovich 'chemical' poisoning claims
More Russian mercenaries heading to Ukraine
Kremlin says Biden's comments on Putin are 'alarming'
More than 200 children among 5,000 dead in besieged Mariupol

Day 34

"The Russians have been pushed back from a number of positions," the department said in a statement.

"However, Russia still poses a significant threat to the city through their strike capability."

The Ukrainian president said that Russian troops still control north of Kyiv and will continue their attacks even though there are "hundreds and hundreds of units of burned and abandoned enemy equipment".

"Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv regions, Donbas, southern Ukraine - the situation everywhere remains tense, very difficult," he added.

Mariupol, one of the worst affected cities, remains under siege and Mr Zelenskyy said Russian troops did not allow a humanitarian corridor to be organised on Monday.

The centre of the city remains under Ukrainian control despite continuous heavy shelling, according to the MoD.

Elsewhere, Russian troops are maintaining blocking positions while trying to reorganise, it said.

Russia has been repeatedly accused of not allowing people to leave the bombed-out city, and one official reported just 586 managed to escape yesterday.

Peace talks continue despite 'poisoning' claim

Russia and Ukraine will hold their first face-to-face peace talks in two weeks on Tuesday.

Ukraine said its top objective at the talks, being held in Istanbul, is to secure a ceasefire - although both it and the US are sceptical of any major breakthrough.

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Drone captures Mariupol devastation

The talks will take place despite claims a Russian oligarch and two Ukrainian representatives were victims of a chemical attack during negotiations earlier in the month.

Three men including Roman Abramovich suffered symptoms including red eyes, constant and painful tearing, and peeling skin on their hands and faces, a source confirmed to Sky News, after a meeting on Ukrainian territory reportedly on 3 March.

Mr Abramovich reportedly lost his sight for several hours

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has now warned people don't "eat or drink" when negotiating with Russia.

Sanctioned Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich stands in a VIP lounge before a jet linked to him took off for Istanbul from Ben Gurion international airport in Lod near Tel Aviv, Israel, March 14, 2022. REUTERS/Stringer
Image: The US has cast doubt on claims Abramovich was poisoned

"I advise anyone going for negotiations with the Russian Federation not to eat or drink anything.

"And, preferably, avoid touching any surface."

However, the US has cast doubt on the claims, with an official saying the "intelligence highly suggests" the cause was environmental, "not poisoning".

Just how involved is the Chelsea owner in Ukraine-Russia negotiations?

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What happened in Ukraine on day 33?

More Russian mercenaries heading to Ukraine

The Russian private military company the Wagner Group is operating in eastern Ukraine, with its mercenaries being diverted away from operations elsewhere to help support the Russian army, according to the latest Ministry of Defence intelligence update.

The group is believed to be funded by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a businessman with close links to Vladimir Putin.

Russia is expected to deploy more than a thousand mercenaries to undertake combat operations.

However, the MoD also described Russian troops as a "largely stalled invasion".

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Residents in the city of Izyum said they fear annihilation at the hands of Putin's troops.

In the towns and villages that surround the provincial city of 50,000, Sky's Sally Lockwood saw schools that had been obliterated by precision strikes, health clinics reduced to rubble by shelling and ordinary houses destroyed by airborne assaults.

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2022-03-29 05:37:30Z
CBMihQFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS91a3JhaW5pYW4tdHJvb3BzLXJlZ2FpbmluZy10ZXJyaXRvcnktc2F5cy11a3JhaW5pYW4tcG0tYXMtcGVhY2UtdGFsa3MtcmVzdW1lLWFtaWQtcG9pc29uaW5nLWNsYWltLTEyNTc3MTkz0gGJAWh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC91a3JhaW5pYW4tdHJvb3BzLXJlZ2FpbmluZy10ZXJyaXRvcnktc2F5cy11a3JhaW5pYW4tcG0tYXMtcGVhY2UtdGFsa3MtcmVzdW1lLWFtaWQtcG9pc29uaW5nLWNsYWltLTEyNTc3MTkz

Senin, 28 Maret 2022

Ukraine war latest: US to send specialised fighter jets to bolster Nato's eastern front - Financial Times

A fresh round of talks between Russian and Ukrainian delegations could kick off in Turkey as soon as Tuesday, the Kremlin said, adding that negotiations had yielded few breakthroughs.

David Arakhamia, a member of the Ukrainian delegation, confirmed that talks were expected to restart in Istanbul on Tuesday morning.

“While we cannot and will not speak about progress at the talks, the fact that they are continuing to take place in person is important, of course,” said Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov.

Russian president Vladimir Putin and Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday agreed that Istanbul would host peace talks this week.

Putin’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told journalists on Monday that the Russian and Ukrainian delegations could potentially reach an agreement at the talks, as Moscow believed Nato had heard some of its security concerns, the state Tass news agency reported.

“So I still see that there is a chance for an agreement, because there is an understanding of our western partners’ gross mistakes of many years, it is present now, although for understandable reasons they will hardly say it out loud,” Lavrov said.

“We have an interest in these talks having a successful outcome, a result that will meet our key aims,” Lavrov said.

However he also listed points that Moscow plans to raise, such as Ukraine’s demilitarisation and “denazification”, that have previously thwarted progress.

“When we negotiate with the Ukrainian side now . . . we are obliged to make sure Ukraine stops settling down with the west and with Nato militarily,” Lavrov said. “That Ukraine stops being a country that is constantly militarised.”

Putin could meet his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky in future, Lavrov added, but only once progress had been made on Russia’s key aims, as a meeting simply to exchange views right now would be “counterproductive”.

Zelensky had said ahead of the peace talks that Ukraine was ready to declare neutrality, abandon its attempt to join Nato and agree not to develop nuclear weapons if Russia withdraws troops and Kyiv receives security guarantees.

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2022-03-28 16:53:45Z
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Russia Ukraine war: Roman Abramovich 'poisoned along with Ukrainian negotiators' - Metro.co.uk

Roman Abramovich has been sanctioned by the UK Government (Picture: Getty Images)

The Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich was poisoned along with Ukrainian negotiators, it has been claimed.

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the Vladimir Putin ally and Chelsea FC owner – who has been sanctioned by the UK government – was hit by symptoms after a suspected poisoning at a meeting in Kyiv earlier this month.

Abramovich, and at least two senior Ukrainian officials, are said to have developed peeling skin on their faces and hands, red eyes, and constant and painful tearing, the paper reported.

Quoting ‘people familiar with the matter’, it added that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has met with Abramovich, was not been affected.

The lives of the Chelsea owner and peace negotiators are not thought to be in danger.

Widespread reports have previously suggested Russian forces are attempting to assassinate Zelensky, but it is unclear who the target of the alleged poisoning would have been.

Abramovich passed a handwritten note from Zelensky to Putin and is acting as a go-between for the two leaders.

Roman Abramovich's peacemaker flights as he avoids sanctions Metro Graphics
Roman Abramovich’s recent flights

The incident is likely to raise serious safety questions about the continuation of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine and President Zelensky’s involvement.

Russia has been widely blamed for a series of poisonings around the world, including a Novichok incident in Salisbury, the death of Putin critic Alexander Litvinenko and near fatal poisoning of opposition figure Alexei Navalny.

The investigative media group Bellingcat said the latest incident took place overnight from March 3 to 4, with three people experiencing ‘symptoms consistent with poisoning with chemical weapons’ including the Russian oligarch turned negotiator.

‘Abramovich, along with another Russian entrepreneur, had taken part in the negotiations alongside Ukraine’s MP Rustem Umerov’, it tweeted.

‘The negotiation round on the afternoon of 3 March took place on Ukrainian territory, and lasted until about 10 pm.

thumbnail for post ID 16351975 Britain's oldest 'postman', 98, delivers letters to residents in his care home

‘Three members of the negotiating team retreated to an apartment in Kyiv later that night and felt initial symptoms – including eye and skin inflammation and piercing pain in the eyes – later that night.

‘The symptoms did not abate until the morning.’

President Zelensky’s spokesman said he had no information about any suspected poisoning, according to the WSJ.

It cited western experts suggesting it was difficult to confirm if the symptoms were caused by a chemical or biological agent or by an electromagnetic-radiation attack.

Bellingcat claimed the most likely cause of the symptoms was an ‘international poisoning with an undefined chemical weapon’, adding that ‘microwave irradiation’ was another possible theory.

Russia-Ukraine war: Everything you need to know

This is a breaking news story, more to follow soon… Check back shortly for further updates.

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MORE : Ukraine-Russia peace talks: What does neutral status mean?

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2022-03-28 15:20:00Z
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Ukraine war: Biden denies calling for regime change in Russia a day after saying Putin 'cannot remain in power' - Sky News

US President Joe Biden has denied that he was calling for regime change when he said that Russia's president Vladimir Putin "cannot remain in power".

Mr Biden was leaving a church service in Washington DC when he was questioned by a reporter about the speech.

When asked if he had been calling for regime change in Russia, Mr Biden replied: "No."

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Biden: 'This man cannot remain in power'

Key developments:

• The next round of face-to-face talks between Ukraine and Russia will take place in Turkey starting today
• The Ukrainian region of Luhansk, much of which is controlled by Russian-backed separatists, said it may hold a referendum on joining Russia
• Ukraine said 1,100 people were evacuated from frontline areas on Sunday, including from the city of Mariupol, after both sides agreed to set up two "humanitarian corridors"
• The UN said 1,119 civilians have been killed in Ukraine and 1,790 injured since the Russian invasion began in late February
• Ukraine's deputy prime minister said Russian forces were "militarising" the exclusion zone around the occupied Chernobyl nuclear power station

Map of Russia's invasion of Ukraine
Image: Russia's invasion of Ukraine as at 26 March

In a charged speech in Poland on Saturday, the US president built on earlier remarks in which he called Mr Putin a "butcher", describing him as "a dictator" and saying stopping the war in Ukraine is "the task of our time".

More on Ukraine

He appealed to Russian people directly with comparisons between the invasion of Ukraine and the horrors of WWII.

"For God's sake, this man cannot remain in power," he added at the end of his speech.

Read more: With a single sentence, Joe Biden has given a gift to Moscow's propaganda machine

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Cultural heart of Byshiv destroyed

US officials row back after backlash

Senior US officials spent most of Sunday evening and Monday trying to play down that part of Mr Biden's speech.

Among them was Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who said Mr Biden had simply meant that Mr Putin should not be "empowered to wage war" against Ukraine or anywhere else.

He insisted "we do not have a strategy of regime change" as the Kremlin said it is "not up to the Americans to decide who will remain in power in Russia".

The UK government sought the distance itself from Mr Biden's comments, with Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi saying it is "up to the Russian people" to decide whether to overthrow Mr Putin.

Referring to the remarks, French President Emanuel Macron said he "wouldn't use those terms" and suggested they could make it harder to resolve the conflict.

"We want to stop the war that Russia launched in Ukraine, without waging war and without escalation," he said.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that neither NATO nor Mr Biden aim to bring about regime change in Russia.

Asked whether Mr Biden made a dangerous mistake with his comments, he replied: "No."

"He said what he said," he said.

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Enormous blaze at Lviv oil facility

Zelenskyy considers adopting neutral status amid peace talks with Russia

Meanwhile, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that he is prepared to discuss adopting a neutral status as part of a peace deal with Russia.

Speaking to Russian journalists by video late on Sunday, he said: "Security guarantees and neutrality, non-nuclear status of our state - we are ready to go for it. This is the most important point."

Mr Zelenskyy, who spoke to the group in Russian, said such a deal would have to be guaranteed by third parties and put to Ukrainians in a referendum.

He ruled out trying to re-capture all Russian-held territory by force, saying this would lead to a third world war.

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However, he added that he wanted to reach a "compromise" over the eastern Donbas region, which has been held by Russian-backed forces since 2014.

There would be no movement on other Russian demands, such as demilitarisation, he said.

It comes as another top official warned that Russia is aiming to carve Ukraine in two to create a Moscow-controlled region.

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Ukrainian military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov said that Mr Putin had realised "he can't swallow the entire country" and would likely split it like in "the Korean scenario" - a reference to the division between North and South Korea.

Mr Budanov said: "The occupiers will try to pull the occupied territories into a single quasi-state structure and pit it against independent Ukraine".

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2022-03-28 06:54:56Z
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Shanghai imposes lockdown as officials struggle to contain Covid outbreak - Financial Times

Shanghai ushered in extreme lockdown measures on Monday that cleaved China’s leading financial centre in two and blocked connections to the rest of the country, as local authorities tried to quell a record outbreak of largely asymptomatic Covid cases.

Police cut off tunnels and bridges linking Pudong, home to Shanghai’s financial district and many big manufacturers, to Puxi. The two areas, separated by the Huangpu river, are being locked down for mass testing, with Pudong closed until April 1 and its residents confined to their homes. Puxi’s closure and testing drive will start when Pudong reopens, and will run until April 5.

Police also blocked highways leading out of the city, with anyone wanting to leave required to produce a negative Covid test taken within 48 hours, state media reported, citing notices from Shanghai police.

The lockdowns, which far exceed previous measures in Shanghai and marked the first time authorities have confined millions of the city’s residents to their homes, sparked panic buying as shoppers rushed to stock up on vegetables.

The outbreak in mainland China’s most international financial centre is proving a big test for the country’s wider strategy to contain coronavirus. Following an initial lockdown of Wuhan in early 2020, authorities have instituted severe restrictions on other cities to eliminate outbreaks, although recently there had been signs that the approach was being tempered.

President Xi Jinping this month emphasised the need to “minimise the impact” of the virus on the country’s economy after southern tech hub Shenzhen was locked down. In Shanghai, authorities had indicated that a full-scale lockdown was not necessary a few weeks ago, although buildings with positive cases were often sealed off.

Some factories in China have set up isolated “bubble” systems, an approach comparable to the closed system employed for the Winter Olympics in February, which allowed staff to work during lockdowns as long as they did not leave the premises.

Shanghai, with a population of 26mn, recorded just 50 symptomatic cases on Sunday, according to official data, but notched a record 3,450 asymptomatic cases, compared with 5,134 asymptomatic cases across the rest of mainland China.

Over the weekend, the Shanghai World Expo and Exhibition Centre, a vast building in the Pudong district that hosted the Shanghai World Expo in 2010, was opened as a quarantine centre for mild and asymptomatic cases.

The city’s response to the outbreak contrasts with that taken in Hong Kong, which has recorded more than 1mn cases over the past two months after being largely free of infections for almost two years. Plans for mass testing in the territory, which also sparked panic buying, have been downplayed recently given the sheer scale of infections.

China’s stock market started the week lower following news of the lockdowns in Shanghai, with the country’s benchmark CSI 300 index falling as much as 2 per cent on Monday morning as traders weighed the implications for the country’s broader strategy.

“In the near term, China will stick to its zero-tolerance approach,” said Bruce Pang, head of research at China Renaissance. He added that while supply chain shocks had been minimal, the outbreaks would probably weigh on economic growth as Chinese consumers grappled with greater uncertainty.

Pang said that official statements, including from the latest meeting of the Chinese Communist party’s politburo, “imply any adjustment [to containment strategies] will come with the precondition of eliminating infection”. 

Additional reporting by Wang Xueqiao in Shanghai

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2022-03-28 06:03:10Z
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Ukraine is looking for peace without delay, says Zelensky - The Times

Ukraine is looking for peace “without delay”, President Zelensky said on the eve of new negotiations with Russia.

He also repeated his willingness to adopt a policy of neutrality and to abandon hopes of Nato membership.

In an interview with independent Russian media, Zelensky said: “We are looking for peace, really, without delay. There is an opportunity and a need for a face-to-face meeting in Turkey . . . Security guarantees and neutrality, non-nuclear status of our state. We are ready to go for it.”

This morning’s key developments:

• A senior adviser to Zelensky promised an investigation into a video purportedly showing Ukrainian soldiers knee-capping helpless Russian prisoners.

• Russian missile strikes continued overnight, striking targets across the country, including the cities of Volyn,

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2022-03-28 05:20:00Z
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