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    Home » News » Russia-Ukraine war: Ukraine defences in Sievierodonetsk holding, says UK’s MoD; Chornobyl radiation detectors re-start – live | Ukraine
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    Russia-Ukraine war: Ukraine defences in Sievierodonetsk holding, says UK’s MoD; Chornobyl radiation detectors re-start – live | Ukraine

    James MartinBy James MartinJune 8, 2022No Comments18 Mins Read
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    Ukraine holds Sievierodonetsk, launches counterattacks in Kherson – UK MoD

    Russia continues to attempt assaults against Sievierodonetsk although Ukrainian defences are holding, the UK Ministry of Defence has said.

    Though it is unlikely that either side has gained significant ground in the last 24 hours, the department added.

    Regarding the unfolding situation in the eastern frontline city of Sievierodonetsk, the full report, released just after 6am BST, reads:

    Russia continues to attempt assaults against the Sieverodonetsk pocket from three directions although Ukrainian defences are holding. It is unlikely that either side has gained significant ground in the last 24 hours.

    While Russia is concentrating its offensive on the central Donbas sector, it has remained on the defensive on its flanks.”

    Referring to Ukraine’s south-western Kherson region, British intelligence said Ukrainian forces have recently achieved some success through counterattacks, including regaining a foothold on the eastern bank of the Ingulets River.

    With the frontage of the occupied zone stretching for over 500km, both Russia and Ukraine face similar challenges in maintaining a defensive line while freeing up capable combat units for offensive operations.

    In the occupied Kherson region, Russia is forcibly aligning its administration with that of the Russian Federation by introducing the Russian rouble as legal tender and employing Russian teachers to introduce the Russian curriculum and language to schools.

    Russia will highly likely claim its occupation of Kherson as evidence of delivering improved governance and living standards to the Ukrainian people.”

    Updated at 03.39 EDT

    As the battle continues for Sievierodonetsk, there is a flurry of claim and counter-claim about what is happening on the ground. Rodion Miroshnik has just posted an update to Telegram of what he says is happening in the city. Miroshnik is the ambassador to Russia of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic. He writes:

    Ukrainian formations retain control over only a small part of the Sievierodonetsk chemical plant AZOT. Ukrainian militants are firing indiscriminately at the quarters adjacent to the enterprise. Snipers are at work. The circle of allied troops around the remaining group is narrowing.

    According to information from the field, the Sievierodonetsk airport has already been cleared of Ukrainian formations. The shelling that was carried out from there stopped. The remaining militants are hiding in forest plantations around the airport. Allied forces are searching for and clearing them.

    This is how the “powerful counter-offensive” promised by Kyiv looks like in reality.

    None of Miroshnik’s claims have been independently verified. Russia is the only UN member to recognise the Luhansk People’s Republic as an entity.

    Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency is carrying some quotes from Vladimir Rogov, who is part of the Russian-imposed administration in occupied Zaporizhzhia in the south of Ukraine. He told the agency that there is progress towards holding a referendum on the region being annexed by Russia. RIA Novosti quotes him saying:

    The referendum will be held this year. Preparations will take several months. The wording of the questions will be presented in the near future. The vast majority of residents of our region want to return to their native harbour as soon as possible and become part of greater Russia.

    Rogov also said that it was planned to restore freight and passenger rail links with Crimea from Zaporizhzhia. These services were stopped eight years ago when Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine.

    ‘Nobody is going to surrender Sievierodonetsk’ – Luhansk governor

    Serhiy Haidai, Ukraine’s governor of Luhansk, has posted to Telegram to say that “Nobody is going to surrender Sievierodonetsk”.

    He writes that the regional centre of Luhansk is seeing the most intense fighting, saying: “Fierce battles are taking place in Sievierodonetsk, our defenders are fighting for every inch of the city.”

    In his latest message he claims Russians “do NOT control the Lysychansk-Bakhmut route, but fire heavily. We do not use this road, it is too dangerous”.

    Haidai writes:

    The plans of the racists have not changed, they ‘want’ to capture Sievierodonetsk and the ‘way of life’ by 10 June. All the racist forces have been thrown into this. In addition, the orcs [slang term for Russian forces] again plan to cross the Seversky Donets River to create a bridgehead for the offensive.

    Updated at 02.49 EDT

    Maksym Kozytskyi, governor of Lviv in western Ukraine, has said in his morning update on Telegram that overnight the region experienced one air alarm over the threat of a cruise missile strike, but “the danger did not come true”/

    He said that yesterday 405 internally displaced people arrived in the region by evacuation trains, and that “everything is calm in Lviv region”.

    Updated at 02.50 EDT

    The Tass news agency is reporting a statement from the Russian Embassy in the United States which is highly critical of the US transfer of weaponry and supplies to Ukraine – claiming it is irresponsible. It states:

    The [Biden] administration is also demonstrating irresponsibility regarding the transfer of long-range artillery systems to Ukraine. The main risk is an escalation of the conflict if the armed forces of Ukraine use these systems to strike at the territory of the Russian Federation. This is fraught with unpredictable consequences. In addition, Washington ignores the obvious threat of putting modern high-precision weapons into the hands of radical nationalists, terrorists and bandit formations not only on the territory of Ukraine, but also abroad.

    Ukraine is launching a ‘Book of Executioners’, a system to collate evidence of war crimes Kyiv says were committed during Russia’s occupation, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Tuesday.

    Ukrainian prosecutors say they have registered more than 12,000 alleged war crimes involving more than 600 suspects since the Kremlin started its invasion on 24 February.

    Next week, a special publication is to be launched – ‘The Book of Executioners’ – an information system to collect confirmation of data about war criminals, criminals from the Russian army,” Zelenskiy said in a video address.

    Zelenskiy said this would be a key element in bringing to account Russian servicemen who have committed what Ukrainian authorities have described as murders, rape and looting.

    “These are concrete facts about concrete individuals guilty of concrete cruel crimes against Ukrainians,” Zelenskiy said.

    He cited the Kyiv suburb of Bucha, where investigators found what they say is evidence of mass executions.

    Norway has donated 22 self-propelled howitzers to Ukraine, including spare parts, ammunition and other gear, the Norwegian defence ministry said.

    “The Norwegian government has waited to publicly announce the donation for security reasons. Future donations may not be announced or commented upon,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

    Zelenskiy calls for ‘full de-occupation’ of entire Ukrainian territory

    With neither side prevailing on the battlefield, there seems little prospect of negotiations.

    Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he “simply cannot see the preconditions for ending the war” in an interview with the Financial Times.

    Victory meant restoring “all” of Ukraine’s territory, including Crimea – annexed by Russia in 2014 – and separatist-held areas, he suggested.

    “We have to achieve a full de-occupation of our entire territory,” Zelenskiy said by video link at an event hosted by the newspaper on Tuesday.

    Most observers in Kyiv now expect the war to continue through the summer until at least the end of the year.

    China has spoken against third parties’ attempts to “drag countries of the region into the conflict of world powers”, Russian state-owned media agency Tass reports.

    The outlet quoted China’s foreign minister Wang Yi as saying during his meeting with Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev in the city of Nur-Sultan on Tuesday:

    China has always played a constructive role in the assistance to peaceful talks.

    It is necessary under the present-day situation to be aware of third parties’ attempts to drag countries of the region into the conflict of world powers and to avoid their threats to take a certain side.

    China will never be pursuing geopolitical interests in Central Asia and will also not permit outer powers to initiate chaos in this region.”

    Stalemate with Russia ‘not an option’, says Zelenskiy

    A stalemate with Russia is “not an option”, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said, reiterating a plea for foreign help in the war.

    Ukraine’s fierce resistance of Russia’s invasion led to a stalemate in parts of the country, with Moscow re-focussing its forces in the east.

    In an interview with the Financial Times newspaper on Tuesday, he said:

    Victory must be achieved on the battlefield.

    We are inferior in terms of equipment and therefore we are not capable of advancing.

    We are going to suffer more losses and people are my priority.”

    A stalemate with Russia is “not an option”, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said after visiting Ukrainian troops in Soledar, Donetsk region.
    A stalemate with Russia is “not an option”, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said after visiting Ukrainian troops in Soledar, Donetsk region. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Reuters

    Asked what Ukraine would consider a victory, Zelenskiy said restoring the borders Ukraine controlled before Russia’s invasion on 24 February would be “a serious temporary victory”.

    But he said the ultimate aim was the “full de-occupation of our entire territory”.

    Asked about talks with Russia, which have been suspended since late March, Zelenskiy said he had not changed his position, adding that war should be ended at the negotiating table.

    He said he was ready for direct talks with Vladimir Putin, adding that there was “nobody else to talk to” but the Russian president.

    Ukraine ‘holds back assault’ on Sievierodonetsk, military says

    According to the latest Ukrainian military operational report, Ukraine is holding back the Russian assault on its key eastern city.

    Our warriors successfully hold back the assault in the city of Sievierodonetsk, the combat is ongoing.”

    An attempt to capture the nearby towns of Toshkivka and Ustinivka was also unsuccessful, according to the general staff of the armed forces of Ukraine.

    Russian forces have been bombarding Ukrainian positions with intense artillery barrages, airstrikes and non-stop street-by-street fighting, according to the regional governor of Luhansk province.

    Serhiy Haidai said earlier this week that tough street battles were continuing with varying degrees of success. “The situation constantly changes, but the Ukrainians are repelling attacks,” he said.

    Between 10,000 and 11,000 civilians remain in the city.

    Members of a foreign volunteers unit fighting in the Ukrainian army take positions in Sievierodonetsk, Luhansk region of Ukraine June 2, 2022.
    Members of a foreign volunteers unit fighting in the Ukrainian army take positions in Sievierodonetsk, Luhansk region. Photograph: Serhii Nuzhnenko/Reuters

    Updated at 03.41 EDT

    Chornobyl radiation detectors transmitting data for first time since war began

    Dozens of radiation detectors around the Chornobyl nuclear power plant have started transmitting radiation data for the first time since Russia invaded Ukraine, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

    The IAEA said the radiation monitoring network in the area stopped functioning when Russian forces occupied the Chornobyl site in February and held it for five weeks before withdrawing on March 31.

    Radiation levels in the area surrounding Ukraine’s Chornobyl nuclear power plant are now back to normal after detectors came back online today, according to the UN nuclear watchdog.

    Most of the 39 detectors sending data from the Exclusion Zone … are now visible on the IRMIS (International Radiation Monitoring Information System) map.

    The measurements received so far indicated radiation levels in line with those measured before the conflict.”

    Radiation detectors from the area around the #Chornobyl Power Plant, for the first time since 24 February, are transmitting data to the IAEA monitoring system. Measurements received so far indicate levels in line with those before the conflict. https://t.co/HxfPphlLO1 pic.twitter.com/zfNoGQw3q5

    — IAEA – International Atomic Energy Agency (@iaeaorg) June 7, 2022

    “The resumption of radiation data transmission from the Exclusion Zone is a very positive step forward for nuclear safety and security in Ukraine,” the agency’s Director General Rafael Grossi said in the statement.

    “It ends a long period of virtual information blackout that created much uncertainty about the radiation situation in the area, especially when it was under Russian occupation,” the agency’s director general Rafael Grossi said in the statement.

    Updated at 02.05 EDT

    Here are some of the latest images from Ukraine to be sent across our newswires today.

    Ivan Sosnin, 19, stands in front of his destroyed house in the city of Lysychansk at the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on June 7, 2022.
    Ivan Sosnin, 19, stands in front of his destroyed house in the city of Lysychansk at the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on June 7, 2022. Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images
    People live in a shelter to be protected from shelling in the city of Lysychansk.
    People live in a shelter to be protected from shelling in the city of Lysychansk. Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images
    A Ukrainian senior citizen stands with the help of a walking stick at a shelter in northern Kharkiv, Ukraine.
    A Ukrainian senior citizen stands with the help of a walking stick at a shelter in northern Kharkiv, Ukraine. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
    An Ukrainian injured serviceman and an injured civilian wait for medical treatment in Bakhmut, eastern Ukraine.
    An Ukrainian injured serviceman and an injured civilian wait for medical treatment in Bakhmut, eastern Ukraine. Photograph: Bernat Armangué/AP
    An injured Ukrainian servicemen is transferred to a medical facility after getting an emergency medical treatment in the Donetsk region, eastern Ukraine, onb Tuesday.
    An injured Ukrainian servicemen is transferred to a medical facility after getting an emergency medical treatment in the Donetsk region, eastern Ukraine, onb Tuesday. Photograph: Bernat Armangué/AP

    Ukraine holds Sievierodonetsk, launches counterattacks in Kherson – UK MoD

    Russia continues to attempt assaults against Sievierodonetsk although Ukrainian defences are holding, the UK Ministry of Defence has said.

    Though it is unlikely that either side has gained significant ground in the last 24 hours, the department added.

    Regarding the unfolding situation in the eastern frontline city of Sievierodonetsk, the full report, released just after 6am BST, reads:

    Russia continues to attempt assaults against the Sieverodonetsk pocket from three directions although Ukrainian defences are holding. It is unlikely that either side has gained significant ground in the last 24 hours.

    While Russia is concentrating its offensive on the central Donbas sector, it has remained on the defensive on its flanks.”

    Referring to Ukraine’s south-western Kherson region, British intelligence said Ukrainian forces have recently achieved some success through counterattacks, including regaining a foothold on the eastern bank of the Ingulets River.

    With the frontage of the occupied zone stretching for over 500km, both Russia and Ukraine face similar challenges in maintaining a defensive line while freeing up capable combat units for offensive operations.

    In the occupied Kherson region, Russia is forcibly aligning its administration with that of the Russian Federation by introducing the Russian rouble as legal tender and employing Russian teachers to introduce the Russian curriculum and language to schools.

    Russia will highly likely claim its occupation of Kherson as evidence of delivering improved governance and living standards to the Ukrainian people.”

    Updated at 03.39 EDT

    Russia hands over bodies of 210 Ukrainian fighters

    Russia has handed over to Kyiv the bodies of 210 Ukrainian fighters, most of whom died defending the city of Mariupol from Russian forces at a vast steel works, the Ukrainian military confirmed.

    Ukraine’s defence intelligence directorate issued a statement late on Tuesday:

    The process of returning the bodies of the fallen defenders of Mariupol is under way.

    To date, 210 of our troops have been returned – most of them are heroic defenders of Azovsta.

    Work continues on bringing home all of the captured Ukrainian defender.”

    Updated at 03.40 EDT

    1,000 Ukrainian soldiers taken to Russia for investigation – reports

    More than 1,000 Ukrainian servicemen and foreign mercenaries, who had surrendered in Mariupol, have been transferred to Russia for an investigation there, a law enforcement source told Russian state-owned news agency, Tass.

    More Ukrainian prisoners of war will be taken to Russia “later on”, the outlet cited a the Russian law enforcement source as saying.

    Over 1,000 people from Azovstal have been transferred to Russia. Law enforcement officers are working with them.

    Investigators also plan to send a number of other captives to Russia in the future, following a series of face-to-face confrontations.”

    Russian service members seen on the the territory of Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol after Ukrainian defenders surrendered last month.
    Russian service members seen on the the territory of Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol after Ukrainian defenders surrendered last month. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters

    Ukraine’s president Zelenskiy previously said he thought more than 2,500 Azovstal defenders – who also include border guards, police and territorial defence – were being held by Russia.

    Kyiv is seeking the handover of all the estimated defenders in a prisoner swap, but Russian lawmakers have demanded that some of the soldiers be put on trial

    The Guardian’s Pjotr Sauer previously reported that more than 900 Ukrainian troops who had been trapped at Mariupol’s besieged Azovstal steel plant, where Ukrainian forces held out for weeks, had been sent to a prison colony on Russian-controlled territory within Ukraine.

    Some residents who managed to escape are also saying they were given no choice but to travel to Russia in what Kyiv regards as “deportations”, Agence France-Presse added.

    Summary and welcome

    Hello and welcome back to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine. I’m Samantha Lock and I will be bringing you all the latest news for the next few hours.

    Ukrainian forces are struggling to hold their ground in bloody street-to-street fighting in the eastern frontline city of Sievierodonetsk as president Zelenskiy calls for a “full de-occupation” of Ukrainian territory.

    If you’re just waking up, or just dropping in to find the latest information, here’s a summary of the main points you might have missed:

    • Ukrainian forces are finding it hard to stave off Russian attacks in the centre of Sievierodonestk but Moscow’s forces do not control the frontline eastern city, regional officials say. Russian forces have seized residential quarters of the key eastern city and are fighting to take control of an industrial zone on its outskirts and the nearby towns, Russian defence minister Sergei Shoigu said. The Luhansk governor, Serhiy Haidai, conceded that Russian forces control the industrial outskirts of the city. Satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies showed significant damage in Sievierodonetsk and nearby Rubizhne.
    • Some 800 civilians have taken refuge in a chemical factory in Sievierodonetsk, according to a lawyer for Dmytro Firtash, whose company owns the facility. “These 800 civilians include around 200 out of the plant’s 3,000 employees and approximately 600 inhabitants of the city of Sievierodonetsk,” Lanny J. Davis, a US lawyer, noted in a statement published on the company website.
    • More than 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers who surrendered in the southern port city of Mariupol have been transferred to Russia, according to Russian state-owned news agency, Tass. More Ukrainian prisoners of war will be taken to Russia “later on”, the outlet cited a Russian law enforcement source as saying. Some residents who managed to escape are saying they were given no choice but to travel to Russia in what Kyiv regards as “deportations”, Agence France-Presse added.
    • A stalemate with Russia is “not an option”, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said, reiterating a plea for foreign help in the war. “Victory must be achieved on the battlefield,” he said in an interview with the Financial Times on Tuesday, adding that he “simply cannot see the preconditions for ending the war”. Victory meant restoring “all” of Ukraine’s territory, including Crimea – annexed by Russia in 2014 – and separatist-held areas, he suggested.
    • Russian proxy fighters in east Ukraine have said they are opening a trial against two Britons, Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner, who were captured fighting alongside Ukrainian soldiers in Mariupol. The two men, who are serving in the Ukrainian military, and Ibrahim Saadun, a captive from Morocco, were shown sitting in a courtroom cage reserved for defendants in a video released on pro-Russian social media channels on Tuesday.
    • Ukraine’s first deputy minister of agrarian policy and food, Taras Vysotskyi, said it would take six months to clear the coast of Russian and Ukrainian mines. His remarks dealt a blow to a proposal under discussion where ships leaving Ukrainian ports would be given safe escort by Turkish naval vessels.
    • The European Union needs to build warehouses and extend railway tracks across the Ukrainian border to help Kyiv in its attempts to move more grain out of the country to those who need it, says the country’s trade representative. Ukraine will not be able to export more than 2m tonnes of grain a month, around a third of pre-war levels, as long as its main trade routes through its Black Sea ports remain blockaded by Russia, said Taras Kachka.
    • The World Bank has approved $1.49bn of additional financing for Ukraine to help pay wages for government and social workers, expanding the bank’s total pledged support for Kyiv to over $4 billion. The latest round of funding is supported by financing guarantees from Britain, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Latvia.
    • Russia is ramping up oil exports from its major eastern port of Kozmino as it aims to offset the impact of EU sanctions with the surging demand from Asian buyers. Sources told Reuters that Russia has already increased the amount of crude pumped to Kozmino on its main Asian oil route, the East Siberia Pacific Ocean (ESPO) pipeline, by 70,000 barrels per day (bpd).
    • The United States Treasury Department has banned US money managers from buying any Russian debt or stocks in secondary markets, on top of its existing ban on new-issue purchases, in its latest sanctions on Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.
    • Former German chancellor Angela Merkel said she tried to prevent the situation in Ukraine and has no regrets while in office. “It’s a great sadness that it didn’t work out, but I don’t blame myself for not trying,” Merkel said during a televised interview on Tuesday, speaking on the 2014 Minsk agreement with Russia.
    • Moscow’s Chief Rabbi has reportedly fled Russia, after coming under pressure to support Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. Journalist Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt tweeted late on Tuesday: “Can finally share that my in-laws, Moscow Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt and Rebbetzin Dara Goldschmidt, have been put under pressure by authorities to publicly support the ‘special operation’ in Ukraine — and refused.”

    Ukrainian forces are finding it hard to stave off Russian attacks in the centre of Sievierodonestk.
    Ukrainian forces are finding it hard to stave off Russian attacks in the centre of Sievierodonestk.





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