• Russia-Ukraine war live: two Russian jets and two helicopters reportedl

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 13 16:05:28 2023
    XPost: sci.military.naval, soc.history.war.misc

    the key:
    "The Russian news outlet Kommersant reported that two Russian fighter
    jets and two military helicopters had been shot down on Saturday close
    to the Ukrainian border."

    from https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2023/may/13/russia-ukraine-war-live-russian-retreat-in-bakhmut-highlights-shortage-of-credible-combat-units-say-uk-officials

    Ukraine war live
    Ukraine
    Russia-Ukraine war live: two Russian jets and two helicopters reportedly
    shot down – as it happened
    Russian reports suggest two warplanes and two helicopters downed on
    Saturday, though unclear if due to friendly fire or Ukrainian attacks

    Zelenskiy meets pope as Ukraine retakes ground in Bakhmut
    What we know on day 444 of the invasion
    Updated 6h ago
    6h ago
    A summary of today's developments
    6h ago
    Russian fighter jets and military helicopters 'shot down close to the
    Ukrainian border'
    8h ago
    Summary
    8h ago
    Zelenskiy meets with Pope Francis at the Vatican
    9h ago
    Two Russian jets and two helicopters reportedly downed
    9h ago
    Zelenskiy to visit Germany
    9h ago
    Italy promises Ukraine full support
    10h ago
    Summary
    10h ago
    UK-supplied missiles used to attack occupied Luhansk, Russia claims
    11h ago
    Ukraine regains at least 1km in Bakhmut
    12h ago
    Zelenskiy arrives in Italy
    14h ago
    Summary
    15h ago
    Zelenskiy arrives in Rome
    16h ago
    Three injured in Russian strikes on Mykolaiv
    17h ago
    Russian retreat in Bakhmut highlights 'shortage of credible combat
    units', says UK MoD
    17h ago
    Opening summary

    Ukrainian troops fire a Partyzan multiple launch rocket system in
    Zaporizhzhia region. Photograph: Reuters
    Nadeem Badshah (now) , Geneva Abdul,Adam Fulton (earlier)
    Sat 13 May 2023 13.31 EDT
    From 8h ago
    10.18 EDT

    Two Russian jets and two helicopters reportedly downed
    Luke Harding
    Luke Harding
    Guardian foreign correspondent Luke Harding reporting from Kyiv.

    There are unconfirmed reports that another plane and helicopter has
    crashed, in what appears to be a disastrous day for Russian aviation.
    Moscow Telegram channels reported that an SU-35 warplane had been shot
    down too, together with a second Mi8 helicopter.

    Another military helicopter crashed on Friday in Crimea. It was unclear
    whether the two aircraft and two helicopters were downed on Saturday
    because of friendly fire, or if the Ukrainians targeted them with missiles.

    Updated at 10.29 EDT
    6h ago
    13.31 EDT
    A summary of today's developments

    The Russian news outlet Kommersant reported that two Russian fighter
    jets and two military helicopters had been shot down on Saturday close
    to the Ukrainian border. Kommersant said on its website that the Su-34 fighter-bomber, Su-35 fighter and two Mi-8 helicopters had made up a
    raiding party, and had been “shot down almost simultaneously” in an
    ambush in the Bryansk region, adjoining northeast Ukraine.
    A 15-year-old girl was among two people killed and ten people were
    injured in a Russian shelling attack, Ukraine’s defence ministry said.
    The eastern city of Kostyantynivka was targeted by Smerch rocket
    launchers, it added.
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy held talks in Italy with the prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, President Sergio Mattarella and Pope Francis. The trip is
    Zelenskiy’s first to Italy since Russia invaded on 24 February last year. Ukrainian forces have regained at least a kilometre of territory in
    Bakhmut amid a Russian withdrawal that reflects Moscow’s “severe
    shortage of credible combat units”, the UK Ministry of Defence has said
    in its latest intelligence briefing. It said elements of a Russian
    brigade withdrew “in bad order” from their positions on the southern
    flank of the eastern Ukrainian city, the scene of the war’s longest
    battle. The brigade had been “dogged with allegations of poor morale and limited combat effectiveness”.
    Zelenskiy will be received in Berlin on Sunday, German government
    sources told Reuters on Saturday, as the leader seeks to shore up
    support from key allies against Russia’s invasion. The Ukrainian leader
    last visited Germany for the Munich security council in February last
    year just before the war broke out.
    The German government will provide further military equipment worth
    €2.7bn (£2.4bn) to Ukraine in what would be the biggest Berlin has
    provided since Russia’s invasion. The package includes 20 Marder
    infantry fighting vehicles, 30 Leopard 1 tanks, 15 Gepard anti-aircraft
    tanks, 200 reconnaissance drones, four additional Iris-T anti-aircraft
    systems including ammunition, additional artillery ammunition and more
    than 200 armoured combat and logistics vehicles, according to Der Spiegel. Russian attacks injured three people in the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv, the city’s mayor said. The strikes occurred early on Saturday, Oleksandr Sienkevych said on his Telegram channel. Russian forces
    targeted a local factory, also damaging nearby residential buildings,
    causing fires in three apartments and damaging an educational
    institution, he said.
    Russian-installed officials in Luhansk have said missiles fired by
    Ukrainian forces injured six children and a Russian parliamentarian and
    damaged two disused factories in the eastern Ukrainian region’s main
    city, about 100km (60 miles) behind the frontlines.
    A Russian SU-34 warplane crashed in the Bryansk region bordering
    Ukraine, Tass news agency reported, quoting emergency services, in the
    second such incident on Saturday after a helicopter was seemingly downed
    in the same region.
    Two Russian pilots were killed when a Russian Mi-28 military helicopter
    crashed in the annexed peninsula of Crimea, Russian news agencies
    reported, citing the defence ministry. It said it believed the reason
    for Friday’s crash was equipment failure, Tass reported.
    An unidentified object that entered Polish airspace from the direction
    of Belarus was probably an observation balloon, the defence ministry
    said on Saturday on Twitter. A spokesperson for Poland’s territorial
    defence force told Reuters a search for the object was under way.
    Russian and Belarusian authorities were not immediately available for
    comment.
    Russia’s defence ministry said on Saturday two industrial sites in the occupied city of Luhansk have been struck with Storm Shadow long-range
    cruise missiles supplied by Britain.
    Zelenskiy has thanked the British prime minister, Rishi Sunak, for the provision of long-range cruise missiles. The UK defence secretary, Ben
    Wallace, earlier confirmed it would send the Storm Shadow missiles,
    prompting a threat from the Kremlin of a military response.
    Police in the Russian city of St Petersburg have created an anti-drone
    unit to detect unmanned drones after a suspected attack on the Kremlin
    last week. The unit was launched on Tuesday during the annual second
    world war Victory Day celebrations on St Petersburg’s Palace Square, the city’s interior ministry said.
    South Africa’s foreign ministry has summoned the US ambassador over allegations he made that the country had provided arms and ammunition to
    Russia for its war in Ukraine. Reuben Brigety said on Thursday that
    South Africa had loaded weapons and ammunition on to a Russian vessel,
    which is under sanctions, at the Simon’s Town naval base near Cape Town
    in December last year and that the arms were then transported to Russia. Russia’s defence ministry has said Ukrainian forces carried out
    “offensive operations” along the entire line of contact near Soledar,
    the ministry’s official Zvezda news outlet reported. More than 1,000
    troops and up to 40 tanks were used in Thursday’s assault, it said on
    Friday, adding that the attacks were “repulsed”.
    The UN nuclear watchdog chief, Rafael Grossi, plans to present an
    agreement with Russia and Ukraine on protecting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear
    power plant to the UN security council this month, indicating a deal is
    close, four diplomats have told Reuters. Grossi has been trying for
    months to secure an agreement to reduce the risk of a catastrophic
    accident from shelling at the Russian-occupied nuclear power station, Europe’s biggest.
    Rishi Sunak expressed disappointment at a decision to block Zelenskiy’s request to speak via video at Saturday’s Eurovision grand final. The
    European Broadcasting Union, which produces the event, said the
    Ukrainian president had “laudable” intentions but rejected the request
    over fears it could politicise the event.
    6h ago
    13.21 EDT
    A 15-year-old girl was among two people killed and 10 people were
    injured in a Russian shelling attack, Ukraine’s defence ministry said.

    The eastern city of Kostyantynivka was targeted by Smerch rocket
    launchers, it added.


    Updated at 13.25 EDT
    6h ago
    13.10 EDT
    Ukrainian troops are advancing in two directions in the eastern city of
    Bakhmut but the situation in the city centre is more complicated, deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said.

    “The enemy is not able to take control of the city,” Malyar wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

    6h ago
    12.57 EDT
    Russian fighter jets and military helicopters 'shot down close to the
    Ukrainian border'
    The Russian news outlet Kommersant reported that two Russian fighter
    jets and two military helicopters had been shot down on Saturday close
    to the Ukrainian border.

    Kommersant said on its website that the Su-34 fighter-bomber, Su-35
    fighter and two Mi-8 helicopters had made up a raiding party, and had
    been “shot down almost simultaneously” in an ambush in the Bryansk
    region, adjoining northeast Ukraine.

    “According to preliminary data ... the fighters were supposed to deliver
    a missile and bomb attack on targets in the Chernihiv region of Ukraine,
    and the helicopters were there to back them up – among other things to
    pick up the ‘Su’ crews if they were shot down.”

    The Russian state news agency Tass said a Russian Su-34 warplane had
    crashed in that region but did not specify a cause.

    Tass also cited an emergency services official as saying an engine fire
    in a helicopter had caused it to crash near Klintsy, which is about 40
    km (25 miles) from the border.

    It made no mention of the Su-35 or of a second helicopter.

    Updated at 13.01 EDT
    6h ago
    12.45 EDT
    President Zelensky has tweeted details of his meeting today with the
    Pope at the Vatican.


    7h ago
    12.23 EDT
    Japan has expressed concern about Russian and Chinese military
    co-operation in Asia and believes the two countries are “strengthening” their joint exercises.

    Foreign minister Yoshimasa Hayashi said the security situation in Europe
    and the Indo-Pacific region was indivisible since the war in Ukraine
    started, Sky News reports.

    Russia’s invasion has “shaken the very foundation of the international order” and Vladimir Putin must face a united response from the worldwide community, he told international ministers in Sweden.

    “In addition, China and Russia are strengthening their military collaboration, including joint flights of their bombers and joint naval exercises in the vicinity of Japan,” Hayahshi said.

    7h ago
    11.56 EDT
    Emma Graham-Harrison
    Emma Graham-Harrison
    A ballad about ethnic cleansing was an unusual choice for Eurovision, a competition best known for glam, kitschy pop. But seven years ago
    Crimean Tatar singer Jamala swept Ukraine to its second victory in the
    song contest with 1944.

    It told the story of the deportation of her entire people – hundreds of thousands of women, children and men – from their ancestral home to
    central Asia on Stalin’s orders.

    The Tatars’ exile lasted decades, and when they were finally allowed to return, their centuries-long history had been all but erased. Russians
    had moved into their homes, and the peninsula’s geography had been
    rewritten, with towns and villages all given new Russian names.

    Music is particularly important to Crimean Tatars because the brutality
    of the deportations means an entire people have been left with very few physical heirlooms.

    Families were given just 15 minutes to pack for their long journey
    crammed into cattle wagons, could take only what they could carry and
    ended up selling almost everything of value to survive in exile.

    ‘I was born to do this’: Ukraine’s 2016 Eurovision winner Jamala on why Putin fears her people, the Tatars
    Read more
    Updated at 12.28 EDT
    7h ago
    11.37 EDT
    The head of Russia’s federal crime agency suggested that key sectors of
    the economy should be returned to state ownership to support Moscow’s
    war in Ukraine.

    Moscow has already seized assets or acquired them at a heavy discount
    from some western firms that have quit Russia or scaled back their
    activities since the invasion, Reuters reports.

    “We are essentially talking about economic security in a war,” Alexander Bastrykin, head of the investigative committee, told a conference that
    was streamed online.

    “Let’s go along the path of nationalising the main sectors of our economy.”

    Updated at 11.45 EDT
    8h ago
    11.11 EDT
    Ukraine has regained at least a kilometre of territory in the eastern
    city of Bakhmut amid an alleged Russian withdrawal from the area, as the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy flew to Rome to meet Pope
    Francis for the first time since Russia’s invasion, writes Lorenzo Tondo
    and Luke Harding.

    The UK’s Ministry of Defence said that over the past four days, Russian troops from the 72nd separate motor rifle brigade (72 SMRB) had possibly withdrawn “in bad order” from their positions on the southern flank of
    the Bakhmut operation. The move, according to British intelligence,
    reflected Moscow’s lack of effective combat units.

    In its latest intelligence briefing posted on Twitter, the MoD wrote:
    “72 SMRB is an element of Russia’s 3rd Army Corps, a formation created
    in autumn 2023 [sic] and dogged with allegations of poor morale and
    limited combat effectiveness”.

    Zelenskiy and pope discuss peace in Ukraine as Russia retreats in Bakhmut
    Read more
    Updated at 11.22 EDT
    8h ago
    10.58 EDT
    Summary
    It’s approaching 6pm in Ukraine, here’s a look at the latest news.

    Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrived in Italy on Saturday for talks with the
    prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, President Sergio Mattarella and Pope
    Francis. The trip is Zelenskiy’s first to Italy since Russia invaded on
    24 February last year.

    Meloni, has promised Italy’s full support to Ukraine in its efforts to
    repel Russia’s “brutal and unjust aggression.”

    Speaking alongside Zelenskiy on Saturday, Meloni said Italy would
    continue to supply Ukraine with weapons and back his country for as long
    as is necessary.

    “We are betting on Ukraine’s victory,” Meloni said.

    In other developments:

    Ukrainian forces have regained at least a kilometre of territory in
    Bakhmut amid a Russian withdrawal that reflects Moscow’s “severe
    shortage of credible combat units”, the UK Ministry of Defence has said
    in its latest intelligence briefing. It said elements of a Russian
    brigade withdrew “in bad order” from their positions on the southern
    flank of the eastern Ukrainian city, the scene of the war’s longest
    battle. The brigade had been “dogged with allegations of poor morale and limited combat effectiveness”.
    Zelenskiy will be received in Berlin on Sunday, German government
    sources told Reuters on Saturday, as the leader seeks to shore up
    support from key allies against Russia’s invasion. The Ukrainian leader
    last visited Germany for the Munich security council in February last
    year just before the war broke out.
    The German government will provide further military equipment worth
    €2.7bn (£2.4bn) to Ukraine in what would be the biggest Berlin has
    provided since Russia’s invasion. The package includes 20 Marder
    infantry fighting vehicles, 30 Leopard 1 tanks, 15 Gepard anti-aircraft
    tanks, 200 reconnaissance drones, four additional Iris-T anti-aircraft
    systems including ammunition, additional artillery ammunition and more
    than 200 armoured combat and logistics vehicles, according to Der Spiegel. Russian attacks injured three people in the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv, the city’s mayor said. The strikes occurred early on Saturday, Oleksandr Sienkevych said on his Telegram channel. Russian forces
    targeted a local factory, also damaging nearby residential buildings,
    causing fires in three apartments and damaging an educational
    institution, he said.
    Russian-installed officials in Luhansk have said missiles fired by
    Ukrainian forces injured six children and a Russian parliamentarian and
    damaged two disused factories in the eastern Ukrainian region’s main
    city, about 100km (60 miles) behind the frontlines.
    A Russian SU-34 warplane crashed in the Bryansk region bordering
    Ukraine, Tass news agency reported, quoting emergency services, in the
    second such incident on Saturday after a helicopter was seemingly downed
    in the same region.
    Two Russian pilots were killed when a Russian Mi-28 military helicopter
    crashed in the annexed peninsula of Crimea, Russian news agencies
    reported, citing the defence ministry. It said it believed the reason
    for Friday’s crash was equipment failure, Tass reported.
    An unidentified object that entered Polish airspace from the direction
    of Belarus was probably an observation balloon, the defence ministry
    said on Saturday on Twitter. A spokesperson for Poland’s territorial
    defence force told Reuters a search for the object was under way.
    Russian and Belarusian authorities were not immediately available for
    comment.
    Russia’s defence ministry said on Saturday two industrial sites in the occupied city of Luhansk have been struck with Storm Shadow long-range
    cruise missiles supplied by Britain.
    Zelenskiy has thanked the British prime minister, Rishi Sunak, for the provision of long-range cruise missiles. The UK defence secretary, Ben
    Wallace, earlier confirmed it would send the Storm Shadow missiles,
    prompting a threat from the Kremlin of a military response.
    Police in the Russian city of St Petersburg have created an anti-drone
    unit to detect unmanned drones after a suspected attack on the Kremlin
    last week. The unit was launched on Tuesday during the annual second
    world war Victory Day celebrations on St Petersburg’s Palace Square, the city’s interior ministry said.
    South Africa’s foreign ministry has summoned the US ambassador over allegations he made that the country had provided arms and ammunition to
    Russia for its war in Ukraine. Reuben Brigety said on Thursday that
    South Africa had loaded weapons and ammunition on to a Russian vessel,
    which is under sanctions, at the Simon’s Town naval base near Cape Town
    in December last year and that the arms were then transported to Russia. Russia’s defence ministry has said Ukrainian forces carried out
    “offensive operations” along the entire line of contact near Soledar,
    the ministry’s official Zvezda news outlet reported. More than 1,000
    troops and up to 40 tanks were used in Thursday’s assault, it said on
    Friday, adding that the attacks were “repulsed”.
    The UN nuclear watchdog chief, Rafael Grossi, plans to present an
    agreement with Russia and Ukraine on protecting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear
    power plant to the UN security council this month, indicating a deal is
    close, four diplomats have told Reuters. Grossi has been trying for
    months to secure an agreement to reduce the risk of a catastrophic
    accident from shelling at the Russian-occupied nuclear power station, Europe’s biggest.
    Rishi Sunak expressed disappointment at a decision to block Zelenskiy’s request to speak via video at Saturday’s Eurovision grand final. The
    European Broadcasting Union, which produces the event, said the
    Ukrainian president had “laudable” intentions but rejected the request
    over fears it could politicise the event.
    Updated at 11.13 EDT
    8h ago
    10.38 EDT
    Zelenskiy meets with Pope Francis at the Vatican
    Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has met Pope Francis at the
    Vatican, who said in late April the Holy See is involved in a peace
    mission to end the war with Russia.

    Volodymyr Zelenskiy with his hand on his heart shakes hands with Pope
    Francis as he arrives at the Vatican.
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy shakes hands with Pope Francis as he arrives at the Vatican. Photograph: Vatican Media/Reuters
    Earlier the president met his Italian counterpart, Sergio Mattarella,
    and then prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, before he was due to head to
    the Vatican.

    Both Mattarella and Meloni reiterated Italy’s full support for Ukraine
    in terms of military, financial, humanitarian and reconstruction aid in
    the short and long term.

    At a news conference after her meeting with Zelenskiy, Meloni condemned Russia’s “brutal and unjust aggression,” pledged Italy’s support for Ukraine for “as long as is necessary,” and urged Russia to immediately withdraw.

    “You can’t achieve peace through a surrender,” she said, echoing a previous comment by Mattarella. “It would be a very grave precedent for
    all nations of the world.”

    She emphasised Italy’s support for Ukraine’s membership of the European Union and the “intensification” of a partnership with Nato.

    Pope Francis and President Volodymyr Zelenskiy sit around a table at the Vatican.
    Pope Francis and Zelenskiy meet at the Vatican. Photograph: Vatican Media/Reuters
    Updated at 10.47 EDT
    9h ago
    10.25 EDT
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy has arrived at the Vatican for a private audience
    with Pope Francis.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy waves as he arrives. Standing
    next to him is the prefect of the pontifical house.
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy is welcomed by the prefect of the pontifical house. Photograph: Andreas Solaro/AFP/Getty Images
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrives in a car for a private audience with the pope. Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrives for a private audience with the pope.
    Photograph: Andreas Solaro/AFP/Getty Images
    Updated at 10.46 EDT
    9h ago
    10.18 EDT
    Two Russian jets and two helicopters reportedly downed
    Luke Harding
    Luke Harding
    Guardian foreign correspondent Luke Harding reporting from Kyiv.

    There are unconfirmed reports that another plane and helicopter has
    crashed, in what appears to be a disastrous day for Russian aviation.
    Moscow Telegram channels reported that an SU-35 warplane had been shot
    down too, together with a second Mi8 helicopter.

    Another military helicopter crashed on Friday in Crimea. It was unclear
    whether the two aircraft and two helicopters were downed on Saturday
    because of friendly fire, or if the Ukrainians targeted them with missiles.

    Updated at 10.29 EDT
    9h ago
    10.05 EDT
    Zelenskiy to visit Germany
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy will be received in Berlin on Sunday, German
    government sources told Reuters on Saturday, as the leader seeks to
    shore up support from key allies against Russia’s invasion.

    Zelenskiy will arrive from Italy where he was meeting with Italian
    officials and Pope Francis on Saturday.

    The Ukrainian leader last visited Germany for the Munich security
    council in February last year just before the war broke out.

    Germany on Saturday announced €2.7 bn of military aid to Ukraine, its
    biggest such package yet since the Russian invasion, and pledged further support for Kyiv for as long as necessary.

    The country has also taken in around a million Ukrainian refugees.

    Christian Mölling, deputy director at the German council on foreign
    relations said Zelenskiy will probably want to know directly from
    Chancellor Olaf Scholz how he sees the war ending.

    Mölling said:

    Does Germany want a Ukrainian victory or is it enough for the war to
    end? It will be important for Zelenskiy to hear directly from the
    chancellor how he thinks … Ukraine needs financial assistance to pay its
    debt so it doesn’t go bankrupt and Germany plays a big role there.

    He added: “And Ukraine is seeing that in Germany other topics are
    beginning to move into the foreground.”

    Updated at 10.11 EDT
    9h ago
    09.55 EDT
    Italy promises Ukraine full support
    Prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, has promised Italy’s full support to
    Ukraine in its efforts to repel Russia’s “brutal and unjust aggression.”

    Speaking alongside Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Saturday, Meloni said Italy
    would continue to supply Ukraine with weapons and back his country for
    as long as is necessary.

    “We are betting on Ukraine’s victory,” Meloni said.

    Earlier in the day Zelenskiy met Italy’s head of state, Sergio
    Mattarella, in the president’s Quirinale palace and he will shortly head
    to the Vatican for talks with Pope Francis.

    Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni listens during a joint press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
    Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni listens during a joint press conference with Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Photograph:
    Alberto Pizzoli/AFP/Getty Images
    Updated at 10.00 EDT
    10h ago
    09.13 EDT
    Here are the latest images from Ukraine and elsewhere:

    Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, welcomes Volodymyr Zelenskiy for
    a meeting at Palazzo Chigi in Rome.
    Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, welcomes Volodymyr Zelenskiy for
    a meeting at Palazzo Chigi in Rome. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential
    Press Ser/AFP/Getty Images
    Citizens of Ukraine wait for Zelenskiy’s procession in Piazza Barberini, Rome.
    Citizens of Ukraine wait for Zelenskiy’s procession in Piazza Barberini, Rome. Photograph: Francesco Fotia/Shutterstock
    Italian president, Sergio Mattarella, with Zelenskiy before their
    meeting at the Quirinale presidential palace in Rome.
    Italian president, Sergio Mattarella, with Zelenskiy before their
    meeting at the Quirinale presidential palace in Rome. Photograph:
    Ukrainian Presidential Press Ser/AFP/Getty Images
    A memorial service for Ukrainian Armed Forces Sgt Oleksii Khabatiuk, who
    died in Bakhmut.
    A memorial service for Ukrainian Armed Forces Sgt Oleksii Khabatiuk, who
    died in Bakhmut. Photograph: Aleksandr Gusev/Sopa Images/Shutterstock
    A woman walks past a poster made as a postage stamp depicting President Vladimir Putin appearing in an orange jumpsuit before judges of the international criminal court in The Hague.
    A woman walks past a poster made as a postage stamp depicting President Vladimir Putin appearing in an orange jumpsuit before judges of the international criminal court in The Hague. Photograph: Roman
    Pilipey/Getty Images
    Updated at 09.40 EDT
    10h ago
    09.03 EDT
    Summary
    It’s 4pm in Ukraine, here’s a look at the latest news.

    Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrived in Italy on Saturday for talks with the
    prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, President Sergio Mattarella and Pope
    Francis. The trip is Zelenskiy’s first to Italy since Russia invaded on
    24 February last year.

    Italy is fully supporting Ukraine in its resistance against Russia’s invasion, the Italian head of state said in welcoming Zelenskiy to his residence in Rome on Saturday.

    “It is an honour to have you here in Rome,” Mattarella told Zelenskiy,
    in remarks aired on Italian television.

    In other developments:

    Ukrainian forces have regained at least a kilometre of territory in
    Bakhmut amid a Russian withdrawal that reflects Moscow’s “severe
    shortage of credible combat units”, the UK Ministry of Defence has said
    in its latest intelligence briefing. It said elements of a Russian
    brigade withdrew “in bad order” from their positions on the southern
    flank of the eastern Ukrainian city, the scene of the war’s longest
    battle. The brigade had been “dogged with allegations of poor morale and limited combat effectiveness”.
    The German government will provide further military equipment worth
    €2.7bn (£2.4bn) to Ukraine in what would be the biggest Berlin has
    provided since Russia’s invasion. The package includes 20 Marder
    infantry fighting vehicles, 30 Leopard 1 tanks, 15 Gepard anti-aircraft
    tanks, 200 reconnaissance drones, four additional Iris-T anti-aircraft
    systems including ammunition, additional artillery ammunition and more
    than 200 armoured combat and logistics vehicles, according to Der Spiegel. Russian attacks injured three people in the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv, the city’s mayor said. The strikes occurred early on Saturday, Oleksandr Sienkevych said on his Telegram channel. Russian forces
    targeted a local factory, also damaging nearby residential buildings,
    causing fires in three apartments and damaging an educational
    institution, he said.
    Russian-installed officials in Luhansk have said missiles fired by
    Ukrainian forces injured six children and a Russian parliamentarian and
    damaged two disused factories in the eastern Ukrainian region’s main
    city, about 100km (60 miles) behind the frontlines.
    A Russian SU-34 warplane crashed in the Bryansk region bordering
    Ukraine, Tass news agency reported, quoting emergency services, in the
    second such incident on Saturday after a helicopter was seemingly downed
    in the same region.
    Two Russian pilots were killed when a Russian Mi-28 military helicopter
    crashed in the annexed peninsula of Crimea, Russian news agencies
    reported, citing the defence ministry. It said it believed the reason
    for Friday’s crash was equipment failure, Tass reported.
    An unidentified object that entered Polish airspace from the direction
    of Belarus was probably an observation balloon, the defence ministry
    said on Saturday on Twitter. A spokesperson for Poland’s territorial
    defence force told Reuters a search for the object was under way.
    Russian and Belarusian authorities were not immediately available for
    comment.
    Russia’s defence ministry said on Saturday two industrial sites in the occupied city of Luhansk have been struck with Storm Shadow long-range
    cruise missiles supplied by Britain.
    The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has thanked the British
    prime minister, Rishi Sunak, for the provision of long-range cruise
    missiles. The UK defence secretary, Ben Wallace, earlier confirmed it
    would send the Storm Shadow missiles, prompting a threat from the
    Kremlin of a military response.
    Police in the Russian city of St Petersburg have created an anti-drone
    unit to detect unmanned drones after a suspected attack on the Kremlin
    last week. The unit was launched on Tuesday during the annual second
    world war Victory Day celebrations on St Petersburg’s Palace Square, the city’s interior ministry said.
    South Africa’s foreign ministry has summoned the US ambassador over allegations he made that the country had provided arms and ammunition to
    Russia for its war in Ukraine. Reuben Brigety said on Thursday that
    South Africa had loaded weapons and ammunition on to a Russian vessel,
    which is under sanctions, at the Simon’s Town naval base near Cape Town
    in December last year and that the arms were then transported to Russia. Russia’s defence ministry has said Ukrainian forces carried out
    “offensive operations” along the entire line of contact near Soledar,
    the ministry’s official Zvezda news outlet reported. More than 1,000
    troops and up to 40 tanks were used in Thursday’s assault, it said on
    Friday, adding that the attacks were “repulsed”.
    The UN nuclear watchdog chief, Rafael Grossi, plans to present an
    agreement with Russia and Ukraine on protecting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear
    power plant to the UN security council this month, indicating a deal is
    close, four diplomats have told Reuters. Grossi has been trying for
    months to secure an agreement to reduce the risk of a catastrophic
    accident from shelling at the Russian-occupied nuclear power station, Europe’s biggest.
    Rishi Sunak, the British prime minister, has expressed disappointment at
    a decision to block Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s request to speak via video at Saturday’s Eurovision grand final. The European Broadcasting Union,
    which produces the event, said the Ukrainian president had “laudable” intentions but rejected the request over fears it could politicise the
    event.
    Updated at 09.35 EDT
    10h ago
    08.53 EDT
    UK-supplied missiles used to attack occupied Luhansk, Russia claims
    Russia’s defence ministry says two industrial sites in the occupied city

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