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Ukraine: Kyiv police find bound men in Bucha as Russia continues eastern assault — live updates

  • April 30, 2022
  • Police find three more bodies with their hands tied in Bucha
  • France’s Macron vows to ‘intensify’ military aid to Kyiv
  • Russia’s invasion still facing ‘considerable challenges,’ says UK
  • Russia has paid off overdue foreign debt in US dollars
  • Zelenskyy says Russia wants to destroy Donbas

This article was last updated at 16:02 GMT/UTC

Kyiv: 14 Ukrainians including pregnant soldier freed in prisoner exchange

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk says a new prisoner exchange has taken place with Russian forces.

“Prisoners were exchanged today. Bringing home 14 of our people: 7 military and 7 civilians,” Vereshchuk wrote on Facebook. She added that the new exchange was “special to me” as one of the military women is in the fifth month of pregnancy.

Several exchanges between Moscow and Kyiv have taken place since Russia invaded on February 24.

On Friday, Vereshchuk told the BBC that Russian forces of deporting large numbers of civilians into Russia, including almost 500 women, who are being held in prisons.

“Now we refuse to hold an exchange with no women on the list. That is how we try to somehow rescue our women and civilians,” she said.

Russia: Risk of nuclear war should be kept to a ‘minimum’

A Russian Foreign Ministry official said the risk of a nuclear conflict must be minimized and that war between nuclear powers should be prevented.

The TASS news agency cited Vladimir Yermakov, the foreign ministry’s head of nuclear non-proliferation as saying that all nuclear powers must stick to the logic laid out in official documents aimed at preventing atomic war.

“The risks of nuclear war, which should never be unleashed, must be kept to a minimum, in particular through preventing any armed conflict between nuclear powers,” Yermakov said. “Russia clearly follows this understanding.”

He was referring to a joint statement made by Russia, China, Britain, the United States and France in January that agreed that the further spread of nuclear arms and a nuclear conflict should be avoided.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said this week the West should not underestimate the heightened risks of nuclear war over Ukraine.

Bodies found in Bucha with hands tied behind their backs

Kyiv regional police said they’d uncovered the bodies of three civilians in Bucha whose hands had been tied behind their backs and who showed signs of torture.

The bodies were found in a pit in Bucha, located close to the capital Kyiv.

“The victims’ hands were tied, cloths were covering their eyes and some were gagged. There are traces of torture on the corpses,” authorities said in a statement on Saturday.

The victims had multiple gunshot wounds in their ears and other extremities, indicating that they’d been tortured before being killed, Kyiv regional police chief Andriy Nebytov said.

Over 1,000 bodies have been discovered in and around Bucha, where Ukrainian authorities allege widespread abuse by Russian troops who occupied the area during their bid to seize Kyiv. Russia rejects the accusations.

Over 390,000 refugees from Ukraine in Germany

The number of refugees arriving in Germany from Ukraine continues to rise, the German Interior Ministry said.

Currently, at least 392,600 refugees from Ukraine are in Germany, according to the latest figures published on Saturday. The actual number, however, could be much higher.

An exact number is hard to determine, as there are no stationary controls at the European Union’s internal borders, and people fleeing Ukraine can enter Germany without a visa and stay for 90 days.

The war refugees from Ukraine are mainly “women, children and older people,” Germany’s Interior Ministry said.

The United Nations estimates over 5.4 million people have fled Ukraine since Russia launched its invasion at the end of February.

France’s Macron vows to step up military aid to Ukraine

French President Emmanuel Macron said his country would “intensify” deliveries of military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine.

The newly reelected French leader promised the aid boost during a phone call on Saturday with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

The French aid to Ukraine amounts to “more than 615 tons of equipment, including medical equipment, generators for hospitals, food aid, shelter aid and emergency vehicles,” a statement from the French presidency said.

France will also send its ultra-modern Caesar cannons to Kyiv.

The French presidency said Zelenskyy thanked France for “large-scale military shipments that contribute to the Ukrainian resistance.”

Earlier this week, Germany announced it would send Gepard anti-aircraft tanks to Ukraine — shifting its previously cautious policy towards weapons deliveries.

France, the Czech Republic and the United States, however, have been providing hundreds of long-range artillery components to Ukraine’s military.

Berlin planning to speed up LNG terminal construction: report

As part of its bid to reduce Germany’s dependence on Russian fossil fuel imports, the government is planning a new law to enable faster approval and construction of import terminals for liquefied natural gas (LNG), the dpa news agency has reported.

The agency cited sources from the Ministry of Economics and Technology as saying the law on accelerating LNG projects in northern Germany had been submitted for departmental approval.

It said a paper it had seen stated that the “LNG Acceleration Act” aimed to “go through all approval and licensing procedures as well as the awarding of public contracts and concessions considerably faster than is possible under the current legal situation, and so to achieve speedy approvals and integration of LNG into the German market.”

Among other things, licensing authorities would be allowed to temporarily suspend certain requirements such as environmental impact assessments under some circumstances.

Germany imported some 55% of its gas, 50% of its coal and 35% of its crude oil from Russia in March.

The goal of lessening German dependence on Russia for its energy needs gained further urgency last week after Moscow halted gas supplies to fellow EU states Poland and Bulgaria.

Berlin has come under considerable pressure from allies to embargo fossil fuel imports from Russia, which are thought to provide Moscow with much of its revenue for continuing its assault on Ukraine. So far, Germany has cited fears of severe economic damage as a reason for not stopping its imports from Russia.

Germany’s post-war economy has depended largely on imports of cheap Russian fossil fuels

Russia forces focusing on east but without success: Ukrainian General Staff

Fighting is ongoing in eastern Ukraine but Ukrainian forces are repelling Russian attempts to advance further inland, the Ukrainian General Staff has said in an update.

Some 14 attacks were repelled in the eastern regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, which are partly controlled by pro-Russian separatists. Ukrainian forces destroyed 11 tanks, nine drones and seven artillery systems, according to the update.

Russia was continuing to mass troops near the city of Izyum in the Kharkiv region at the eastern Ukrainian border, the Ukrainian General staff added. Russian units also fired at targets with rockets and artillery in the Dnipropetrovsk region, southwest of the city of Kharkiv, the update said.

This comes as the English-language newspaper Kyiv Independent published information from Ukraine’s armed forces saying that 23,200 Russian troops have been killed so far during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which began on February 24.

That figure and the information from the Ukrainian General Staff cannot yet be independently verified. Russia has so far given a far lower official death toll for Russian troops in Ukraine.

 

Shelling in Russia’s Bryansk region hits oil terminal: governor

Shells hit parts of an oil terminal and adjacent sites in the Bryansk region after Russian air defenses prevented a Ukrainian aircraft from entering the area on Saturday morning, the region’s governor told Russian news agencies.

Alexander Bogomaz was cited by RIA news agency as saying that there were no casualties and that a logistics building at the terminal had been damaged.

The Bryansk region lies about 100 kilometers (62 miles) north of Ukraine’s northern border with Russia.

Russian forces ‘stealing grain’: Ukrainian minister

Ukraine’s deputy agriculture minister has said Russian soldiers have stolen hundreds of thousands of tons of grain from areas they are occupying.

Taras Vysotskiy told Ukrainian national television that he was worried that Russian forces might also steal 1.5 million metric tons (1.6 million US tons) of grain he said was stored in occupied territory.

The same stealing accusation was leveled at Russian troops by Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry on Thursday. It said such theft increased the threat to global food security.

Ukraine is one of the world’s major wheat producers and had a 10% share of the export market in 2021, according to UN figures.

Ukraine has sometimes been called the ‘breadbasket of Europe’

Russia’s invasion still facing ‘considerable challenges’: UK military intelligence

Russian forces are still being hampered in their operations in Ukraine by deficits in tactical coordination, the UK Ministry of Defense has said in an intelligence update.

“A lack of unit-level skills and inconsistent air support have left Russia unable to fully leverage its combat mass, despite localized improvements,” it said.

It said many of the units previously involved in the failed attempts to take territory in Ukraine’s northeast were depleted and likely to be suffering from “weakened morale.”

Russia was now trying to remedy these shortcomings “by geographically concentrating combat power, shortening supply lines and simplifying command and control,” according to the update.

Moscow is now focusing its military efforts on taking territory in eastern Ukraine after its forces failed to make significant advances elsewhere in the country in the face of determined Ukrainian resistance.

Russia blames West for faltering talks with Ukraine

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview for Chinese news agency Xinhua published early on Saturday morning that the lack of progress in ongoing talks with Ukraine was down to Western intervention.

He said “the belligerent rhetoric and incitement of Kyiv’s Western benefactors” is what is obstructing further talks, Russian news agency TASS reported.

“If the US and NATO are really interested in resolving the Ukraine crisis, then first of all, they should wake up and stop supplying the Kyiv regime with arms and ammunition,” Lavrov said.

Lavrov said negotiations have been continuing over daily video conferences. But he said Ukraine must stop acting in the interests of “remote advisers” who incite Kyiv to “fight until the last Ukrainian.”

However, on Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in an interview with Polish media that talks between the two sides were at high risk of falling apart, Ukrainian newspaper Ukrayinska Pravda reported.

Lavrov also insisted that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which he referred to using the official Kremlin terminology of a “special military operation,” was going to plan.

He also said Russia could “retool” its economy to bolster it against potential “unlawful hostilities” and that the country would reduce imports and boost its technological independence in the face of Western sanctions.

Russia trying to ‘destroy Donbas,’ Zelenskyy says

In his nightly video address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed that Russia wants to “destroy any life” in the Donbas region, comparing it to the Russian offensive against the port city of Mariupol.

“Constant brutal bombings, constant Russian strikes at infrastructure and residential areas show that Russia wants to make this area uninhabited,” he said.

He welcomed the return to Kyiv of the UK’s Ambassador to Ukraine Melinda Simmons and added that “currently, 27 foreign diplomatic missions operate in the capital of our country.”

Zelenskyy also gave his condolences to the relatives and friends of Vera Hyrych, the journalist killed in Thursday’s airstrike against Kyiv.

“The dismantlement of debris in Kyiv, where Russian missiles hit yesterday during the visit of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, continues,” he said. “Unfortunately, such a deliberate and brutal humiliation of the United Nations by Russia was left without a powerful response.”

Russia makes overdue foreign payments in dollars

Russia’s Finance Ministry said on Friday that it had made two interest payments on foreign bonds in dollars, just avoiding a last-minute default.

The payment of the debt in US dollars marks a U-turn by Moscow after it had pledged to pay only in rubles following the freezing of its foreign currency reserves.

While the deadline had already passed, Russia was able to make the payment before the end of the 30-day grace period, which investors and rating agencies had not expected.

The sanctioning of Russia’s Central Bank has forced Moscow to use revenues from gas and oil sales to pay off debts or foreign currency reserves outside the country. The aim of the international sanctions is to deplete the country’s financial resources and so halt its ability to fund its war in Ukraine.

Speculation over a possible default has loomed large since the sanctions were first imposed. Russia has not defaulted since the 1917 Revolution, which led to the collapse of the Russian Empire and the founding of the Soviet Union.

A US license that allows banks to process Russian debt payments is set to expire in less than four weeks.

Summary of Friday’s events in the war in Ukraine

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that Russian strikes on Kyiv on Thursday were meant to “humiliate” the UN during the visit by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

One of the strikes hit a residential building, killing Radio Free Europe journalist Vira Hyrych.

Russia confirmed the strikes but said it had destroyed the production facilities of a space-rocket plant in the Ukrainian capital.

Ukraine said it was planning an operation to evacuate the civilians who have been trapped inside the Azovstal steelworks in the besieged city of Mariupol. Guterres said the UN would redouble its efforts to reduce human suffering after his visit to Kyiv.

NATO Allied Air Command said that it had scrambled fighter planes “multiple times” in recent days to track and intercept Russian planes near alliance airspace, especially in areas over the Baltic and Black seas.

Polish officials said that more than 3 million Ukrainian refugees have crossed into the country since the beginning of the war, although many have since moved on and some have returned to Ukraine.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that his county does not consider itself to be at war with NATO and accused Western nations of threatening nuclear war. He also told Moldova it should “worry about its future” over ties with NATO.

The Pentagon said on Friday that the US was training Ukrainian troops at its military installations in Germany.

rs, tj, ab/sms (AP, Reuters, AFP, dpa)

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/ukraine-kyiv-police-find-bound-men-in-bucha-as-russia-continues-eastern-assault-live-updates/a-61643081?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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