Vladimir Putin warned that Nato will be directly at war with Moscow if the US and UK allow Kyiv to use longer-range weapons against targets inside Russia, as both nations deliberated the move in Washington.
“It would mean that Nato countries, the US, European countries, are at war with Russia,” Mr Putin said. “If that’s the case, then taking into account the change of nature of the conflict, we will take the appropriate decisions based on the threats that we will face,” the Russian president said.
Mr Putin did not address reports of Russia recently acquiring new ballistic missiles from Iran to likely use them in the war against Ukraine.
On the war front, Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed Russia’s counter-offensive in Kursk, stating that Kyiv had anticipated Russian forces to fight back.
President Joe Biden is set to give Mr Zelensky the go-ahead to use Storm Shadow missiles and their French equivalent, Scalp missiles, to strike deeper into mainland Russia, sources said.
Russian shelling killed three people and injured nine in a village in northeastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, regional prosecutors said yesterday.
Russia strikes grain vessel near Nato member Romania
Ukraine accused Russia of using strategic bombers to strike a civilian grain vessel in a missile attack in Black Sea waters near Nato member Romania, escalating tensions between Moscow and the military alliance.
Volodymyr Zelensky said the vessel carrying Ukrainian grain to Egypt had been hit overnight by a Russian missile just after it left Ukrainian territorial waters. There were no casualties, he said.
The US ambassador to Ukraine “strongly condemned” the attack and said Russia was responsible. A UN spokesperson said the incident was a “stark reminder” of the threats still faced in the Black Sea by civilian vessels.
There was no immediate comment from Russia.
Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha said the strike was “a brazen attack on freedom of navigation and global food security”. Ukraine’s navy said Russian Tupolev Tu-22 bombers had fired a number of cruise missiles at 11.02pm local time (2002 GMT) on Wednesday.
It was the first time a missile has struck a civilian vessel transporting grains at sea since the start of Moscow’s invasion in February 2022. Some vessels have been damaged during Russian attacks on Ukrainian ports where they were moored.
Arpan Rai13 September 2024 04:43
Kharkiv village under Russian attack, three killed
Russian shelling killed three people and injured nine in a village in northeastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, regional prosecutors said yesterday.
A statement said one person died of his injuries in hospital after the attack on the village of Borova, southeast of Kharkiv. Kharkiv is Ukraine’s second largest city and a frequent target of Russian strikes.
The Interior Ministry had earlier reported emergency services were working at the site of the initial attack when Moscow’s troops shelled it again. Three rescuers were among the injured.
Prosecutors also reported that five people were injured in a Russian airstrike on the city of Kharkiv’s Kyivskyi district.
Arpan Rai13 September 2024 04:39
Three Red Cross staff members killed in Ukraine
At least three Red Cross staff members were killed by artillery strikes in eastern Ukraine yesterday. The deadly strikes, which left two others wounded, hit a Red Cross truck that was delivering firewood in the war-divided Donetsk region, the organisation said. Photos released by local police showed the truck engulfed in flames.
Volodymyr Zelensky blamed Russia for the attack, which he said warranted a “firm and fundamental” response from the international community.
Mirjana Spoljaric, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, confirmed the deaths. “I condemn attacks on Red Cross personnel in the strongest terms. It’s unconscionable that shelling would hit an aid distribution site,” Ms Spoljaric said in a statement.
“Our hearts are broken today as we mourn the loss of our colleagues and care for the injured,” she added.
Arpan Rai13 September 2024 04:31
Ukraine’s chief rabbi mourns adopted son killed in battle
Servicemen, veterans and others gathered in Kyiv yesterday to remember the adopted son of Ukraine’s chief rabbi, Moshe Azman, who was killed in battle.
Anton Samborskyi, 32, was reported missing in late July, and his death was confirmed after weeks of uncertainty. The funeral service underlining unity among Ukraine‘s diverse communities in the fight against Russia’s invasion took place at the Central Synagogue of Kyiv, followed by a burial at the city’s Jewish cemetery.
Rabbi Azman, who adopted Samborskyi when he was a 10-year-old orphan, shared his grief publicly, referring to his son by his chosen Jewish name, Matityahu or “Moty”.
Mr Azman wrote in a post on social media that Samborskyi had a daughter in May, but he was drafted into the army a week after the baby was born. He said the last time he spoke to his son was on 17 July.
About 100 mourners, including servicemen and veterans in uniform, many holding flowers and wearing yarmulkes – some with a camouflage design – gathered for the service. Mourners filed past the closed casket, which was draped with a tallit, or Jewish prayer shawl, and hugged Mr Azman and his relatives.
“He went to the front voluntarily – as someone who wanted to defend his country. That’s why he joined an assault brigade,” David Milman, a Jewish army chaplain who attended the service, told The Associated Press.
Ukraine has a centuries-old Jewish heritage, with Jewish communities playing a significant role in the country’s cultural and religious history, despite periods of persecution. Its Jewish population was decimated during the Holocaust in the Second World War.
Arpan Rai13 September 2024 04:28
Starmer stares down Putin as he and Biden prepare to escalate Ukraine war with missiles
Sir Keir Starmer defiantly stared down a threat of retaliation by Vladimir Putin as he flew out to Washington DC for talks with Joe Biden on the Ukraine war.
The prime minister and the US president are believed to be on the cusp of allowing Kyiv to open up a new front in the war with Russia by using Western Storm Shadow long-range missiles.
“So this is not a question of allowing the Ukrainian regime to strike Russia with these weapons or not. It is a question of deciding whether or not Nato countries are directly involved in a military conflict,” Mr Putin told Russian state TV.
But a determined prime minister told journalists on the flight: “First, to reiterate, it was Russia who started this in the first place. They caused the conflict, they’re the ones who are acting unlawfully. And Ukraine obviously has the right to self-defence.
Arpan Rai13 September 2024 04:13
Putin warns of war with Nato
Jane Dalton13 September 2024 03:15
Two people killed and rescuers wounded in Kharkiv
Russian shelling on Thursday killed two people and injured seven more in the Ukrainian northeastern Kharkiv region, the Ukrainian interior ministry said.
It said on the Telegram messenger that emergency services were working at the site after a Russian attack on Borova village when Moscow troops shelled it again.
Three rescuers were among the injured.
Jane Dalton13 September 2024 02:00
Blinken and Lammy pledge to forward Kyiv appeals
Mr Blinken traveled to Warsaw after spending a day in Kyiv with British foreign secretary David Lammy, during which they pledged to take the Ukrainian requests to their leaders.
US president Joe Biden and British prime minister Keir Starmer are to meet in the United States on Friday amid signs both Washington and London are growing more receptive to allowing the Ukrainians to use their arms to hit targets farther inside Russia than previously agreed.
“As what Russia’s doing has changed, as the battlefield has changed, we’ve adapted,” Mr Blinken said at a news conference in Warsaw.
Biden has allowed Ukraine to fire US-provided missiles across the border into Russia in self-defence, but has largely limited the distance they can be fired.
Jane Dalton13 September 2024 00:45
Watch: Putin warns West over long-range missiles
Putin: West fighting directly with Russia if it lets Ukraine use long-range missiles
If Ukraine is allowed to use long-range Western-provided missiles against targets inside Russia, it would mean the direct participation of Nato countries in the conflict, Vladimir Putin said on Thursday 12 September. Western long-range precision weapons can only be used with intelligence data from Nato satellites and flight assignments entered by Nato military personnel, he claimed. “Therefore, we are not talking about allowing the Ukrainian regime to strike Russia with these weapons or not. We are talking about making a decision about whether NATO countries are directly involved in the military conflict or not,” Mr Putin said. He added that the decision would change “the very nature of the conflict”. “This will mean that Nato countries, the United States, and European countries are fighting against Russia.”
Jane Dalton12 September 2024 23:30
Air strikes set to spark health crisis in Ukraine, WHO warns
Russian air strikes have severely damaged the nation’s energy and healthcare infrastructure, leaving millions vulnerable as temperatures drop, officials from the United Nations agency said.
Hans Kluge, the WHO’s regional director for Europe, said this winter was likely to be the most challenging yet.
The nearly 2,000 attacks on Ukraine’s healthcare infrastructure were having a severe effect on the largely public health system.
“Frequent power outages are already taking a toll with danger signs for the winter,” Mr Kluge said after a visit to frontline regions in eastern Ukraine.
“This could jeopardise the storage and distribution of vaccines, leading to a rise in vaccine-preventable diseases,” he said.
Other concerns, he said, included possible contamination of water due to frequent power outages and growing signs of antimicrobial resistance because of misuse of antibiotics.
“We have stories of wounds that simply will not heal due to resistance to antibiotics,” Mr Kluge said.
“This could have consequences far beyond Ukraine if drugs become ineffective.”
WHO plans to install 15 heating units at hospitals at risk of further attack as well as a network of treatment clinics in areas where health care access is difficult.
Jane Dalton12 September 2024 22:30