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    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637

    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 Empty Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637

    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 12:15

    Summary for Wednesday, 22nd November 2023 - DAY 637



    Good morning

    Welcome to our daily coverage of the war in Ukraine. (updated regularly throughout the day)


    Key developments over the past 24 hours:

    • Ukrainian air defences shot down all 14 Shahed drones launched by Russian forces in an overnight attack, the air force said this morning. The attack on Ukraine’s central, south-eastern, and western regions lasted from 8pm on Tuesday until 3am on Wednesday. There were no immediate reports of casualties or major damage.

    • The air force also said that the Russian military launched an X-22 missile in Zaporizhzhia region in the south-east but the missile failed to reach its target, falling into a field.

    • For their part, the Russians said their anti-aircraft units destroyed three Ukrainian drones over the Crimean peninsula.

    • The White House says it is concerned Iran may provide ballistic missiles to Russia to use against Ukraine. “In return for that support, Russia has been offering Tehran unprecedented defence cooperation, including on missiles, electronics and air defence,” said John Kirby, US national security council spokesperson.

    • President Joe Biden’s request for more than $61bn in emergency US funding to support Ukraine’s defence remains stalled in Congress. The US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, has announced the Pentagon will in any case be sending an additional $100m in weapons to Ukraine from existing US stockpiles, including another Himars mobile artillery system.

    • More than 10,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, with about half of recent deaths occurring far behind the frontlines, the UN human rights office said. Its mission in Ukraine, which has dozens of monitors, said it expected the real toll to be “significantly higher” since its work was continuing.

    • Germany will support Ukraine with a further military aid package worth €1.3bn (£1.1bn) that will include an additional IRIS-T air defence unit, Germany’s defence minister, Boris Pistorius, has said.

    • Russia has not used its “premier air-launched cruise missiles” from its heavy bombers for nearly two months, likely allowing it to build up a substantial stock that could be used in a repeat of last year’s campaign to destroy Ukraine’s critical national infrastructure, the UK Ministry of Defence has said in an intelligence update.

    • Russian forces hit port infrastructure in Ukraine’s southern city of Odesa on Tuesday evening, the regional governor said, adding that no one was injured. The Ukrainian southern military command also reported strikes on the Belhorod-Dniester district south-west of Odesa, with missiles hitting open ground and administrative buildings. Ukraine is maintaining a humanitarian corridor into the Black Sea to circumvent Russia’s de facto port blockade.

    • A Slovakian border crossing with Ukraine was blocked on Tuesday, it was reported, although the Slovakian haulers’ union played it down as involving a single truck. Ukrainian truckers have been exempt from seeking border crossing permits since Russia’s invasion. Polish and Slovakian drivers say that has undercut business and they want restrictions imposed.

    • The European Council’s president, Charles Michel, on a visit to Kyiv said he expected a “difficult” meeting next month about Ukraine joining the EU. The European Commission has recommended opening formal membership negotiations but talks cannot start unless all 27 member states agree.

    • “I will do everything in my power to convince my colleagues that we need a decision in December,” Michel told the Ukrainian president. Volodymyr Zelenskiy was quoted by AFP as saying: “We believe that the EU will be ready to do its part … so that by the end of the year in December, the result will be a political decision to start accession negotiations.”
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 12:56

    Crimea comes under attack again

    Brendan Cole - Newsweek

    Ukrainian drones targeting Crimea have been intercepted by Russian air defenses, Moscow has said, amid reports that Kyiv is stepping up its strikes on the occupied peninsula.

    The Russian defense ministry said on its Telegram channel that on 7.30 a.m. Wednesday, "an attempt by the Kyiv regime to carry out a terrorist attack by an aircraft-type UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) on objects on the territory of the Russian Federation was stopped."
    "On-duty air defense systems destroyed three Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles over the territory of the Republic of Crimea," added the message, without specifying where exactly the interception took place.
    Newsweek has contacted the Russian and Ukrainian defense ministries for comment.
    Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky has repeatedly said that one of Kyiv's aims in the war started by Russia was to recapture the peninsula that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
    Meanwhile, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the Tass state news agency on Wednesday that in 2024 the 10th anniversary of what the Kremlin has called "the reunification of Crimea with Russia" will see "large-scale" celebrations.
    But ahead of the anniversary, Crimea continues to be a focus for Ukrainian strikes, with high profile attacks in recent months, such as September's hit on the headquarters of Russia's Black Sea fleet in Sevastopol.
    Wednesday's incident comes a day after social media users in Crimea posted reports of loud explosions around Yevpatoria and Saky on the peninsula's west coast. An image posted on X, formerly Twitter, by user Pulse of Ukraine shows what it is purportedly the Saky Thermal Power Plant "presumably on fire." An air base in the area was also reportedly hit in a high-profile attack but Russian state media played down the reports.
    "The enemy is planting fakes," commented Oleg Kryuchkov, an official of the Moscow-installed administration in Crimea, writing on his Telegram channel.
    There has been a renewed intensity in drone warfare in the fight for Ukraine. Both Russia and Ukraine have used the devices to target each other's capital cities in recent days, with UAVs being shot down on both Saturday and Sunday in areas around Kyiv and Moscow.
    Following reports of a downed drone near the Russian city of Bryansk, Kremlin propagandist Vladimir Solovyov appeared to express nostalgia for the pre-war era on his radio show.
    "There was a time when we used to have a serious discussion about whether tea or coffee was better in the morning and life seemed quiet and peaceful," he said in a clip posted on X by Ukrainian internal affairs adviser, Anton Geraschchenko.
    "If someone had told me that my morning would start with checking news reports and finding out that the Ministry of Defense says that the Kyiv regime attempted a terrorist attack by an airplane-type UAV against a facility on Russian territory…I would think 'all right guys, stop pretending, this shouldn't happen."
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 13:06

    Putin scales back attack on Ukraine’s strategic Avdiivka town after heavy Russian losses

    Arpan Rai - The Independent

    Russian troops have not abandoned plans to capture Ukrainian stronghold, warns military official

    Vladimir Putin has scaled back his assault on Avdiivka, said Kyiv’s military officials who also warned that the attacks have not fully stopped yet.
    Mr Putin is pouring in fewer troops and equipment in an attempt to seize the battered but strategic Ukrainian stronghold in the Donetsk oblast that has largely been occupied by Russia.

    “Russian occupying forces have reduced the number of ground and air attacks, though they still violate the rules of war by shooting at medical teams and evacuation vehicles,” said Ukrainian military spokesperson Oleksandr Shtupun.

    Avdiivka, that has a vast coking plant, has seen fierce fighting and is now down to just 1,500 residents compared to its pre-war population of about 32,000.
    “The invaders are not abandoning their plans to surround Avdiivka. Eight attacks were repelled today,” the spokesperson said.
    Russia is likely planning its third wave of attacks in a similar bid it made for Bakhmut last year.
    Ukrainian forces are continuing to hold their positions, said Vitaliy Barabash, the head of Avdiivka’s military administration.

    “The enemy continues to press on our boys. The main focus for them is drones. And drones again,” he said.
    The long-contested town of Maryinka nearby has also started seeing a surge in the number of Russian attacks.
    Russia has not detailed its military operations and objectives for Avdiivka in daily updates, but in the latest development, it said its troops were attacking villages south of Avdiivka.
    Mr Putin’s troops have continued to fight and occupy Ukraine’s eastern regions in a slow advance and at the cost of thousands of its troops ever since the launch of the full-scale invasion last year.

    In the southern theatre of war, Russian forces struck port infrastructure in the Black Sea city of Odesa with missiles, regional officials said on Monday.
    Russia’s ministry of defence said marines were “stopping all attempts by the Armed Forces of Ukraine to carry out amphibious landings on the Dnipro islands and the left (eastern) bank of the Dnipro river” in the Kherson region.
    Despite the rain and snowy weather conditions, experts monitoring the war said troops on both sides continue to carry out their military operations in eastern and southern Ukraine.
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 13:13

    Some of the latest images of Ukraine from the news wires:



    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 5000
    A memorial site for service people who lost their lives fighting against the Russian attack on Ukraine, in Independence Square on the first snowy day of the year in Kyiv, 22 November 2023. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters


    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 5890
    Oleh Shumei performs in front of the monument to the Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko during the commemoration of the Heavenly Hundred Heroes, who were killed in 2014 during the mass Euromaidan protest on 21 November 2023 in Lviv, Ukraine. Day of Dignity and Freedom marks the beginning of the Orange Revolution in 2004 and the Revolution of Dignity in 2013. Photograph: Global Images Ukraine/Getty


    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 5528
    A snowy memorial wall of fallen defenders of Ukraine in the Russian-Ukrainian war in downtown Kyiv on 22 November 2023. Photograph: Roman Pilipey/AFP/Getty
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 13:28

    Russia stands by convict pardon policy despite 'satanist' killer release

    The Kremlin said on Wednesday there were “no revisions” to its policy of pardoning prisoners in exchange for fighting in Ukraine, AFP reports, after local media said a “satanist” killer had been released.
    About 100,000 Russian prisoners have fought in Ukraine in exchange for their freedom, according to the head of an independent prisoners’ rights group Olga Romanova.
    Nikolai Ogolobyak, 33, was sentenced to 20 years for the ritualistic murder of four teenagers in 2008. He was freed earlier this month after fighting in Ukraine, local media said on Tuesday.
    AFP has the details:
    Quotes sign: “Now everyone is studying the pardon lists very closely,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
    “But I repeat once again, we are talking about certain conditions that are related to being on the frontline,” he said, adding: “There have been no revisions in this regard.”
    Ogolobyak and six other members of a self-proclaimed cult were handed lengthy jail terms for the gruesome murders, which took place in Russia’s Yaroslavl region 15 years ago.
    The practice is controversial and local media have reported several instances of released prisoners going on to commit serious offences, including murders, after leaving the army.
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 13:30

    Poland charges 16 people for Russian spying

    Poland said Wednesday it had charged 16 foreign individuals with spying for Russia, AFP reports, for allegedly preparing acts of sabotage and gathering information on military equipment deliveries to Ukraine.
    The charges against the spy ring, dismantled in March, were announced by the office of the intelligence service coordinator Mariusz Kaminski.
    Quotes sign: “Charges have been filed against 16 foreigners accused of conducting espionage activities on behalf of Russian intelligence services on Polish territory and participating in an organised criminal group,” the office of the intelligence service coordinator Mariusz Kaminski.
    “Their assigned tasks included identifying military facilities and critical infrastructure, monitoring and documenting trains transporting military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine and preparing for train derailments,” it added.

    Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro said on X/Twitter, they “face ten years in prison each.”
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 13:46

    Orbán threatens Hungary will block Ukraine's EU membership bid

    Lisa O'Carroll - The Guardian
    Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán is threatening to block Ukraine’s candidacy for membership of the EU.
    He has written to the European Council president Charles Michel arguing that the official candidacy recommended on 8 November by the European Commission should not be endorsed by EU leaders.
    “The European Council is not in a position to … agree on the future of the enlargement process unless a consensus on our future strategy towards Ukraine is found,” he wrote.
    The leaders meet on 14 and 15 December with the recommendation that candidacy should be granted in mid-December high on the agenda.
    But Orbán says the Council leaders “must have a frank and open discussion on the feasibility of the EU’s strategic objectives in Ukraine which presently aim to achieve the military victory of Ukraine and the military defeat of Russia with the intention to induce fundamental political changes in Russia.
    “Do we regard these objectives realistically attainable,” he asks.
    His letter is being seen in the context of his battle to force the EU to release €30bn of funding, withheld because of rule of law and corruption concerns.
    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 3363
    Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán at the Fidesz party congress in Budapest on 18 November. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 13:56

    Turning food into a weapon: how Russia resorted to one of the oldest forms of warfare

    Julian Borger - The Guardian
    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 3328
    A cargo ship and a Ukrainian coastguard vessel ply the Danube–Black Sea canal. Photograph: Operational Command South Press Service/Reuters

    With Russia blockading Ukraine’s eastern ports, an alternative route to the west is possible but faces serious problems.

    The Romanian Black Sea port of Constanta shipped a record high 29.4 million metric tons of Ukrainian grain between January and October, Reuters reports, citing the port authority.
    If you want a primer on how Russia has resorted to one of the oldest forms of warfare – a food blockade – to try and crush Ukraine, read more here.
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 14:34

    Civilian casualties mount as war enters second winter

    Scoop
    At least 10,000 civilians, including over 560 children, have been killed and more than 18,500 injured since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February last year, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission there said on Tuesday.
    The Monitoring Mission stated that the casualty figure represents deaths verified according to its methodology, cautioning that the actual figure may be significantly higher given the challenges and time required for verification.
    “Ten thousand civilian deaths is a grim milestone for Ukraine,” said Danielle Bell, head of the Monitoring Mission, adding that the war, now entering into its 21st month, “risks evolving into a protracted conflict, with the severe human cost being painful to fathom.”
    Monitoring also showed that a significant number of civilian casualties occurred far beyond the frontlines, primarily attributed to the Russian armed forces’ deployment of long-range missiles and loitering munitions against targets in populated areas across the country.
    “Nearly half of civilian casualties in the last three months have occurred far away from the frontlines. As a result, no place in Ukraine is completely safe,” Ms. Bell warned.

    Security Council meeting

    Meanwhile, in New York, the UN Security Council met to discuss the situation in Ukraine, where ambassadors were briefed by senior officials.
    Miroslav Jenca, Assistant Secretary-General in the Department of Political Affairs, warned that there are indications that attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine may escalate further during the upcoming coldest season.
    “The impact for millions of Ukrainians will be dire as they brace themselves for the second war-time winter,” he said.

    Relentless conflict

    Recent developments highlight the relentless nature of the conflict, he added, noting that Russian aerial attacks persist across the country, with Kyiv experiencing missile strikes for the first time in two months on 11 November.
    While the capital escaped casualties that night, attacks on Kyiv and its surroundings continue, including drone strikes over the weekend. Other parts of Ukraine, including the city of Kherson, recaptured by Ukraine over a year ago, continue enduring regular intense bombardments, resulting in civilian deaths, Mr. Jenca said.

    Humanitarian situation

    He also informed Security Council members that the humanitarian situation is rapidly deteriorating, exacerbated by attacks on energy infrastructure and anticipation of frigid weather conditions.
    A Winter Response Plan, developed by the UN and its partners in collaboration with Ukrainian authorities, is in full swing, he said, calling for urgent international support to provide essential resources for 1.7 million people in need.
    Continued contributions are also needed for the [url=https://www.unocha.org/attachments/09f935be-9806-402b-8014-7bbf98ba1379/Ukraine HRP 2023 Humanitarian Response Plan EN 20230214.pdf]2023 Humanitarian Response Plan for Ukraine[/url], he added, which is currently only 54 per cent funded.
    Humanitarian agencies are unable to reach around four million Ukrainians in Russian-controlled areas of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions of Ukraine due to limited access, Mr. Jenca said, stating:
    “Humanitarian partners are ready to expand operations in these areas – if given access and adequate support.”

    Domestic and global food security

    Also briefing the Council, Matthew Hollingworth, Country Director for the World Food Programme (WFP), spoke of the impact of the Russian invasion on food security within Ukraine and globally.
    “Today, because of hostilities, Ukrainians are being cut off from accessing markets to buy food, and farmers have reported that they can no longer produce food – a situation that has a dramatic impact inside and outside of Ukraine,” he said.
    The situation is particularly dire in settlements near front lines, amid fears that it will only worsen in the winter.
    “Around one in five Ukrainian families face some level of severe food insecurity. The closer someone lives to hostilities, the more critical are those needs,” he said.

    Impact over years to come

    Mr. Hollingworth also informed ambassadors that fields in Ukraine are contaminated with mines and unexploded ordnance and households are unable to grow food to feed themselves.
    He added that if attacks on such food infrastructure and the blockage of sea export routes continue, “it will dramatically impact the agricultural production outlook over years to come.”
    “This export of produce means that people are fed around the world. It is important to remember that Ukraine accounted for nine per cent of global wheat exports, 15 per cent of maize export, and 44 per cent of sunflower oil exports before February 2022,” he said.
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 14:50

    Collaborator from Luhansk whose sister survived Irpin’s occupation ordered to kill writer Vakulenko

    Olena Roshchina - Ukrainska Pravda
    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 5319c5d-neskorodiev--slidstvo-info-
    Vladyslav Neskorodiev, Lev. Photo: Slidstvo.Info

    Journalists of the Slidstvo.Info investigative outlet have found that Vladyslav Neskorodiev,  who goes by the alias of Lev and is a collaborator from Luhansk, was involved in the murder of children's writer and poet Volodymyr Vakulenko in Kapitolivka, Izium district, during the occupation of Kharkiv Oblast.
    Neskorodiev’s family members live both in occupied territories and in Kyiv Oblast.

    Source: Slidstvo.Info

    Details: A week ago, law enforcement officers reported that they had identified two soldiers from Luhansk Oblast who were suspected of killing Volodymyr Vakulenko and three other men. V. Neskorodiev and S. Udodenko were served with a notice of suspicion. Neskorodiev goes by the alias Lev (Lion) and is the commander of one of the companies of the so-called Luhansk People’s Republic [a self-proclaimed and non-recognised formation in Luhansk Oblast, backed by Russia – ed.]. Udodenko is a machine gunner who goes by the alias Udod (Hoopoe). Both are natives of the currently occupied city of Luhansk.

    Slidstvo.Info journalists found Vladyslav Neskorodiev's sister and aunt and talked to them.
    In the spring of 2022, the Russian military, led by Neskorodiev, repeatedly came to the writer Vakulenko's house. The investigation materials state that the Russian military abducted the writer along with his teenage son, who has a disability. 
    Despite a day of torture, Vakulenko refused to cooperate with the Russians, and they first returned him and his son home, but a white car with the Z letter on it was again parked in Vakulenko's yard two days later (the Z letter is one of the most recognisable symbols of the ongoing Russian aggression in Ukraine; the Russians often put such marks on their armoured vehicles – ed.).
    Collaborator Neskorodiev ordered the soldiers to forcefully drag Vakulenko out of the house. The Russian military also took his backpack with Ukrainian military patches of Ukrainian Armed Forces units on it. A few days later, locals found the backpack in Kapitolivka, a 15-minute drive from Izium. 
    Neskorodiev supposedly ordered soldier Udodenko to shoot Vakulenko. And Udodenko killed the writer with three shots, before breaking his fingers. Vakulenko's body was identified among those recovered during the exhumation in November 2022. 
    Slidstvo.Info found Vladyslav Neskorodiev's page on the Russian social network Odnoklassniki (Classmates). He is 33 years old, has a wife Lina, and a 7-year-old daughter. The family decided not to leave occupied Luhansk.
    Slidstvo.Info called Neskorodiev, but his Ukrainian number turned out to be no longer in service. 
    And Vladyslav's sister Siuzanna, who moved to Irpin, Kyiv Oblast, after the occupation of Luhansk in 2014, heard about the war crimes her brother is suspected of committing for the first time during a conversation with journalists.

    Quote from Siuzanna: "You're telling me this now, and my heart just started pounding. I don't know this whole story at all... We are from Luhansk. I left back in 2014. But my brother stayed there, and I don't even know where he is, what's going on with him... I was shocked when I heard from my grandmother what had happened there, in Luhansk. It was a shock for me, I couldn't believe it."

    Details: Siuzanna said that when Russian troops occupied Kyiv Oblast, she did not have time to leave with her children to a safe place, so she waited for Irpin to be liberated in the basement of her house. Her family survived the occupation in Irpin. Their house in Irpin survived, but the windows were smashed. Now they have moved to another house.
    Siuzanna had a falling out with her brother, so she doesn't keep in touch with him: "We haven't spoken to him for 7 years. I don't even know where he is, what's going on with him. We've always had a bad relationship. The last time we saw each other was in 2014, when we were in Luhansk."
    She said she did not know that her brother had sided with the Russians: "He was working on construction sites, helping my aunt and uncle. I don't know anything else about him. My family stayed in Luhansk: my brother Oleksandr Kovalov and my mother. My aunt stayed because my grandmother said she would not leave. I can't answer for the rest of them, I don't know why they decided to stay. Everyone decides for themselves."
    Siuzanna reiterated that she hates the Russian army and that she herself "would never have switched to the Russian side". 
    Instead, Neskorodiev's aunt, Nataliia Kovalova, who lives in Luhansk, is happy with the occupation and does not hide her affection for Vladimir Putin and the Russian army on Odnoklassniki. 
    In a conversation with journalists, Kovalova said that she had also quarrelled with her nephew, but was convinced that Neskorodiev was not capable of killing a civilian because she had raised him since childhood.
    "Vladyslav would never be able to kill any civilian, and I know that for sure. I raised him from childhood, he is not that kind of person. So whatever the Ukrainian Prosecutor's Office publishes is their problem. I don't believe it, and I will never believe it," said Nataliia, who is also convinced that "the Russian army is protecting Ukrainians" and that "American mercenaries" serve in the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
    The Prosecutor's Office of Ukraine suspects Vladyslav Neskorodiev of organising the murder of three more civilians in Izium: Ivan Shabelnyk, Ukrainian combat veteran Yurii Kavun and Leonid Taran. 
    Neskorodiev’s whereabouts are currently unknown. In Ukraine, he faces imprisonment for a term of 8 to 12 years (Article 438 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine).
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 15:07

    Ukrainian state language protection commissioner says concept of separate ‘Russian-speaking’ population product of Russian ideology, ‘we are all Ukrainians’

    Meduza
    In response to a question about whether, in his opinion, Russian-speaking people can be called Ukrainians, Ukrainian State Language Protection Commissioner Taras Kremin said that the concept of a “Russian-speaking” population in Ukraine is purely Russian ideology, and that “we are all citizens of Ukraine.”
    Kremin added that since the beginning of the full-scale war, the Ukrainian language has become a way of determining “friend or foe” on the front line.
    Military personnel on the front have repeatedly mentioned that the first reaction to hearing Russian is to shoot. So Ukrainian is a security factor.
    At the beginning of November, politician Iryna Farion stated that she does not consider Russian-speaking soldiers of the Ukrainian Armed Forces to be Ukrainians. After this, she faced criticism, including from the military. Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) opened a case against Farion under articles about insulting the honor and dignity of a military serviceman, as well as about the violation of citizens' equality.


    Body of second victim found under rubble of hospital in Selydove, search is underway for another person – Emergency Service

    Interfax-Ukraine
    The death toll as a result of the Russian occupiers' attack on a hospital in the town of Selydove, Donetsk region, has increased to two, according to the Telegram channel of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine.
    "Two deaths are already known. The body of another person was recovered by rescuers from under the rubble of a partially destroyed hospital," the service said in the statement.
    At the same time, the department said rescue work at the attack site continues, and one more person may be under the rubble. Rescuers have already dismantled 78 tonnes of destroyed building structures.
    Earlier, Donetsk Regional Military Administration said two people were killed and eight were injured as a result of an attack on a hospital and a mine in Selydove on Tuesday night. According to acting head of the regional military administration Ihor Moroz one person died in the hospital and one in the mine territory." "As a result of the strike in the mine, seven buildings, 14 cars and five buses were damaged. The hospital's clinic, infectious diseases and emergency departments were partially destroyed," Moroz said.
    However, later the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine said one person was killed and eight were injured as a result of the strike.
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    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 16:14

    The Wagner Group is entering its terrorism era

    Fahad Mirza - GNET (Global Network on Extremism & Technology)
    The private military company (PMC) the Wagner Group has long been the secret weapon of the Kremlin. Despite denying its existence for years, the Russian government has relied on Wagner fighters to secure its interests in Crimea, Syria, and several African countries. The Wagner Group has also been a key supplemental fighting force for Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. However, the future of the Wagner Group has become increasingly uncertain since its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, led a group of his fighters to march towards Moscow over grievances with the Russian defence minister. Two months later, both Prigozhin and Wagner’s battlefield commander, Dmitry Utkin, were likely assassinated.

    While the Wagner Group has never been officially designated as an extremist organisation, it treads an interesting line between various designations. The United States currently labels PMC Wagner as a ‘transnational criminal organisation’, but there is a growing movement on Capitol Hill to brand the group as a foreign terrorist organisation. The UK and France have both already labeled Wagner as a terrorist organisation and there is mounting pressure in Germany for the EU to follow suit.

    Over the past decade, the Wagner Group has expanded beyond being a mercenary company used to carry out operations the Russian government wishes to distance itself from. Experts note that there is no singular entity known as ‘The Wagner Group’; rather, it is a sprawling network of shell companies and shadowy operatives whose services range from all-out warfare to troll factories. For this discussion, ‘The Wagner Group’, ‘PMC Wagner’, and ‘Wagner’ refer to this network.

    In this Insight, rather than deliberate on appropriate policy labels, I argue that following Yevgeny Prigozhin’s mutiny and subsequent death, the remnants of the Wagner Group are likely to splinter into an organisation that more closely resembles a traditional terrorist group. This new entity would operate independently from the Kremlin, pursue its own political goals, find funding, and recruit its own members.

    To support this prediction, this Insight will;

    1. Recount the Wagner Group’s prior involvement in conflicts worldwide to show its tactics have always involved brutality and that they have been able to profit off its operations independent of the funding it received from Russia.

    2. Analyse its disinformation campaigns as part of its hybrid warfare strategy to show they have experience manipulating media and maximising the reach of its propaganda.

    3. Examine its membership to show how it differs from other private military companies.

    Background

    Wagner first appeared as an entity in 2014 during Russia’s annexation of Crimea. In that conflict, operatives wore unmarked uniforms and assisted separatist forces. While the annexation of Crimea was relatively non-violent, Wagner’s subsequent involvement in helping pro-Russian forces in the Donbas region of Ukraine destabilise government forces led to significant casualties. From 2014 to 2021, the [url=https://ukraine.un.org/sites/default/files/2022-02/Conflict-related civilian casualties as of 31 December 2021 %28rev 27 January 2022%29 corr EN_0.pdf]estimated civilian casualty[/url] count was 3,404. The group has also been accused of intentionally killing civilians in Libya, Mali, and several other conflict zones including in Ukraine during the 2022 Russian invasion.
    There appears to be a particular consistent pattern in Wagner’s activities in Africa; it provides security and/or combat training for government forces against rebel groups, often engaging in war crimes in the process. In exchange, Wagner either gets paid directly or gains control of self-sustaining pre-established businesses, usually in mining or energy, as payment. These long-term economic investments have resulted in billions of dollars in revenue for Wagner, leading to the establishment of several shell companies and other financial holding systems to circumvent international sanctions. Having these funding sources separate from the Russian government ensures that the Wagner Group’s ability to operate is not dependent upon the Kremlin. This is significant because any terrorist entity that splits off from Wagner in the future can fund itself through these means.
     
    Membership 

    Most of Wagner’s mercenaries initially came from Russia’s special forces and other elite units. In its early days, the group was thought to number about 5,000, though as the Russian invasion of Ukraine continued and Wagner fighters were being lost, Prigozhin recruited 50,000 convicts from Russian prisons to replenish Wagner’s forces. Prisoners who agreed to join Wagner were promised freedom after completing a six-month contract. Western military officials say these ex-convicts formed the bulk of Wagner’s force in Ukraine at the height of its operations in early 2023.  
    Many of the men recruited from prison are violent repeat offenders and have already reoffended since returning home from their service with Wagner. These offences include robberies, car theft, sexual assault and murder. In Kaliningrad, a man was arrested for the sexual assault of an 8-year-old girl after taking her from her mother, to whom he had bragged about his prison time and his Wagner service in Ukraine. These men are not being given the tools they need to properly reenter society; they are instead offered a chance for their violent crimes to be forgotten by agreeing to commit more violence. As discussed before, Wagner forces often spend their tours of duty committing war crimes and other atrocities on innocent civilians. To ask someone to seamlessly reintegrate into society after experiencing that is a near-impossible task.  
    Additionally, over the last year, the Russian government has been forcing Wagner fighters to sign contracts to join the Russian army for significantly less pay and autonomy and fewer benefits in an attempt to get the group under control. This came after several instances of public criticism from Prigozhin that ultimately boiled over into the mutiny. For many, joining the Russian military represents a substantial downgrade from the compensation and benefits Wagner fighters had become accustomed to. Some reports indicate that between May 2022 and May 2023, contractors could earn as much as $10,000 per month. In contrast, as of March 2023, Russian military personnel made an average of $2,535 monthly. Additionally, Wagner typically offered ex-convicts six-month contracts, after which they were free to return home. This privilege is not extended to regular soldiers, who cannot terminate their contracts as long as Putin’s mobilisation decree remains in effect.
    Finally, it’s important to note that, unlike many mercenary groups whose primary motivation is financial profit, the Wagner Group does seem to have a political ideology that helps drive its goals. Wagner was named for its cofounder Dmitry Utkin’s military call sign, Wagner. This call sign is a reference to Richard Wagner, the favourite composer of German Nazi leader Adolf Hitler. Utkin was a Nazi sympathiser with close ties to the white supremacist and ultra-nationalist organisation the Night Wolves. The Night Wolves are a motorcycle club in Russia known for their far-right and anti-Semitic political views that seek to ignite ethnic divides, incite hate against minorities, and promote the Kremlin. The Wagner Group seems to closely align with the political beliefs of the Night Wolves with both groups having members who fought alongside pro-Russian rebels in Crimea in 2014. This is significant because a future splinter group from Wagner would most likely espouse these far-right and xenophobic political ideas. A group of former mercenaries with far-right political ideology would most likely carry out acts of violence on minority communities and other groups typically targeted by far-right extremists.

    Disinformation

    As stated before, the Wagner Group is more than just soldiers for hire. It was confirmed earlier this year by Yevgeniy Prigozhin himself, that in addition to being the head of Wagner, he also founded the Internet Research Agency (IRA). The IRA is a shadowy company based in St. Petersburg which has carried out Russian information warfare operations by employing fake social media accounts and other forms of disinformation to exploit social divisions around the world. Together with the Association for Free Research and International Cooperation (AFRIC), another Prigozhin-linked company, they have been engaged for over half a decade in a series of disinformation campaigns aimed at igniting social conflicts and undermining support for democracy worldwide. 
    Disinformation has been a low-cost and highly effective part of Wagner’s hybrid warfare strategy that synergises online information manipulation with offline violence. Wagner and other disinformation actors employ a host of tactics in their campaigns – one of the most common of which is to amplify online content that helps promote a narrative in line with their strategic goals. 
     
    For example, when Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, the IRA was part of an effort to paint the Ukrainian government as fascists and/or neo-Nazis to justify the annexation. They then promoted similar narratives when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 to justify the invasion and deflect from their brutality against the Ukrainians. The narrative was a success –  even some members of the US Congress were found parroting the Russian propaganda.   
    In another example, after armed men suspected to be Wagner fighters killed nine Chinese nationals at a gold mine in the Central African Republic earlier this year, a video circulated online claiming France had secretly ordered the attack and planned to frame the Wagner Group. The French Foreign Ministry said their media monitoring unit quickly traced the video to a cluster of Facebook and Twitter accounts linked to Wagner. Still, the narrative had already helped stoke anti-French sentiment throughout West Africa. These examples show Wagner has a pattern of using disinformation and other forms of information manipulation in conjunction with its on-the-ground operations to synergise its efforts and further Russian interests. This type of hybrid warfare appears to be Wagner’s go-to strategy and has allowed it to dominate both the online and offline space. A future splinter group of Wagner would most likely employ this strategy and look to bolster its offline terrorist activities with online information manipulation. For example, one team of this splinter group could carry out a bombing on a specific target, then another team could employ disinformation methods to manipulate the online discourse to maximise the propaganda impact of the bombing. 
    Disseminating messages has always been a major objective for terrorist groups. Often, the reason terrorist attacks are carried out on well-populated civilian targets is to maximise media coverage of the attack and get more people to hear what their messages are. The next generation of terrorist groups will be able to manipulate social media using disinformation tactics and shape the narrative around attacks to suit their goals. A splinter group of Wagner would excel in this area.

    Conclusion

    The Wagner Group has a history of brutality and war crimes. It has the capacity to self-finance, it has experience in manipulating narratives to appear sympathetic and a membership composed of violent repeat criminal offenders who lack the means to return to their homes peacefully. Its far-right xenophobic ideology encourages violence and a belief in a Russian-centric world order. With its leaders dead and the Russian government planning to strip the remaining members of their unique status by forcing them to join the main Russian military, it is not only possible but likely that in the coming years, at least some portion of Wagner will splinter into an independent terrorist organisation. This group will likely continue to carry out operations similar to its current activities, but perhaps with an increased focus on self-serving operations, particularly those in African regions where actions have already been far less dictated by the Russian government.  
    While national security forces can combat groups like Wagner in the offline space, social media companies have a responsibility to combat these groups online. However, the past few years have seen a sharp decline in social media companies’ willingness to combat disinformation. Researchers at NewsGuard found that when searching for prominent news topics on TikTok, almost 20% of the videos presented as search results contained misinformation. Meta and other major tech companies have gutted their teams dedicated to promoting accurate information online, and X, formerly Twitter, has seen a flood of disinformation about many topics including the recent Israel-Palestine conflict. Thanks to X’s revamped policies that allow anyone to pay to be verified, as well as large-scale layoffs in their Trust and Safety teams, the platform seems uninterested in even attempting to combat disinformation. 
    Additionally, there have been a number of lawsuits filed against the US government for communicating with social media companies over disinformation that violated company policies. The goal of these lawsuits was to curtail any effort by the federal government to combat disinformation claiming these efforts were ‘censorship’. Regardless of these claims, social media and other tech companies must work with governments to properly combat hybrid threats like Wagner. There are no clear-cut answers when it comes to fighting online extremism and disinformation, but social media companies need to have dedicated teams to protect their users. Those teams also need the resources to effectively track and take down mis/disinformation. Additionally, they should work proactively with governments worldwide to synergise their efforts in stopping disinformation actors.
    The next generation of terrorists will utilise technology in novel ways and the Wagner Group has already shown that it is capable of manipulating information to bolster its military operations. Disinformation is a whole-of-society problem that requires a whole-of-society approach.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637

    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 17:28

    Here is an update on today's main developments, as at 6:15pm in Kyiv:


    • Vladimir Putin said Russia has always been “ready for talks” to end the “tragedy” of war in Ukraine. Speaking at the G20 meeting, the Russian president gave his most pacific comments yet since invading Ukraine, but then blamed Kyiv for no peace talks.

    • Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine’s troops faced “difficult” defensive operations on parts of the eastern front, as bitter winter cold settles in. But the president added forces in the south were still conducting offensive actions.

    • The Russian foreign ministry said relations with the US were extremely thin and risked being torn at any moment. Spokesperson Maria Zakharova told reporters Washington’s actions could lead to “unpredictable consequences.”

    • Hungary prime minister Viktor Orbán is threatening to block Ukraine’s candidacy for membership of the European Union. European leaders will meet on 14 and 15 December to discuss Ukraine’s EU bid.

    • European Council president Charles Michel said he expected a “difficult” meeting next month about Ukraine joining the EU. He promised to do “everything in my power” to make a decision in December.

    • The EU has approved a further €1.5bn payment in macro financial assistance to Ukraine. It is the tenth payment made as part of an €18bn programme to keep the Ukrainian economy moving.

    • Russia’s defence ministry said a group of Russian journalists had come under drone attack from Ukrainian forces in the Zaporizhzhia region. It said one reporter received medical treatment but no one was life-threateningly injured.

    • Russia said on Wednesday it had protested to Finland after a damaged Russian tank was placed on display near the Finnish parliament. Finland is an EU and Nato member and shares a 1,340km border with Russia.

    • The Kremlin said there were “no revisions” to its policy of pardoning prisoners in exchange for fighting in Ukraine. It followed local media reports of a Russian “satanist” killer who was released.

    • The Ukrainian air force said it shot down 14 Shahed drones launched by Russian forces overnight. There were no immediate reports of casualties or major damage.

    • The US voiced concern that Iran may provide Russia with ballistic missiles for use in its war against Ukraine. National security council spokesperson John Kirby said the development that would probably be disastrous for the Ukrainian people.

    • The UN human rights office said more than 10,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion. It expects the real toll is significantly higher.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637

    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 18:49

    Politician planning Russian presidential run summoned to prosecutors office

    A Russian independent politician was summoned to the local prosecutor’s office after declaring her intention to run in next year’s presidential election, AFP reports.
    According to Freedom House, “the Kremlin manipulates elections and suppresses genuine dissent”.
    AFP has the details on the story here:
    President Vladimir Putin is set to extend his rule until at least 2030 in a nationwide vote next March – a contest rights groups say will be neither free nor fair.
    After saying she would try to stand in the 2024 vote and criticising the current regime, prosecutors in Rzhev, a town 200 kilometres west of Moscow, called Ekaterina Duntsova, 40, in for questioning.
    Officials said her post had “raised some questions, specifically about the wording of sections about war and peace, my opinion of the current government and what is happening in our country,” Duntsova told AFP in a video interview Wednesday.
    In earlier social media posts, Duntsova said issues of “war and peace” affected every Russian, and said the country was “moving away from rights and freedoms, away from love and peace, away from a beautiful future.”
    Any criticism of Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine is effectively illegal under sweeping censorship laws passed in the first days after Russia launched its military offensive.


    Death toll from Russian strike on Ukrainian hospital rises to 3 people

    The death toll from a Russian strike on a hospital has risen to three people, emergency services in Ukraine’s southern town of Selydove said.
    The strike on Tuesday damaged two hospital buildings – injuring at least eight people, and a coal mine – Reuters reports, citing local Ukrainian authorities.
    After clearing rubble overnight, the State Emergency Service said on Telegram on Wednesday: “Another body was recovered from the rubble of the hospital building... In total, three people were killed in the missile strike”.
    Moscow denies targeting civilians. But the United Nations says more than 10,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion. It expects the real toll is significantly higher.


    readmore Can hospitals be military targets? What international law says
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637

    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 20:52

    A 17-year-old Russian was sentenced to six years in a juvenile penal colony for throwing Molotov cocktails at army recruitment offices on Wednesday

    the latest ruling in Moscow’s crackdown against dissent over its invasion of Ukraine.
    Yegor Balazeikin, then a student at a prestigious high school in Saint Petersburg specialising in social sciences, threw home-made Molotov cocktails, but they failed to ignite.
    Balazeikin “has no regrets” over his actions, his mother said, but according to supporters, he has suffered worsening health conditions while in custody – including autoimmune hepatitis and liver fibrosis.
    AFP has a reporter at the court in Saint Petersburg:
    Quotes sign: Balazeikin said he had targeted the enlistment buildings in Saint Petersburg and in his hometown of Kirovsk, 30 kilometres (20 miles) east of Saint Petersburg, in protest at Russia’s offensive on Ukraine.
    His uncle was killed a few months after volunteering to fight at the start of the conflict.
    Moscow has taken a harsh line against public shows of dissent and opposition to its actions in Ukraine.
    Russian courts have sentenced several individuals to multiple years in prison - also on “terrorism” charges - for attempted attacks on military and government buildings.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 637

    Post by Kitkat Wed 22 Nov 2023, 20:58

    Closing Summary


    • Vladimir Putin said Russia has always been “ready for talks” to end the “tragedy” of war in Ukraine. Speaking at the virtual G20 meeting, the Russian president gave his most pacific comments yet since invading Ukraine, but then blamed Kyiv for no peace talks.

    • Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine’s troops faced “difficult” defensive operations on parts of the eastern front, as bitter winter cold settles in. But the president added forces in the south were still conducting offensive actions.

    • The death toll from a Russian strike on a Ukrainian hospital in Selydove rose to three people. After Tuesday’s attack, rescuers spent the night clearing rubble and discovered further casualties.

    • The Russian foreign ministry said relations with the US were extremely thin and risked being torn at any moment. Spokesperson Maria Zakharova told reporters Washington’s actions could lead to “unpredictable consequences.”

    • Finland prime minister Petteri Orpo said the country will shut three border crossings after Helsinki accused the Kremlin of pushing hundreds of asylum seekers to the border in recent weeks. It leaves just one crossing open in its 1,340km border with Russia, also the Nato and EU border.

    • Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, is threatening to block Ukraine’s candidacy for membership of the EU. European leaders will meet on 14 and 15 December to discuss Ukraine’s EU bid.

    • The European Council president, Charles Michel, said he expected a “difficult” meeting next month about Ukraine joining the EU. He promised to do “everything in my power” to make a decision in December.

    • The EU has approved a further €1.5bn (£1.3bn) payment in macro financial assistance to Ukraine. It is the tenth payment made as part of an €18bn programme to keep the Ukrainian economy moving.

    • Russia’s defence ministry said a group of Russian journalists had come under drone attack from Ukrainian forces in the Zaporizhzhia region. It said one reporter received medical treatment but no one was life-threateningly injured.

    • A Russian independent politician was summoned to a local prosecutor’s office after declaring her intention to run in next year’s presidential election. She had been critical of the regime.

    • The Kremlin said there were “no revisions” to its policy of pardoning prisoners in exchange for fighting in Ukraine. It followed local media reports of a Russian “satanist” killer who was released.

    • The Ukrainian air force said it shot down 14 Shahed drones launched by Russian forces overnight. There were no immediate reports of casualties or major damage.

    • The US voiced concern that Iran may provide Russia with ballistic missiles for use in its war against Ukraine. The national security council spokesperson, John Kirby, said the development would probably be disastrous for the Ukrainian people.

    • The UN human rights office said more than 10,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion. It expects the real toll is significantly higher.

      Current date/time is Sat 27 Apr 2024, 07:37