KRAZY KATS

Welcome to Krazy Kats - a friendly informal online community discussing life issues that we care about. Open 24/7 for chat & chill. Come and join us!

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 16:33

    Summary for Thursday, 4th January 2024 -  DAY 680



    Key developments over the past 24 hours:

    • Nuclear inspectors have been denied access to the main halls of reactors one, two and six at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia power station in Ukraine. Rafael Grossi, director general of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency, said inspectors at the plant had for two weeks had no access and were yet to receive 2024 maintenance plans for the plant.

    • Russia and Ukraine have exchanged hundreds of prisoners of war in the biggest single release of captives since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. Ukrainian authorities said 230 Ukrainian prisoners of war returned home in the first exchange in almost five months. Russia’s defence ministry said 248 Russian servicemen were freed under the deal sponsored by the United Arab Emirates.

    • Oleksandr Kubrakov, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister for restoration, said a family returning from abroad had become the first to conclude a property purchase agreement under a compensation scheme for destroyed housing. “We want those Ukrainians who need it to feel confident applying for governmental support toward repairing houses or buying new property. Especially if this will let them come back to Ukraine from abroad as did this first family.” The house was in Bucha, Kubrakov said.

    • The Polish foreign minister has called on allies to deliver long-range missiles to Ukraine to help Kyiv target Russian “launch sites and command centres”.

    • The Nato support and procurement agency said it would support a group of countries with a contract for up to 1,000 Patriot guidance enhanced missiles.

    • Polish farmers would resume their blockade at a border crossing with Ukraine, Reuters reported. “I will try to convince carriers not to use blockades as a method of defending their interests. We will do everything to effectively protect their interests,” said the Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk.

    • Norway will send two F-16 fighter jets to Denmark to contribute to the training of Ukrainian pilots, the Norwegian defence minister has said.

    • Reports that the US wanted Ukraine to alter its strategy of seeking total victory in its war against Russia were not true, state department spokesperson Matthew Miller said.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 16:45

    Russian hackers inside Ukraine's biggest telecoms company since at least May – Kyiv spy chief

    Russian hackers were inside Ukrainian telecoms company Kyivstar’s system from at least May last year in a cyber-attack that should serve as a “big warning” to the west, Ukraine’s cyber spy chief told Reuters.
    The hack, one of the most dramatic since Russia’s full-scale invasion nearly two years ago, knocked out services provided by Ukraine’s biggest telecoms operator for about 24 million users for days from 12 December.
    In an interview, Illia Vitiuk, head of the Security Service of Ukraine’s (SBU) cybersecurity department, disclosed exclusive details about the hack, which he said caused “disastrous” destruction and aimed to land a psychological blow and gather intelligence.
    He said:
    Quotes sign: This attack is a big message, a big warning, not only to Ukraine, but for the whole western world to understand that no one is actually untouchable.
    He noted Kyivstar was a wealthy, private company that invested a lot in cybersecurity.
    The attack wiped “almost everything”, including thousands of virtual servers and PCs, he said, describing it as probably the first example of a destructive cyber-attack that “completely destroyed the core of a telecoms operator.”
    Quotes sign: For now, we can say securely, that they were in the system at least since May 2023.
    I cannot say right now, since what time they had … full access: probably at least since November.
    The SBU assessed the hackers would have been able to steal personal information, understand the locations of phones, intercept SMS-messages and perhaps steal Telegram accounts with the level of access they gained, he said.
    A Kyivstar spokesperson said the company was working closely with the SBU to investigate the attack and would take all necessary steps to eliminate future risks, adding: “No facts of leakage of personal and subscriber data have been revealed.”
    Vitiuk said it had no big impact on Ukraine’s military:
    Quotes sign: After the major break there were a number of new attempts aimed at dealing more damage to the operator.
    Speaking about drone detection, speaking about missile detection, luckily, no, this situation didn’t affect us strongly.


    Investigating the cyber-attack on the Ukrainian telecoms company Kyivstar’ is harder because of the wiping of the company’s infrastructure.

    Illia Vitiuk, the head of the Security Service of Ukraine’s (SBU) cybersecurity department, said he was “pretty sure” it was carried out by Sandworm, a Russian military intelligence cyberwarfare unit that has been linked to cyber-attacks in Ukraine and elsewhere, Reuters reports.
    A year ago, Sandworm penetrated a Ukrainian telecoms operator, but was detected by Kyiv because the SBU had itself been inside Russian systems, Vitiuk said, declining to identify the company. The earlier hack has not been previously reported.
    Russia’s defence ministry did not respond to a written request for comment on Vitiuk’s remarks.
    A group called Solntsepyok, believed by the SBU to be affiliated with Sandworm, said it was responsible for the attack.
    Vitiuk said SBU investigators were still working to establish how Kyivstar was penetrated or what type of Trojan horse malware could have been used to break in, adding that it could have been phishing, someone helping on the inside or something else.
    If it was an inside job, the insider who helped the hackers did not have a high level of clearance in the company, as the hackers made use of malware used to steal hashes of passwords, he said.
    Kyivstar’s CEO, Oleksandr Komarov, said on 20 December that all the company’s services had been fully restored throughout the country. Vitiuk praised the SBU’s incident response effort to safely restore the systems.
    Why the hackers chose 12 December was unclear, he said, adding: “Maybe some colonel wanted to become a general.”
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 16:49

    Here are some of the latest images from the news wires.


    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 5393
    A Russian missile attack in central Kyiv on Wednesday destroyed a block of flats. Photograph: Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images


    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 2048
    More than 200 Ukrainian prisoners of war have been returned from Russian captivity to Sumy in the largest prisoner exchange since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion. Photograph: AP
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 17:01

    Polish farmers resume blockade of border crossing with Ukraine

    Wojciech Kość (in Warsaw) and Bartosz Brzeziński (in Brussels) - Politico

    They are rejoining hauliers who have been protesting for months; both groups fear the impact of opening markets to Ukraine.

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 11861869-scaled
    The farmers' key complaint is for the government to defend them against Ukrainian grain imports | Wojtek Jargilo/EFE via EPA

    WARSAW — Polish farmers restarted a blockade of a Poland-Ukraine border crossing on Thursday, accusing the new Polish government of failing to guarantee it will meet their demands for financial help.
    The farmers rejoined truckers at the Medyka-Shehyni crossing — hauliers are also blocking other crossings complaining about competition from Ukrainian rivals — turning the border issue into a political minefield for the new government in Warsaw.

    Prime Minister Donald Tusk needs to defuse the protests while not angering the transport and farming lobbies, all while ensuring that Kyiv gets material and political support to resist Russia's war of aggression.
    Tusk said on Wednesday that he wants to investigate why the protesting farmers are back at the border and why they had so little trust in a deal struck with his government last month to end the blockade.

    He also worried about the signal being sent by the protests.
    "I will convince Polish hauliers not to use blockade as a method of defending their interests. Our arguments will be better heard when Poland is not a country blocking the border," Tusk said, while adding: "My government and I personally will do everything, whether they block or not, to effectively protect their interests in this unequal competition with Ukrainian hauliers."

    The farmers blocked the Medyka crossing for a month before ending their protest on December 24 following a a deal with the government. But now some farmers are back, saying they don't trust the agreement as it doesn't bear Tusk's signature.

    Not enough


    Their key complaint is for the government to defend them against Ukrainian grain imports, but the specific issues they're pressing have nothing to do with Ukraine. The farmers want corn production subsidies, a lower agricultural tax in 2024, and to keep preferential liquidity loans in place.

    New Agriculture Minister Czesław Siekierski pledged before Christmas to meet these demands. He published a note Tuesday saying the ministry “accepts all three demands and commits to implementing them.” 
    “Meeting the demands involves planned efforts that are currently underway. The coordination process between different ministries, budget considerations, and the European Commission takes time,” the note also said, adding that making the demands reality was “progressing positively in terms of procedures.”

    But the protesting farmers say it’s not enough.
    "We want the minister to sign a bilateral agreement with us," Roman Kondrów, one of the protest leaders, told the Polish press, adding: “The ministerial note doesn't constitute an agreement."
    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 1652128971050_20181213_EP-080835D_FMA_026-1024x683
    Agriculture Minister Czesław Siekierski pledged before Christmas to meet the farmers' demands | Fred Marvaux/EP

    Siekierski said on Thursday: "I can sign the agreement, but it will be the same information as in the memo, only with the signature of the farmers."

    The farmers' protest group, Betrayed Countryside, is small, with five to 10 people taking part in the protests on rotating eight-hour shifts.

    They say the blockade will continue until February 3 unless the ministry gives them a credible guarantee that their demands will be met. They are letting three trucks through an hour, while also allowing buses and cars to pass.

    Kondrów argued the protest is meant as a wake-up call to the Polish authorities and the wider EU about what he called rampant corruption in Ukraine's agricultural sector and the risks of allowing the country to join the bloc without restrictions.
    "Ukraine is such a country that they just want to take, take, take and give nothing back," he told POLITICO by phone. "It outrages us, we've helped them so much, and the gratitude we get is that we can't sell our own wheat or corn.”

    Polish truckers are protesting as they want the government to end an EU-Ukraine agreement that liberalized road transport rules in an effort to help the Ukrainian economy, crippled by the Russian invasion.

    Underpinning the narratives of both groups are doomsday scenarios about the impact on Poland of Ukraine one day becoming a member of the EU. Leaders of the bloc agreed at a summit in December to open accession talks with Ukraine
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 17:06

    The Nato chief, Jens Stoltenberg, will convene a meeting between Nato diplomats and officials from Ukraine on 10 January, after a recent wave of heavy Russian airstrikes on the country

    - the transatlantic defence alliance said on Thursday.
    The meeting, taking the format of the newly established Nato-Ukraine Council, was being convened at Kyiv’s request after missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian civilians, cities and towns, a Nato spokesperson said.
    Russia has intensified attacks over the New Year period, with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, warning that a Ukrainian airstrike on the Russian city of Belgorod, which Moscow said killed 25 civilians, would “not go unpunished”, according to Reuters.


    Death toll after Kyiv missile strike last week raised to 32

    A missile strike last week killed 32 people in Kyiv, authorities said Thursday, raising the toll of the deadliest attack on the Ukrainian capital since the war began.

    The strike took place on 29 December. Russia has in recent days intensified aerial attacks against Ukraine, which says it has enough munition to withstand a few powerful assaults but would soon need more aid, AFP reports.

    Serhiy Popko, the head of the Kyiv military administration, said:
    Quotes sign: The total number of dead as a result of the enemy missile attack on 29 December is 32 people.
    Thirty people were wounded, he added. All the 32 killed were in a warehouse, Ukrainian authorities said. Russia says it only targets military infrastructure.

    The Kyiv mayor, Vitali Klitschko, had said on Saturday that the 29 December strike was “the largest in terms of civilian casualties.”
    Russia had on that day launched 158 missiles and drones over Ukraine, the air force said, in an attempt to overwhelm air defences. The attack killed at least 55 people and wounded 170.

    Ukraine has retaliated and the Russian border region of Belgorod faced a wave of attacks over the weekend, with 25 people killed – an unprecedented toll since the beginning of the offensive almost two years ago.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 17:17

    One civilian was killed and eight wounded on Thursday in a Russian missile strike on Kropyvnytskyi in central Ukraine

    The strike damaged energy company buildings and caused power and water supply cuts, the regional governor said.
    Russia likely used an X-59 missile, governor Andriy Raikovych said at a briefing, according to Reuters. Raikovych said:
    Quotes sign: Ordinary working people were injured … One worker, unfortunately, died. A simple car mechanic.
    On Telegram, he added that all those hurt had shrapnel wounds.
    Damage to power lines resulted in outages and water supply cuts in several parts of the city though services were restored later, according to Raikovych.


    Putin offers citizenship to foreigners who fight for Russia against Ukraine

    Timothy H.J. Nerozzi - Fox News

    Russian citizenship benefits would also extend to foreign combatants' spouses, parents and children

    Russian President Vladimir Putin approved an order that will grant citizenship to foreigners who fight against Ukraine. 
    According to the decree, foreign nationals who serve with the Russian military for at least one year will be eligible to receive citizenship for both themselves and their families.
    The Kremlin extended the offer to "foreign citizens who signed a [one-year] contract with the Russian Armed Forces or military formations or who are undergoing military service during the special military operation [in Ukraine]," according to a translation from the Moscow Times.
    Citizenship benefits would extend to those who served, their spouses, parents and children.
    The decisions show foreign support for Russia's invasion of Ukraine has become an increasing priority for the government.
    At least 315,000 Russian troops have been killed or injured so far in the war in Ukraine, amounting to nearly 90% of its personnel when the conflict started, a December 2023 report claimed.
    The statistic was highlighted in a declassified U.S. intelligence report that found Russia began its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 with 360,000 troops, a source familiar with the document told Reuters at the time.
    The report also said Russia started the war with 3,100 tanks but has since lost 2,200 of them, and after backfilling its army with T-62 tanks produced in the 1970s, it only has about 1,300 tanks on the battlefield, according to Reuters, citing the source.  
    Global intelligence reports have shown extensive efforts by Russian agents to field combatants in the conflict from foreign countries.
    The Cuban government said last year it had uncovered a human trafficking network being operated in Russia with the goal of recruiting citizens to participate in the war against Ukraine.
    Cuba's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement at the time that the country's ministry of the interior uncovered the operation, which it says has been dismantled.
    The country's foreign affairs ministry said the country has a "firm and clear historical position against mercenarism, and it plays an active role in the United Nations in rejection of the aforementioned practice, being the author of several of the initiatives approved in that forum."
    (Fox News Digital's Adam Sabes and Greg Norman contributed to this report.)
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 17:21

    Andriy Kostin, prosecutor general of Ukraine, visited the sites of Russia’s attacks on civilian infrastructure in the Kharkiv region with international criminal court to investigate potential war crimes since Russia invaded almost two years ago.

    In a tweet, Andriy Kostin said:
    Quotes sign: We are closely cooperating with the ICC in investigating the facts of civilian killings, torture, deprivation of liberty, sexual violence, and shelling of critical civilian infrastructure.
    We also visited the village of Hroza. On 5 October 2023, a missile strike from an Iskander missile targeted a cafe in the village, resulting in the tragic loss of 59 lives – nearly a quarter of Hroza’s population.
    The investigation has already identified those who directed the enemy fire. We are working to identify the Russian servicemen who executed this attack and the officers who gave this criminal order.
    Our commitment to restoring justice is unwavering, and I am grateful for all the support in these efforts.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 17:23

    A Ukrainian military doctor has become engaged to a soldier she served with, their commander has said, a day after she was released from nearly two years of captivity in Russia

    The couple were reunited when Ukraine and Russia exchanged more than 200 soldiers each in the biggest prisoner swap of the war on Wednesday.

    Video on social media showed ex-prisoner of war Galyna Fedychyn kissing her fiance Mykola Gritsenyak after he proposed to her.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 17:50

    Explosions in Sevastopol and Yevpatoriia: Ukraine's Air Command sends greetings to Russian invaders, command post hit

    Valentyna Romanenko - Ukrainska Pravda

    Explosions in the temporarily occupied areas of Yevpatoriia and Sevastopol were part of a special operation carried out by Ukraine’s Air Force


    Source: Lieutenant General Mykola Oleshchuk, Air Force Commander, on Telegram; Directorate of Strategic Communications of the Office of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (StratCom)

    Quote: "On 2 January, the Ministry of Lies of the Russian Federation [the Defence Ministry - ed.] reported that Russian missiles had struck ‘a bunker containing Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhnyi’s deputy and another nine generals of the Armed Forces of Ukraine’.

    Hello to the invaders in Crimea!
    I expect enemy propaganda to conjure up a similarly epic report from Sevastopol and Yevpatoriia on 4 January, and once again, I would like to thank the pilots of the Air Force and everyone who planned the operation for their impeccable combat work!"

    Details: Most likely, this message refers to the successful hits on military facilities in temporarily occupied Crimea: part of the Russian air defence and a command post.

    Update: The Strategic Communications Directorate of the Office of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine has confirmed that at around 15:00 on 4 January, the Defence Forces hit a command post of the Russian occupation forces near Sevastopol.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 18:02

    Ukraine’s churches are adopting the western calendar – but not everyone is happy

    Chris Hann - The Conversation
    Everywhere in Europe, rituals to mark the winter solstice have long been focused on the Christian narrative of the birth of Jesus. 
    Yet in the ancient Julian calendar, which has gradually been falling out of synch with the Earth’s orbit around the Sun, Christmas Day now falls on January 7, over two weeks later.

    A reformed calendar was first disseminated in 1582 on the authority of Pope Gregory XIII. While most of Europe has come to recognise the Gregorian calendar for both religious and civil purposes, a number of eastern Slavic churches – both Orthodox and Catholic – have retained the Julian calendar in their liturgical life.

    Given the deeply embedded sacred character of church rituals, passing a law that brings Christmas forwards is a brave intervention on the part of secular authorities. Yet this is what Ukraine’s president, Volodymr Zelensky, has recently done. The legislation, signed in May 2023, is without precedent since the era when the Communist Party of the Soviet Union under Stalin sought to abolish Christmas altogether.

    Eastern Christianity dominates throughout Ukraine, but unlike the Roman Catholic Church in Poland it is not unified. In the west of the country, Greek Catholics are the most numerous kind of Christian. Historically, differentiation from Roman Catholics mattered more than flagging differences with the Orthodox churches.

    Western Ukraine is where nationalist sentiment was strongest in the 20th century. A recent consultation by the Greek Catholic bishops indicated that a majority of the faithful now favoured a switch to the western calendar.

    Elsewhere, Orthodox Christians have been bitterly divided by politics. Zelensky’s law was not a bolt from the blue. It was the culmination of years of struggle on the part of nationalising elites to create a unified Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) that was not subject to the authority of the Moscow patriarch.

    Even before the Russian invasion, priests and believers who had previously known only the latter orientation were under immense pressure to transfer their affiliation to the OCU.

    The shift to what is referred to in ecclesiastical diplomacy as the revised Julian calendar (largely corresponding to the Gregorian calendar) is presented as being in no way anti-Orthodox. It is above all a way to assert difference from Russia. As Father Andriy, a young Orthodox priest, told the BBC, this is simultaneously perceived as a “returning back to Europe, where we belong.”

    Costs and benefits


    But the course of Zelensky and the OCU is not without risks. It necessarily sows division within families whose members belong to different Orthodox churches, celebrating Christmas on different days. In 2023 there was no public holiday on December 25 due to martial law, while January 7 2024 is a holiday because it falls on a Sunday.
    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 File-20240104-20-kmbznd.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1
    Ukrainians refugees queue for food handouts near the frontline in the Zaporizhzhia region, December 25 2023.
    EPA-EFE/Kateryna Klochko


    In future, many families will doubtless observe both holidays. If citizens enjoy a public holiday on the December 25 but continue to take days off work to enjoy private celebrations two weeks later, the change will have economic costs.
    Symbolic costs and benefits are harder to quantify. The authorities point out that Orthodox countries within the EU (Greece, Bulgaria, Romania) have long made use of the revised Julian calendar. The transformation may nonetheless be experienced by some Ukrainians as cultural westernisation.

    It is a more radical westernisation than the original establishment of the Greek Catholic Church in the wake of the Counter-Reformation, which colonised eastern Christianity but allowed the faithful to retain not only their distinctive rituals but also their calendar.

    It remains unclear if Zelensky’s changes will be followed up consequentially to affect all the saints’ days that provide the believer with orientation and meaning through the entire year. Moveable feasts are more elusive but ecclesiastical committees are already hard at work to standardise the timing of Easter.

    In short, the new legislation may be not welcome to all Ukrainians. As for the Greek Catholic minority in Poland, these Ukrainians too have been swept along.

    But while the anti-Russia message is popular here too, not everyone welcomes the abandonment of a ritual calendar that survived the socialist era intact but must now be abandoned because of a nationalising neighbour. To have holy water blessed on January 6, when their Jordan coincides with the Epiphany of the dominant Roman Catholic Church, may feel like a diminution of the pluralism of their society.

    The top-down imposition of a new religious calendar and suppression of local diversity are often seen from the outside as cultural imperialism. These processes are frequently overlooked when they take place within Europe, among different kinds of Christian. Perhaps we shall know that Russia has lost its war in Ukraine when the patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church embraces the revised Julian calendar.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 18:11

    Seventeen Ukrainian journalists imprisoned in the occupied territories have been added to the international list of persecuted journalists whose release is demanded by the European Federation of Journalists

    - the former deputy prosecutor general of Ukraine said.
    Gyunduz Mamedov added: “Crimes against journalists in the occupied territories have signs of being systematic.”
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 18:14

    The Estonian foreign ministry on Thursday said Russia would close a key border checkpoint to road traffic for two years citing renovation works as the reason behind the move.

    The authorities in Tallinn said they had received an official note from Russia saying the Narva-Ivangorod crossing would close on 1 February, AFP reports.
    The foreign minister, Margus Tsahkna, said:
    Quotes sign: According to the note, the renovation works are planned to last until the end of 2025. We’ll see what really happens.
    From our side, we’ll continue our usual business at the border.
    The crossing – which links Narva, Estonia’s third largest city, and its Russian neighbour Ivangorod – will remain open to pedestrians.
    A former Soviet republic and now a staunch Ukraine supporter, Estonia and Russia share a 333km (207-mile) border with five crossings left open once the Narva checkpoint closes.
    In November 2023, Estonia warned its citizens against “any travel” to Russia, saying Tallinn might temporarily close the border with its eastern neighbour on migrant influx concerns.


    Ukraine hit Russian military unit in Crimea, air force commander says

    Ukraine attacked a Russian military unit near Yevpatoria in Russian-occupied Crimea on Thursday, Ukrainian air force commander Mykola Oleshchuk said.
    On Telegram, he said:
    Quotes sign: Thanks to the air force pilots and everyone who planned the operation for perfect combat work.
    He was referring to a screenshot from local media saying the unit came under attack, Reuters reports.
    Russia’s defence ministry earlier said its forces had foiled the Ukrainian attack.
    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680 Empty Re: Russian invasion of Ukraine: Day 680

    Post by Kitkat Thu 04 Jan 2024, 18:16

    Closing Summary


    It is 6pm in Kyiv. Here is a summary for the main events from today:

    • Russia’s defence ministry on Thursday said its forces had foiled a Ukrainian attack on Russian facilities in Crimea and had destroyed 10 Ukrainian missiles over the peninsula.

    • Ukraine attacked a Russian military unit near Yevpatoria in Russian-occupied Crimea on Thursday, Ukrainian air force commander Mykola Oleshchuk said. On Telegram, he said: “Thanks to the air force pilots and everyone who planned the operation for perfect combat work.”

    • Russian hackers were inside Ukrainian telecoms company Kyivstar’s system from at least May last year in a cyber-attack that should serve as a “big warning” to the west, Ukraine’s cyber spy chief told Reuters. Illia Vitiuk, head of the Security Service of Ukraine’s (SBU) cybersecurity department, disclosed details about the hack in an interview with Reuters.

    • Polish farmers blockaded the Medyka border crossing with Ukraine on Thursday, private broadcaster Polsat News reported, resuming a protest intended to secure government subsidies for corn and prevent tax increases.

    • The Nato chief, Jens Stoltenberg, will convene a meeting between Nato diplomats and officials from Ukraine on 10 January, after a recent wave of heavy Russian airstrikes on the country, the transatlantic defence alliance said on Thursday.

    • A missile strike last week killed 32 people in Kyiv, authorities said Thursday, raising the toll of the deadliest attack on the Ukrainian capital since the war began. The strike took place on 29 December.

    • Russia is planning to buy short-range ballistic missiles from Iran, a step that would enhance Moscow’s ability to target Ukraine’s infrastructure, the Wall Street Journal has reported, citing US officials.

    • One civilian was killed and eight wounded on Thursday in a Russian missile strike on Kropyvnytskyi in central Ukraine, damaging energy company buildings and causing power and water supply cuts, the regional governor said.

    • Vladimir Putin has issued a decree allowing foreign nationals who fight for Russia in Ukraine to obtain Russian citizenship for themselves and their families.

    • Seventeen Ukrainian journalists imprisoned in the occupied territories have been added to the international list of persecuted journalists whose release is demanded by the European Federation of Journalists, the former deputy prosecutor general of Ukraine said.

    • Nuclear inspectors have been denied access to the main halls of reactors one, two and six at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia power station in Ukraine. Rafael Grossi, director general of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency, said inspectors at the plant had for two weeks had no access and were yet to receive 2024 maintenance plans for the plant.

    • Russia and Ukraine have exchanged hundreds of prisoners of war in the biggest single release of captives since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. Ukrainian authorities said 230 Ukrainian prisoners of war returned home in the first exchange in almost five months. Russia’s defence ministry said 248 Russian servicemen were freed under the deal sponsored by the United Arab Emirates.

    • Oleksandr Kubrakov, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister for restoration, said a family returning from abroad had become the first to conclude a property purchase agreement under a compensation scheme for destroyed housing. “We want those Ukrainians who need it to feel confident applying for governmental support toward repairing houses or buying new property. Especially if this will let them come back to Ukraine from abroad as did this first family.” The house was in Bucha, Kubrakov said.

    • The Polish foreign minister has called on allies to deliver long-range missiles to Ukraine to help Kyiv target Russian “launch sites and command centres”.

    • The Nato support and procurement agency said it would support a group of countries with a contract for up to 1,000 Patriot guidance enhanced missiles.

    • Polish farmers would resume their blockade at a border crossing with Ukraine, Reuters reported. “I will try to convince carriers not to use blockades as a method of defending their interests. We will do everything to effectively protect their interests,” said the Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk.

    • Norway will send two F-16 fighter jets to Denmark to contribute to the training of Ukrainian pilots, the Norwegian defence minister has said.

      Current date/time is Sat 27 Apr 2024, 09:40