Russia-Ukraine war live: Wagner ‘banned from Putin’s war’ as Prigozhin snubs Kremlin contracts

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Mutinous Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin was told his mercenaries would no longer be fighting in Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine after he snubbed Russian defence ministry contracts for his fighters, a senior Moscow politician has said.

Colonel-General Andrei Kartapolov, chair of the Russian Duma’s defence committee, claimed that, as a result of this, Mr Prigozhin then committed treason with his shortlived mutiny last weekend, driven by his “exorbitant ambitions” and greed.

While Mr Prigozhin is now in Belarus after an 11th-hour deal brokered by president Alexander Lukashenko, Moscow is still reeling from his armed rebellion – as rumours swirl that former Ukraine war commander Sergei Surovikin has been arrested for having advance knowledge of the mutiny.

Doing little to douse the flames of speculation, the Kremlin admitted on Thursday that it did not know Mr Surovikin’s whereabouts, and failed to say that the so-called “General Armageddon” retained the trust of Mr Putin, instead diverting questions about him to a tight-lipped defence ministry.

Key Points

  • Yevgeny Prigozhin ‘was told Wagner would no longer be fighting in Ukraine'

  • Russian general Sergei Surovikin arrested after Wagner rebellion - report

  • Death toll rises to 12 in Ukraine's Kramatorsk after Russian strike

  • Vladimir Putin ‘fears martyring Prigozhin and will seek to shatter his support’

  • ‘Countdown has begun’ for end of Putin, claims Volodymyr Zelensky aide

  • Prigozhin to be investigated after being paid $2bn in a year, says Putin

Satellite images of Belarus military base chime with reports of new facilities for Wagner

14:30 , Andy Gregory

Satellite images of a military base southeast of the Belarus capital Minsk appear to show new facilities have been set up in recent days – suggesting that a base for Wagner is being swiftly constructed.

Russian outlets have reported that Wagner could set up a new base at a vacant military facility near the town of Asipovichi, about 50 miles from Minsk.

Images captured by the European Space Agency’s Sentinel 2 satellites on Tuesday show rows of long structures in the nearby village of Tsel, in a field which had appeared empty just a fortnight prior.

A satellite image appears to show new facilities set up recently, at a military base in Tse (European Union/Copernicus Sentinel-2/Handout via REUTERS)
A satellite image appears to show new facilities set up recently, at a military base in Tse (European Union/Copernicus Sentinel-2/Handout via REUTERS)
 (via REUTERS)
(via REUTERS)

EU security assurances would be in addition to military support, says Dutch PM

14:09 , Andy Gregory

The European Union still needs to decide the shape and form of the security assurances it wishes to give Ukraine, Dutch premier Mark Rutte has said, as he arrived at today’s meeting in Brussels.

“This European track would be additional [to military support],” Mr Rutte said.

“We will have to discuss how far it goes, and if it would be lethal or non-lethal support. And we have to take into account that several EU countries are not a member of Nato.”

Neutral EU states object to security assurances for Ukraine, says Austrian chancellor

13:48 , Andy Gregory

EU countries with a neutral foreign policy object to giving Ukraine outright security assurances, Austrian chancellor Karl Nehammer has said, ahead of a meeting with EU leaders in Brussels.

“For us as neutral states it is clear we can’t give security guarantees like that. Austria, Ireland, Malta and Cyprus have made it clear they have objections,” Mr Nehammer told reporters.

“The role of the neutral states needs to be explicitly taken into account. We will certainly discuss this and we will find formulations that will be acceptable for us as well.”

BRICS summit to go ahead in South Africa despite Putin arrest warrant

13:29 , Andy Gregory

South Africa has announced it will host the BRICS bloc summit in August as planned, amid speculation that it may move to China so that Vladimir Putin can attend in a nation not obliged to arrest him on war crimes accusations.

South Africa has a duty as a signatory to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to arrest Mr Putin if he attends the talks between the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India and China, due to an arrest warrant over the deportation of children from Ukraine – which he denies.

Just 12 days after president Cyril Ramaphosa met with Mr Putin in Moscow, South Africa’s international relations department has now confirmed the summit will go ahead in South Africa from 22 to 24 August.

A spokesperson for the international relations department declined to comment to Reuters on whether or not Mr Putin will attend, with the department’s minister revealing on Tuesday that the Russian president had not yet replied to an invitation sent prior to the ICC’s charges in March.

Chinese president Xi Jinping, India’s prime minister Narendra Modi and Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva are all said to be planning to attend.

British satirical newspaper takes aim at Putin-Prigozhin tensions

13:11 , Andy Gregory

Seizing the chance for a rare moment of levity in coverage of Ukraine, British fortnightly Private Eye has taken aim at the aborted coup by “Putin’s chef”, Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin.

Satirising an oft-used picture of Mr Prigozhin serving Mr Putin dinner, the magazine shows the Wagner chief serving up “coup of the day”, as the president complains of terrible “feud”.

Russia claims generals killed in Kramatorsk strike which ‘left four children dead'

12:55 , Andy Gregory

Russia claims to have killed two Ukrainian generals and 50 military officers in the attack on a Kramatorsk restaurant, which Kyiv authorities said had killed 12 people, including four children, two of them 14-year-old twin sisters.

Officials initially blamed the strike on an S-300 missile, a surface-to-air weapon that Russia’s forces have repurposed for loosely targeted strikes on cities, but the National Police later said Iskander short-range ballistic missiles were used – raising the prospect of a war crime under the principle of proportionality.

Yulia and Anna Aksenchenko, who were 14 years old, are said to have been among those killed in the Russian strike (Kramatorsk City Council)
Yulia and Anna Aksenchenko, who were 14 years old, are said to have been among those killed in the Russian strike (Kramatorsk City Council)

Kramatorsk is a front-line city which houses the Ukrainian army's regional headquarters. The pizza restaurant was frequented by journalists, aid workers and soldiers, as well as locals.

At least 61 people were wounded in the attack, which also damaged 18 multi-story buildings, 65 houses, five schools, two kindergartens, a shopping center, an administrative building and a recreational building, according to the regional governor, Pavlo Kyrylenko.

Despite these reports, Russia’s defence ministry sought to claim on Thursday that two Ukrainian generals and up to 50 Ukrainian military officers had been killed in the strike, insisting that a temporary Ukrainian army command post had been hit in Kramatorsk.

Top EU diplomat suggests long-term Ukraine Defence Fund

12:29 , Andy Gregory

The European Union needs to consider turning the European Peace Facility that has been used to fund weapons for Kyiv into a more permanent tool to arm the country in the long term, the EU’s foreign policy chief has suggested.

“We talk about security commitments. From my side, it means military support for Ukraine has to have a long haul ... during the war and after the war,” Josep Borrell told reporters as he arrived for an EU summit in Brussels.

“So the European Peace Facility for Ukraine maybe has to become a Ukraine Defence Fund – the training has to continue, the modernisation of the army has to continue.”

Prigozhin told Wagner will no longer fight in Ukraine, Russian MP claims

12:11 , Andy Gregory

Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin has been told that he will be deprived of financing if his mercenaries do not sign contracts with the defence ministry, state news agencies have cited a senior parliamentarian as saying.

Colonel-General Andrei Kartapolov, an influential politician who chairs the lower house of parliament's defence committee, said Mr Prigozhin had refused to sign the contracts and was subsequently told that his mercenaries would no longer fight in Ukraine, Tass reported.

Ukraine conducting nuclear disaster drills near Zaporizhzhia plant, says regional governor

11:54 , Andy Gregory

Ukraine has started nuclear disaster response drills in the vicinity of the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station, regional officials said, where Kyiv has accused Moscow of planning a “terrorist” attack – which the Kremlin denies.

Yuriy Malashko, the governor of the Zaporizhzhia region which includes the plant, which is Europe’s largest, said the drills had begun in the city of Zaporizhzhia and the district around it.

Similar exercises started in the neighbouring Kherson region, Kherson region governor Oleksander Prokudin said.

“The purpose of the event is to coordinate the actions of all services in case of a real threat of an emergency situation at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant,” he said Telegram, urging residents to remain calm.

Mr Prokudin said various officials and civil defence forces were working jointly on scenarios that might follow a nuclear disaster, and on how to inform and evacuate the population. Authorities were testing alert systems.

Kremlin says it does not know whereabouts of ‘General Armageddon'

11:25 , Andy Gregory

The Kremlin has declined to answer questions about General Sergei Surovikin, who is claimed in reports to have been arrested for having knowledge of Wagner Group boss Yevgeny Prigozhin’s weekend rebellion.

The former commander in Ukraine, nicknamed General Armageddon for his wanton tactics during the Syrian war, has been absent from view since Saturday, when he appeared in a video appealing to Mr Prigozhin to halt his mutiny.

He had looked exhausted in that video and it was unclear if he was speaking under duress. There have since been unconfirmed reports that he is being questioned by the security services.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov referred questions about Surovikin to the defence ministry, which has so far not made any statement about him.

Asked if Mr Surovikin still had Vladimir Putin’s trust, Mr Peskov said that, as commander-in-chief of Russia’s armed forces, Mr Putin worked with the defence minister and the chief of the general staff.

Mr Peskov said he did not have information about Mr Prigozhin’s whereabouts at the present time.

Strong support for Putin remains among Russians, Kremlin insists

11:06 , Andy Gregory

The Kremlin has insisted that there is continued strong support among Russians for its war in Ukraine and for Vladimir Putin.

Asked by reporters about a survey suggesting there was an equal number of people who supported negotiations to end the 16-month military operation in Ukraine and those who favoured continuing the conflict, spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said: “The data we have show something quite different - dominant support for the special military operation and for the president.”

“The main thing for Russians is achieving the goals before us which were formulated by the president,” he added.

Full report: Russia ‘arrests General Armageddon’ over knowledge of Wagner mutiny

10:35 , Andy Gregory

A top Russian general has reportedly been arrested for having knowledge of Wagner Group boss Yevgeny Prigozhin’s weekend rebellion.

General Sergei Surovikin, nicknamed “General Armageddon” by the Russian press for his aggressive tactics in the Syrian conflict, has been missing since Saturday when Wagner’s troops launched an armed revolt.

The 56-year-old second-in-command of the Russian armed forces is said to be under interrogation. “Apparently, he [Surovikin] chose Prigozhin’s side during the uprising” and they have gotten ahold of him,” the Moscow Times quoted a source as saying.

My colleague Alisha Rahaman Sarkar has the full report:

Russia ‘arrests General Armageddon’ over knowledge of Wagner mutiny

Aircraft shot down by Wagner ‘played key role in orchestrating’ Russian troops in Ukraine, says UK

10:24 , Andy Gregory

A “command and control” aircraft reportedly shot down by Wagner during its aborted mutiny “played a key role in orchestrating Russian forces” in Ukraine and will “undermine” Moscow’s ability to coordinate its troops, Britain’s Ministry of Defence has claimed.

In its latest update, the ministry said: “On 24 June, air defence forces of the Wagner private military company reportedly shot down Russian military helicopters and an Ilyushin Il-22M airborne command post aircraft.

“The Il-22M is part of a relatively small fleet of up to 12 aircraft, heavily utilised for both airborne command and control, and radio relay tasks. These special mission aircraft have played a key role in orchestrating Russian forces in their war against Ukraine.

“As high value assets they have operated within the safety of Russian airspace, far beyond the range of Ukrainian air defence systems.

“The loss of this aircraft is likely to have a negative impact on Russian air and land operations. In the short term the psychological shock of losing a large number of aircrew in this manner will almost certainly damage morale within the Russian Aerospace Force.

“In the longer term, there is a possibility that current tasking levels may have to be reduced to safely manage the remaining fleet. This will likely undermine Russia's ability to command and coordinate its forces, particularly during periods of high tempo operations.”

Kyiv advancing ‘slowly but surely’ on frontlines as Russia ‘bringing in best reserves'

10:03 , Andy Gregory

Kyiv’s forces are advancing “slowly but surely” on the front lines in Ukraine’s east and southeast – and around Bakhmut – senior military officials have said.

Ukrainian commander-in-chief General Valery Zaluzhniy told top US general Mark Milley that his forces had “succeeded in seizing the strategic initiative”, and told him about weapons and demining equipment required by Kyiv’s forces.

“Ukraine’s defence forces are proceeding with their offensive action and we have made advances. The enemy is offering strong resistance, while sustaining considerable losses,” Zaluzhniy wrote on Telegram.

Defence minister Oleksiy Reznikov told the Financial Times that the liberation of a group of villages was “not the main event” in the offensive.

His deputy Hanna Maliar noted advances towards the occupied cities of Berdiansk and Mariupol, telling a national broadcaster: “Every day, there is an advance. Yes, the advances are slow, but they are sure.”

She cited the recapture this week of the village of Rivnopol in the southeast, saying “mopping up operations were complete” and that the army was now well dug in – with the Russian military now diverting forces to both Bakhmut and the southern front.

“They are redirected their paratroops and assault brigades to both the south and the east,” she said. “They are bringing in their best reserves now.”

A Ukrainian service member fire a machine gun at a training ground near a frontline in Donetsk (REUTERS)
A Ukrainian service member fire a machine gun at a training ground near a frontline in Donetsk (REUTERS)

Watch: Footage shows of scale destruction after Russian strike on Kramatorsk restaurant

09:45 , Andy Gregory

Kramatorsk death toll rises to 12

09:22 , Andy Gregory

Rescuers have pulled another body from the ruins of a restaurant in Kramatorsk, taking to 12 the death toll following a Russian missile strike, Ukraine’s emergency services said.

Three children were among the dead, while 60 more people were wounded, the authorities said.

 (National Police of Ukraine via AP)
(National Police of Ukraine via AP)

EU shouldn’t ‘lower the bar’ to accommodate Ukraine, says Danish finance minister

08:54 , Andy Gregory

Denmark supports EU membership for Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia and the western Balkans but “geopolitical circumstances” did not justify skating over governance reforms, finance minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen has said.

The EU risks “importing instability” if it relaxes its standards on democracy and corruption to hasten the accession of Ukraine and other candidate countries, Mr Rasmussen told the Financial Times.

Asked about Ukraine’s membership in the EU, Mr Rasmussen said that EU shouldn’t “lower the bar” but instead help Ukraine with investments and assistance to help it align with the bloc’s standards, the FT reported.

Although Ukraine met two of seven conditions to launch the EU membership process, an EU official familiar with the bloc’s recommendations to Ukraine told Reuters that some key judicial reforms were needed.

In 2019, the European Commission proposed changes to the system for letting new countries into the EU to give existing members more say, after countries including France and Denmark objected to the expansion of the EU to include six countries in the Balkans.

Mr Rasmussen said Denmark had reversed its position and was even open to internal EU reform, including more majority voting, to accommodate new members.

Papal envoy to meet Patriarch Kirill in Moscow, say reports

08:27 , Andy Gregory

Papal envoy Cardinal Matteo Zuppi and Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, will meet in Moscow on Thursday, the state-backed RIA news agency reported.

It comes a day after Mr Zuppi discussed humanitarian issues with Vladimir Putin’s foreign policy adviser, according to the Kremlin.

EU leaders to debate Russia mutiny today

08:00 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

EU leaders will debate today the repercussions of the aborted mutiny in Russia as they pledge further support for Ukraine in its war against Moscow’s invasion.

At a summit in Brussels, the leaders will also talk with Nato boss Jens Stoltenberg and discuss what role the EU could play in Western commitments to bolster Ukraine’s security.

Estonian prime minister Kaja Kallas said the leaders were certain to discuss Saturday’s dramatic abandoned mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group, even though it is not on the agenda of the summit or mentioned in drafts of its written conclusions.

“It will definitely come up,” she told reporters in Brussels on the eve of the two-day summit.

The West should not be swayed and continue to support Ukraine and bolster its own defences, Ms Kallas said.

Charles Michel, the president of the European Council of EU leaders, struck a similar note.“

Ever more in these circumstances, we will reassert our commitment to support Ukraine for as long as it takes, including through sustainable financial and military assistance,” he wrote in a letter inviting leaders to the summit.

Footage shows aftermath of Russian strike on Kramatorsk restaurant

07:30 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Residents in Ukraine’s eastern city of Kramatorsk are dealing with the aftermath of a Russian missile attack on a crowded pizza restaurant.

Footage shows the destruction on the streets of the city, which are covered in debris following the deadly attack on Tuesday evening.

The strike killed at least nine people, including three children, authorities said Wednesday, as rescue workers continued searching in the destroyed building’s rubble.

Another 56 people were injured, the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs said.

Footage shows scale of destruction after Russian strike on Kramatorsk restaurant

US sanctions gold companies suspected of supporting Wagner mercenaries

07:00 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

The US moved on Tuesday to punish companies accused of doing business with the infamous Russian mercenary army known as the Wagner Group, following the group’s insurrection attempt within Russia’s borders.

The move is not thought to be specifically related to the coup, however, instead being a response to Wagner’s participation in some of the bloodiest fighting taking place within Ukraine, where Russian forces launched a full-scale invasion last year.

A statement from the Treasury Department faulted companies in Africa and the Middle East for participating in a gold-selling scheme in violation of US sanctions to fund the Wagner Group’s ongoing activities. One executive at Wagner, Andrey Nikolayevich Ivanov, was also slapped with individual sanctions on his financial dealings.

John Bowden has more.

Switzerland expands list of sanctions on Russia

06:30 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Switzerland is expanding its sanctions against Russia in line with the EU’s 11th package of sanctions.

“Following today’s amendments, Switzerland’s sanctions list in connection with Russia’s military aggression against Ukraine corresponds to that of the EU,” the Swiss government said in a statement.

The EU further tightened existing sanctions against Russia and introduced new measures on 23 June, applying financial and travel restrictions on 71 individuals and 33 legal entities.

Comment: Putin will cling on to power until people inside the Kremlin are up for the fight

06:00 , Joe Middleton

Prigozhin’s march on Moscow will have frightened Putin – but the Russian leader survived because no other senior figures joined the call for change, writes historian Peter Frankopan

What the coup that never was tells us about Putin’s grip on power | Peter Frankopan

Death toll rises to 12 in Ukraine's Kramatorsk after Russian strike

05:59 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Rescuers have pulled another body from the ruins of a restaurant in eastern Ukraine’s city of Kramatorsk, taking to 12 the death toll following a Russian missile strike, Ukraine’s emergency services said today.

Three children were among the dead, while 60 more people were wounded, the authorities said.

Russia to be blocked from accessing UK legal advice

05:30 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

The UK in its fresh bout of sanctions against Russia has banned Kremlin-linked individuals and businesses from accessing British legal expertise.

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said a new law would be introduced today preventing UK lawyers from advising Russian companies on certain business deals in a move designed to thwart Moscow’s war machine in Ukraine.

Officials said the sanction could impact Russia’s ability to obtain legal advice on everything from trade deals between global corporations to international money lending.

Russia is highly dependent on western countries for legal expertise, according to the MoJ, with the UK previously exporting £56m in legal services to Russian businesses every year.

More here.

Russia to be blocked from accessing UK legal advice in latest sanction

Russian general Sergei Surovikin arrested after Wagner rebellion - report

05:29 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Russian General Sergei Surovikin has been arrested following the Wager Group’s rebellion, the Moscow Times reported, citing defence ministry sources.

The defence ministry is yet to officially comment on the alleged arrest of the general, who has not been seen in public since last Saturday, when Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin launched an armed rebellion against Vladimir Putin.

“The situation with him was not ‘OK’. For the authorities. I can’t say anything more,” one of the sources told the outlet.

A second source said the arrest was carried out “in the context of Prigozhin”.

“Apparently, he [Surovikin] chose Prigozhin’s side during the uprising” and they have gotten ahold of him, the source added.

Putin’s two-faced tirades over the Wagner mutiny could still be his undoing

05:00 , Joe Middleton

Claiming treachery one minute, then praising Wagner’s role in Ukraine the next, may have allowed the Russian leader to steer out of an immediate storm, writes Mary Dejevsky. But such mixed messages expose cracks in his authority that will be hard to repair

Opinion: Putin’s two-faced tirades over the Wagner mutiny could still be his undoing

Twin sisters among at least 11 dead in Russian missile strike

04:30 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Fourteen-year-old twin sisters were among at least 11 people killed in a Russian missile strike on a popular pizza restaurant in eastern Ukraine.

Another girl, aged 17, was among the bodies pulled from the rubble following the attack on the eastern city of Kramatorsk on Tuesday, which turned the restaurant into pile of twisted beams.

Around 60 people were wounded, with an eight-month-old baby suffering head wounds.

The strike, along with others across Ukraine into yesterday, show that the Kremlin is not easing up on its aerial bombardment of the country, despite the armed mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group that shook Russia over the weekend.

Sisters Anna and Yulia Aksenchenko would have turned 15 in September, Kramatorsk city council’s education department said in a Facebook post under a picture of the two girls smiling for the camera.

“Russian missiles stopped the beating of the hearts of two angels,” it said in a Telegram post. “We share the grief of your family and together with you we bow our heads in deep sorrow.”

Chris Stevenson reports.

Twin sisters, aged 14, among at least 11 dead in Russian missile strike in Ukraine

Russian ‘spy’ to be charged over Kramatorsk strike

04:05 , Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

An alleged Russian agent involved in the attack on the city of Kramatorsk will be charged with treason, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said.

Three teenagers were among the 11 people killed in a missile strike on a popular restaurant. Those helping Russia destroy lives deserve the “maximum penalty”, the president said.

Ukrainian authorities said the man allegedly sent video footage of the restaurant to the Russian military hours before it was destroyed.

According to reports, at least 60 others, including Colombian nationals and a leading Ukrainian writer, suffered injuries in the blast.

The attack also damaged 18 multistory buildings, 65 houses, five schools, two kindergartens, a shopping centre, an administrative building and a recreational building, regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said.

UN report finds Russia tortured, executed civilians in Ukraine; Kyiv also abused detainees

04:00 , Joe Middleton

Russian forces carried out widespread and systematic torture of civilians who were detained in connection with its attack on Ukraine, summarily executing dozens of them, the United Nations human rights office said Tuesday.

The global body interviewed hundreds of victims and witnesses for a report detailing more than 900 cases of civilians, including children and elderly people, being arbitrarily detained in the conflict, most of them by Russia.

The vast majority of those interviewed said they were tortured and in some cases subjected to sexual violence during detention by Russian forces, the head of the U.N. human rights office in Ukraine said.

UN report finds Russia tortured, executed civilians in Ukraine; Kyiv also abused detainees

Wagner chief walks free after armed revolt. Other Russians defying the Kremlin aren’t so lucky

03:00 , Joe Middleton

Mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin led an armed rebellion against the Russian military — and walked free. Others who merely voiced criticism against the Kremlin weren’t so lucky.

On Tuesday, Russia’s main domestic security agency, the FSB, said it had dropped the criminal investigation into last week’s revolt, with no charges against Prigozhin or any of the other participants, even though about a dozen Russian troops were killed in clashes.

The Kremlin had promised not to prosecute Prigozhin after reaching an agreement with him that he would halt the uprising and retreat to neighboring Belarus. That came even though President Vladimir Putin vowed to punish those behind the rebellion.

Wagner chief walks free after armed revolt. Other Russians defying the Kremlin aren’t so lucky

NATO warns not to underestimate Russian forces, and tells Moscow it has increased preparedness

02:00 , Joe Middleton

NATO’s chief said Tuesday that the power of Russia’s military shouldn’t be underestimated following the weekend mutiny against it by Wagner Group mercenaries, and said the alliance has increased its readiness to confront Russia in recent days.

Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance may decide to further boost its strength and readiness to face Russia and its ally Belarus when NATO leaders meet in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius on July 11-12.

”So, no misunderstanding and no room for misunderstanding in Moscow or Minsk about our ability to defend our allies against any potential threat,” Stoltenberg said.

NATO warns not to underestimate Russian forces, and tells Moscow it has increased preparedness

US sanctions gold companies suspected of supporting Wagner mercenaries in Russia

01:00 , Joe Middleton

The United States moved on Tuesday to punish companies accused of doing business with the infamous Russian mercenary army known as the Wagner Group, following the group’s insurrection attempt within Russia’s borders.

The move is not thought to be specifically related to the coup, however, instead being a response to Wagner’s participation in some of the bloodiest fighting taking place within Ukraine, where Russian forces launched a full-scale invasion last year.

A statement from the Treasury Department faulted companies in Africa and the Middle East for participating in a gold-selling scheme in violation of US sanctions to fund the Wagner Group’s ongoing activities. One executive at Wagner, Andrey Nikolayevich Ivanov, was also slapped with individual sanctions on his financial dealings.

US sanctions gold companies suspected of supporting Wagner mercenaries in Russia

Mapped: Has Ukraine made advances against Russia?

Wednesday 28 June 2023 23:59 , Joe Middleton

With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine raging for 16 months, Ukraine is now pushing back with its long-awaited counteroffensive that has already recorded a number of gains.

On Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky praised Ukrainian troops for advancing “in all sectors”, having spent the day presenting awards to front-line soldiers in the east and south.

“Today in all sectors, our soldiers made advances. It is a happy day,” Mr Zelensky said in his nightly video address, which was delivered from a train after visiting two frontline areas.

Mapped: Has Ukraine made advances against Russia?

Joe Biden says Putin is ‘clearly losing the war in Iraq’

Wednesday 28 June 2023 22:45 , Joe Middleton

Joe Biden told reporters that Vladimir Putin is “clearly losing the war in Iraq” in his latest blunder.

The US president on the South Lawn of the White House when he was asked how damaged Mr Putin was in the aftermath of Wagner Group’s aborted uprising.

“He’s clearly losing the war in Iraq. He’s losing the war at home and has become a bit of a pariah around the world,’ Mr Biden said, clearly referencing the war in Ukraine.

He was heading to Chicago to deliver an address on the economy when he made the gaffe.

Joe Biden says Putin is ‘clearly losing the war in Iraq’

Footage shows of scale destruction after Russian strike on Kramatorsk restaurant

Wednesday 28 June 2023 21:45 , Joe Middleton

Twin sisters, aged 14, among at least 11 dead in Russian missile strike on pizza restaurant in Ukraine

Wednesday 28 June 2023 20:24 , Joe Middleton

Fourteen-year-old twin sisters were among at least 11 people killed in a Russian missile strike on a popular pizza restaurant in eastern Ukraine.

Another girl, aged 17, was among the bodies pulled from the rubble following the attack on the eastern city of Kramatorsk on Tuesday, which turned the restaurant into pile of twisted beams. Around 60 people were wounded, with an eight-month old baby suffering head wounds.

The strike, along with others across Ukraine into early on Wednesday, show that the Kremlin is not easing up on its aerial bombardment of the country, despite the armed mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group that shook Russia over the weekend.

Chris Stevenson reports.

Failed mutiny has weakened Putin, says German chancellor Scholz

Wednesday 28 June 2023 19:21 , Joe Middleton

German chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Wednesday the failed mutiny in Russia last weekend had weakened Vladimir Putin but it was unclear if it would make the Kremlin any more likely to withdraw its troops from Ukraine to allow for peace talks.

“I do believe he is weakened as this shows that the autocratic power structures have cracks in them and he is not as firmly in the saddle as he always asserts,” Scholz said in an hour-long interview with German broadcaster ARD.

Asked about the impact of the failed mutiny on the Ukraine war, the German chancellor said the pre-condition for successful peace talks was Russia accepting it needed to withdraw its troops from the country.

“Whether this has become easier or harder through these events is not really clear,” he said in the interview recorded on Wednesday afternoon for airing later in the evening.

Scholz said he did not want to participate in speculation about how long Putin would likely remain in office, saying the West’s aim in supporting Ukraine was to help it defend itself, not to bring about regime change.

Reuters

Mapped: Has Ukraine made advances against Russia?

Wednesday 28 June 2023 18:51 , Joe Middleton

With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine raging for 16 months, Ukraine is now pushing back with its long-awaited counteroffensive that has already recorded a number of gains.

On Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky praised Ukrainian troops for advancing “in all sectors”, having spent the day presenting awards to front-line soldiers in the east and south.

“Today in all sectors, our soldiers made advances. It is a happy day,” Mr Zelensky said in his nightly video address, which was delivered from a train after visiting two frontline areas.

Mapped: Has Ukraine made advances against Russia?

Comment: Putin’s two-faced tirades over the Wagner mutiny could still be his undoing

Wednesday 28 June 2023 18:07 , Joe Middleton

Claiming treachery one minute, then praising Wagner’s role in Ukraine the next, may have allowed the Russian leader to steer out of an immediate storm, writes Mary Dejevsky. But such mixed messages expose cracks in his authority that will be hard to repair.

Opinion: Putin’s two-faced tirades over the Wagner mutiny could still be his undoing

Footage shows scale destruction after Russian strike on Kramatorsk restaurant

Wednesday 28 June 2023 17:15 , Joe Middleton

Putin has become ‘a pariah’ around the world, says Biden

Wednesday 28 June 2023 16:31 , Joe Middleton

US president Joe Biden said Wednesday that Vladimir Putin has become “a pariah” around the world but it is hard to say if he has been weakened by recent events involving the head of the militant Wagner Group.

Biden, speaking to reporters at the White House prior to departing on a trip to Chicago, made a gaffe when he told reporters that Putin was “clearly losing the war in Iraq”.

“He’s losing the war at home and has become a bit of a pariah around the world,” Mr Biden said, clearly referencing the war in Ukraine.

Joe Biden says Putin is ‘clearly losing the war in Iraq’

Latest pictures from the scene of a Russian strike on the city of Kramatorsk that killed 10 people

Wednesday 28 June 2023 16:01 , Joe Middleton

 (AP)
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Ukraine wants signal it can join NATO after war is over, says Zelensky

Wednesday 28 June 2023 15:33 , Joe Middleton

Volodymyr Zelensky said today that Ukraine understood it could not join NATO while the war with Russia was ongoing, but that Kyiv wanted to receive a signal that it can join the military alliance after the war ends.

“We understand that we cannot be a member of NATO during the war, but we need to be sure that after the war we will be,” Zelensky told a press conference with the visiting Polish and Lithuanian presidents.

“That is the signal we want to get - that after the war Ukraine will be a member of NATO”.

Reiterating Kyiv’s stance before a NATO summit in Lithuania next month, he said Ukraine also wanted security guarantees for the period until it can join the alliance.

“We would want a third signal at the NATO summit that Ukraine will get security guarantees - not instead of NATO but for the time until we are in the alliance,” he said.

 (AFP via Getty Images)
(AFP via Getty Images)

Lukashenko says he persuaded Putin not to ‘wipe out' Wagner mercenary chief Prigozhin

Wednesday 28 June 2023 15:06 , Joe Middleton

Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko said he persuaded Vladimir Putin not to “wipe out” Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, in response to what the Kremlin cast as a mutiny.

Putin initially vowed to crush the mutiny, comparing it to the wartime turmoil that ushered in the revolution of 1917 and then a civil war, but hours later a deal was clinched to allow Prigozhin and some of his fighters to go to Belarus. Prigozhin flew to Belarus from Russia on Tuesday.

While describing his Saturday conversation with Putin, Lukashenko used the Russian criminal slang phrase for killing someone, equivalent to the English phrase to “wipe out”.

“I also understood: a brutal decision had been made (and it was the undertone of Putin‘s address) to wipe out” the mutineers, Lukashenko told a meeting of his army officials and journalists on Tuesday, according to Belarusian state media.

“I suggested to Putin not to rush. ‘Come on,’ I said, ‘Let’s talk with Prigozhin, with his commanders.’ To which he told me: ‘Listen, Sasha, it’s useless. He doesn’t even pick up the phone, he doesn’t want to talk to anyone’.”

Switzerland expands sanctions against Russia

Wednesday 28 June 2023 14:34 , Andy Gregory

Switzerland has expanded financial and travel sanctions against Russian entities and persons in step with the most recent sanctions imposed by the European Union.

Among those targeted are people, companies and organisations that support the illegal deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia, a statement said.

They also include members of the Russian armed forces, leading representatives of state-controlled Russian media and members of the Wagner mercenary group. The sanctions include asset freezes and a ban to travel to and transit through Switzerland.

However, the Swiss Federal Council also said it had rejected a request by Swiss defence firm Ruag for the trade of 96 Leopard 1 A5 main battle tanks for use in Ukraine, with the cabinet warning that such a sale would be contrary to the war material act and would entail an adjustment of Switzerland's neutrality policy.

Full report: Kramatorsk pizza restaurant missile strike kills 10 including twin sisters aged 14

Wednesday 28 June 2023 14:11 , Andy Gregory

My colleague Chris Stevenson has this extensive report on the strike on a restaurant in Kramatorsk:

Twins, aged 14, among 10 dead in missile strike on Ukraine restaurant

What happened in the Kramatorsk attack?

Wednesday 28 June 2023 13:53 , Chris Stevenson

The Pizza RIA restaurant was popular with both locals, as well as aid workers and journalists – and was said to be crowded when it was hit on Tuesday evening.

“I ran here after the explosion because I rented a cafe here.... Everything has been blown out there,” said Valentyna, a 64-year-old woman who declined to give her surname. “None of the glass, windows or doors are left. All I see is destruction, fear and horror. This is the 21st century,” she told Reuters.

Police said at least 61 people were injured in the strike, which turned the restaurant into a pile of twisted beams. Emergency services posted pictures online of rescue teams sifting through the site with cranes and other equipment.

The Donetsk regional governor – the area where Kramatorsk is located – Pavlo Kyrylenko told national television that people were visible under the rubble. Their condition was unknown, he said, but “we are experienced in removing rubble”.

Video footage on military Telegram channels showed one man, his head bleeding, receiving first aid on the pavement.

Eight people had been rescued alive from the rubble and at least three more were believed to be trapped, Md Bakhal, the spokeswoman for the Donetsk region emergency services said.

The attack also damaged 18 multi-story buildings, 65 houses, five schools, two kindergartens, a shopping center, an administrative building and a recreational building, the regional governor, Mr Kyrylenko, said.

Zelensky says Russian ‘bandit’ leaders should not escape justice

Wednesday 28 June 2023 13:34 , Andy Gregory

Volodymyr Zelensky has described Russia’s political and military leaders as bandits, as he ruled out any peace plan that would turn the war on Ukraine into a “frozen” conflict.

The Ukrainian president made his remarks in a speech to parliament on Ukraine’s Constitution Day, and warned that Russia’s leaders must not escape justice for waging war on his country, which he declared was “on the way to victory”.

“The political and military leadership of the Russian Federation should not escape justice due to the fact that they supposedly have immunity, like state leaders,” Mr Zelensky said.

“They are not the leaders of the state – they are bandits who seized control of the state institutions of Russia ... and began to terrorise the whole world.”

Kramatorsk strike now blamed on supersonic missiles

Wednesday 28 June 2023 13:21 , Andy Gregory

While Urkainian officials initially blamed the strike in Kramatorsk on an S-300 missile, a surface-to-air weapon that Russia’s forces have repurposed for loosely targeted strikes on cities, the National Police later said Iskander short-range ballistic missiles were used.

Zelensky rules out any ‘frozen’ conflict peace proposals

Wednesday 28 June 2023 13:04 , Andy Gregory

Volodymyr Zelensky has said he will not accept any peace proposal that turns Russia’s war on Ukraine into a frozen conflict.

The president’s remarks, made in a speech to parliament on Ukraine’s Constitution Day, signalled that he remains opposed to any peace plan that would freeze any territorial gains made by Russia.

“Ukraine will not agree to any of the variants for a frozen conflict,” he said.

Mr Zelensky has drawn up a 10-point peace “formula” that includes restoring Ukraine’s territorial integrity, the withdrawal of Russian troops and the restoration of Ukraine’s state borders.

Twin sisters among 10 killed in Kramatorsk restaurant strike

Wednesday 28 June 2023 12:48 , Andy Gregory

Here are more details on the twin sisters reported to have been killed in the Kramatorsk restaurant strike.

Yulia and Anna Aksenchenko were due to celebrate their 15th birthdays in September, according to Kramatorsk City Council.

A 17-year-old and a boy of an unknown age are also reported to be among the 10 people officials say were killed in the Russian strikes.

Kremlin asked if ‘General Armaggedon’ knew of Prigozhin’s mutiny in advance

Wednesday 28 June 2023 12:44 , Andy Gregory

The Kremlin has dismissed “gossip” and “speculation” around the shortlived mutiny last weekend.

Asked on Wednesday about a New York Times report suggesting top Russian general Sergei Surovikin had known in advance about Yevgeny Prigozhin’s armed rebellion, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said there would be “a lot of speculation” in the aftermath of the events.

“There will now be a lot of speculation, gossip and so on around these events. I think this is one such example,” said Mr Peskov.

Mr Surovikin, who has not been seen in public since Saturday when he made an appeal for the mutiny to be called off, has often been praised by Mr Prigozhin , and the New York Times cited US officials who were “trying to learn if ... the former top Russian commander in Ukraine helped plan Mr Prigozhin’s actions last weekend”.

Ukraine arrest man accused of helping Russia with Kramatorsk restaurant strike

Wednesday 28 June 2023 12:34 , Andy Gregory

Ukrainian authorities have arrested a man they accused of helping Russia direct the missile strikes which killed at least 10 people, including four children, at a popular pizza restaurant in Kramatorsk.

The Tuesday evening attack on Kramatorsk wounded another 61 people, Ukraine’s National Police said, with two sisters, both aged 14, and a 17-year-old said by officials to be among the dead, as rescuers continue to search the rubble.

The attack also damaged 18 multi-story buildings, 65 houses, five schools, two kindergartens, a shopping center, an administrative building and a recreational building, according to regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko.

Kramatorsk is a frontline city which houses the Ukrainian army’s regional headquarters. The pizza restaurant was frequented by journalists, aid workers and soldiers, as well as locals.

The Security Service of Ukraine said it had detained a man whom it suspects directed the strike on the restaurant, who is an employee of the local gas transportation company. He filmed the restaurant for the Russians and informed them about its popularity, the service claimed, providing no evidence.

Putin ‘trying to shatter populist appeal’ of potential ‘martyr’ Prigozhin

Wednesday 28 June 2023 12:04 , Andy Gregory

Vladimir Putin has likely decided that he is unable right now to directly eliminate [Yevgeny] Prigozhin without making him a martyr and has instead decided to “break” his popular support by branding him “corrupt” and “a liar”, a Western think-tank has suggested.

For the first time, the Russian president has now claimed that the Kremlin “fully funds” and “fully supplies” the Wagner mercenary group, as he tries to ensure that the mercenaries – and wider Russian society – “become disillusioned” with Mr Prigozhin, according to the Institute for the Study of War.

In his statements, Mr Putin deliberately attempted to separate Mr Prigozhin from the Wagner Group “so that the Kremlin can accuse Prigozhin of corruption or conspiring with Ukraine or the West and alienate Prigozhin from Wagner personnel”, the analysts said.

“Prigozhin had built his personal brand on criticising the Russian military command and bureaucrats for corruption and ties to Western countries, and Putin is likely attempting to shatter Prigozhin’s populist appeal by accusing him of the same sins.”

Kremlin says papal envoy in Moscow for talks on Ukraine

Wednesday 28 June 2023 11:49 , Andy Gregory

The Kremlin appreciates the efforts of the Vatican to help resolve the Ukraine crisis, Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson has said, as he claimed that papal envoy had arrived in Moscow for peace talks.

“We highly value the efforts and initiatives of the Vatican and welcome the aspiration of the pope to contribution to ending the armed conflict,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told a regular briefing.

He said Mr Putin’s foreign affairs adviser would hold talks with the envoy, Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, at the Russia president’s request.

Large majority of Americans support military aid for Ukraine, poll suggests

Wednesday 28 June 2023 11:34 , Andy Gregory

Around two thirds of Americans support providing weaponry to Ukraine to defend itself against Russia – rising from 46 per cent just a month ago, new Ipsos polling for Reuters has found.

Eighty-one percent of Democrats, 56 per cent of Republicans and 57 per cent of independents favour supplying US weapons to Ukraine, suggests the two-day poll of 1,004 adults, conducted just days after Yevgeny Prigozhin’s shortlived mutiny.

“This definitely reinforces Biden’s decision to be all-in on this,” William Taylor, a former US ambassador to Ukraine, told Reuters. “The Republican leadership of the House and Senate will also take heart from this.”

The poll also found that 76 per cent of Americans believe that providing aid to Ukraine demonstrates to China and other rivals that the United States has “the will and capability to protect our interests, our allies and ourselves”.

In other findings, the survey said large majorities of Americans – 67 and 73 per cent respectively – are more likely to support a candidate in next year’s US presidential election who will continue military aid to Ukraine and who backs Nato.

Three civilians in Kharkiv village killed by Russian shelling, says governor

Wednesday 28 June 2023 11:27 , Andy Gregory

At least three people have been killed in the Kharkiv region by Russian shelling, the regional governor has alleged.

“Unfortunately, as a result of this shelling, three civilians in the village of Vovchanski Khutory were killed near their homes,” governor Oleh Synehubov wrote Telegram.

He said the victims were men aged 45, 48 and 57.

Germany and France ‘missing in action’ over European defence, report claims

Wednesday 28 June 2023 10:52 , Andy Gregory

A lack of leadership by countries such as Germany and France and narrow industrial interests keep Europe from boosting defence cooperation as warranted by Russia’s war on Ukraine, a report by the Munich Security Conference has claimed.

“The crucial capability gap in European defence is still political leadership,” the Munich Security Report on European Defence said. Acknowledging that European defence has come a long way since Russia’s invasion, the report said Europeans were still far from living up to a “darkening” global security environment.

The report said Germany and France in particular were “missing in action” at a time when European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and EU top diplomat Josep Borrell are driving EU support for Kyiv and joint procurement initiatives.

“Under the Scholz government, Germany has faced recurrent criticism for its absence in EU defence questions,” it said. “Meanwhile, France is seen as pursuing narrow industrial rather than collective European interests.”

Both countries’ initial dithering on supplying arms to Ukraine, on top of a history of neglecting eastern European fears of Russia, has caused lasting damage to their credibility in eastern Europe and to that of joint defence initiatives, the report said, adding: “The onus is on Germany and France to win back trust.”

Putin holds call with Bahrain’s king, Kremlin says

Wednesday 28 June 2023 10:25 , Andy Gregory

Vladimir Putin has held a phone call with the King of Bahrain, Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, the Kremlin said in a statement.

The king expressed support for measures taken by the Russian president to end an armed mutiny by mercenary fighters on Saturday, it claimed.

Body of boy pulled from rubble in Kramatorsk, says mayor

Wednesday 28 June 2023 09:59 , Andy Gregory

The body of a boy has been pulled out of the rubble of a building in Kramatorsk on Wednesday, taking the death toll from a Russian missile strike on a restaurant to nine, the city’s mayor said.

“Rescuers pulled a boy’s body from the rubble,” mayor Oleksandr Goncharenko said, as search and rescue operations continued. He did not give the boy’s age.

Three girls aged between 14 and 17 are also among the nine people killed, authorities said.

Lithuanian president to meet with Zelensky to discuss Nato

Wednesday 28 June 2023 09:44 , Andy Gregory

Lithuanian president Gitanas Nauseda is set to meet Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv on Wednesday to discuss Nato, his office has said, as Ukraine seeks to enter the alliance.

Mr Zelensky has stepped up calls for Ukraine to receive a “political invitation” to join Nato at the summit in Vilnius next month, with Nato members reportedly close to agreeing incremental steps to strengthen ties with Kyiv.

Lithuania has been one of the staunchest supporters of Ukraine in Nato and the EU, and is buying Nasams air defence systems for Ukraine from a Norwegian company.

The presidents will discuss “the Nato summit agenda”, Ukraine’s European Union membership negotiations, and European support for Ukraine, Nauseda’s office said in a statement.

Nauseda will then head to a European Union leaders’ summit in Brussels on Thursday and Friday.

 (AP)
(AP)

Sweden ‘will become a Nato member’, PM insists

Wednesday 28 June 2023 09:21 , Andy Gregory

Sweden still wants to join Nato no later than the alliance’s summit in Vilnius next month, prime minister Ulf Kristersson has said, as he conceded it was not certain this would be possible.

“Sweden will become a Nato member,” Mr Kristersson told public service broadcaster SVT. “Nobody can promise it will happen specifically in Vilnius or right ahead of Vilnius, even if that has been our ambition all along. And that is an ambition we share with every other Nato country as well.”

Turkey has blocked Sweden’s accession, accusing Stockholm of harbouring members of what it considers terrorist groups and expressing outrage over anti-Turkish demonstrations in the Nordic country. Sweden has said freedom of speech is firmly enshrined in its constitution and that it has lived up to all the requirements set out in an agreement struck in Madrid last year with Turkey and Finland.

Swedish and Turkish officials met on 14 June for what Sweden’s chief negotiator characterised as good talks, and are due to hold another high level meeting in Brussels organised by Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg before the Vilnius summit.

“We’ve also said that we respect that it is Turkey that makes Turkish decisions and it is good we now have another meeting ... and maybe we can address the odd question mark ahead of the Vilnius summit in that kind of conversation,” Mr Kristersson said.

Lukashenko claims he persuaded Putin not to ‘wipe out’ Prigozhin

Wednesday 28 June 2023 09:13 , Andy Gregory

Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko has claimed he persuaded Vladimir Putin not to “wipe out” mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin during the shortlived mutiny last weekend.

Mr Putin initially vowed to crush the mutiny, but hours later a deal was clinched to allow the Wagner boss and some of his fighters to go to Belarus, where he arrived by plane on Tuesday.

Describing his conversation with Mr Putin, Mr Lukashenko used the criminal slang phrase for killing someone, equivalent to the English phrase to “wipe out”, echoing Mr Putin’s vow in 1999 to “wipe out [Chechen militants] in the “s***house”, which became widely quoted and emblematic for some of his severe tendencies.

“I also understood: a brutal decision had been made (and it was the undertone of Putin’s address) to wipe out” the mutineers, Mr Lukashenko told a meeting of his army officials and journalists, according to Belarusian state media.

“I suggested to Putin not to rush. ‘Come on,’ I said, ‘Let’s talk with Prigozhin, with his commanders.’ To which he told me: ‘Listen, Sasha, it’s useless. He doesn’t even pick up the phone, he doesn’t want to talk to anyone’.”

Mr Lukashenko, both an old acquaintance of Mr Prigozhin and close ally of Mr Putin, claimed he had advised the Russian president to think “beyond our own noses” and warned that Mr Prigozhin’s elimination could lead to a widespread revolt by his fighters, adding that his own army could benefit from the experience of Wagner troops.

“This is the most trained unit in the army,” BelTA state agency quoted Lukashenko as saying. “Who will argue with this? My military also understand this, and we don’t have such people in Belarus.”

Later, Mr Lukashenko told his military that “people fail to understand that we are approaching this in a pragmatic way”, adding: “They’ve been through it, they’ll tell us about the weaponry – what worked well, which worked badly.”

Three teenagers among eight dead in Kramatorsk restaurant bombing, say officials

Wednesday 28 June 2023 08:41 , Andy Gregory

Three children are among eight people killed in a Russian missile attack on a restaurant and several houses in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk, authorities have said, as they continue to clear rubble and search for survivors.

At least 56 people were also wounded in the attack at a restaurant frequented by journalists, aid workers and soldiers who use Kramatorsk as a base of operations, with the city lying only a few miles from the front line.

The shelling occurred when people had returned from work, said prosecutor general Andrii Kostin, adding that the three dead children were aged between 14 and 17.

Ukraine’s State Emergency Service said that rescuers continued to clear rubble from the site and search for more survivors.

Rescuers and volunteers work to rescue people from under the rubble (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images)
Rescuers and volunteers work to rescue people from under the rubble (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images)

Russia still likely to withdraw from Black Sea grain deal, state media reports

Wednesday 28 June 2023 08:35 , Andy Gregory

The probability of Russia withdrawing from the Black Sea grain deal in July remains high, although talks continue, according to the state-backed RIA news agency, which cited an anonymous source.

Moscow has repeatedly complained it is not getting what it wanted from the deal brokered by the UN in a bid to ease global hunger, which has allowed grain to be shipped out of Ukrainian ports and expires on 18 July.

Ukrainian officials have cited Russia’s repeated threats to withdraw from the deal as among reasons why they feel they would be unable to trust Vladimir Putin in negotiations.