Ukraine-Russia news – live: One dead as Putin’s troops ‘fire at rescue workers in flood-hit Kherson’

One person has died and seven have been wounded after Vladimir Putin’s troops fired at rescue workers in the southern city of Kherson, Kyiv has said.

Russian forces fired at rescuer workers who were clearing mud from flood-hit Kherson and seven people were wounded, Andriy Yermak, head of the president’s office, said on the Telegram messaging app.

Meanwhile, Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko stated in a separate post that eight of the rescuers were wounded. Russia denies targeting civilians.

The collapse of the Kakhovka hydro-electric dam on 6 June unleashed floodwaters across southern Ukraine and Russian-occupied areas of the Kherson region, killing more than 50 people and destroying homes and farmland.

Ukraine accuses Russia of blowing up the Soviet-era dam, under Russian control since the early days of its invasion. The Kremlin accused Kyiv of sabotaging the hydroelectric facility.

Elsewhere, four of Putin’s attack helicopters have been shot down by Ukrainian air defences in the past week, Kyiv claims.

Key Points

  • Russia attacks Ukrainian cities in overnight air strikes

  • Ukraine says eight villages liberated

  • One dead in Russian shelling of rescuer workers in Ukraine’s Kherson

  • Ukrainian shelling in Belgorod leaves at least 8 injured

  • Four of Putin’s attack helicopters downed in last week, Kyiv says

  • Russia says Ukraine plans missile strikes on Crimea

One dead in Russian shelling of rescuer workers in Ukraine's Kherson - Kyiv

Tuesday 20 June 2023 20:31 , Eleanor Noyce

At least one emergency worker was killed and several others were wounded in Russian shelling in the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson on Tuesday, the head of the president’s office said.

Russian forces fired at rescuer workers who were clearing mud from flood-hit Kherson and seven people were wounded, the official, Andriy Yermak, said on the Telegram messaging app.

Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said in a separate post that eight of the rescuers were wounded. Russia denies targeting civilians.

Ukraine’s ‘main blow’ yet to come, says deputy defence minister

06:38 , Arpan Rai

Ukrainian troops are moving forward on the battlefield and facing resistance from Russian troops, deputy defence minister Hanna Maliar, as she warned the main strike is still pending.

“We will advance gradually, with difficulties, facing the furious resistance of the enemy. We must understand that the tasks that are set before the military are carried out by them, and gradual movement is taking place in all directions where the offensive began,” she said on Telegram last night.

“But, of course, the main blow is yet to come.”

UK’s landmark financial support package for Ukraine expected this week

06:10 , Arpan Rai

Rishi Sunak will pledge to stand with Ukraine “as long as it takes” as he announces $3bn (£2.35bn) in bank loan guarantees to bolster Kyiv’s rebuild.

Opening a major conference in London focused on Ukraine’s recovery after Russia’s invasion, Mr Sunak will hail the country’s “defiance” as Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky’s troops use a counter-offensive to push back the Kremlin’s forces.

He will announce a financial package that includes World Bank loan guarantees worth three billion US dollars over three years.

Downing Street said the guarantees amount to the first bilateral package of multi-year fiscal assistance to be set out by a G7 country.

Read more here:

Sunak to pledge £2.35 billion in loan guarantees at Ukraine Recovery Conference

Ukrainian refugees helped push German population up 1.3% last year

06:00 , Eleanor Noyce

Large numbers of refugees from Ukraine fleeing Russia‘s war fueled a 1.3% rise in Germany’s population last year, helping push up the number of inhabitants in the European Union‘s most populous country to more than 84.4 million, official statistics showed Tuesday.

Germany’s population expanded by 1.12 million in 2022, the Federal Statistical Office said. That compared with an increase of just 0.1%, or 82,000 people, the previous year.

All of Germany’s 16 states saw their populations increase. The largest proportional increases were in the country’s two biggest cities, Berlin and Hamburg, which both saw rises of 2.1%.

At the end of last year, Germany was home to 12.3 million people with only foreign citizenship, the statistics office said. Of those, 1.34 million Turkish citizens — a substantial minority in the country for decades — made up the biggest single group.

Read more:

Ukrainian refugees helped push German population up 1.3% last year

Pentagon says accounting error bills extra $6.2bn for Ukraine military aid

05:23 , Arpan Rai

The Pentagon said it overestimated the value of the weapons it has sent to Ukraine by $6.2bn (£4.8bn) over the past two years — about double early estimates — resulting in a surplus that will be used for future security packages.

Pentagon spokeswoman Sabrina Singh said a detailed review of the accounting error found that the military services used replacement costs rather than the book value of equipment that was pulled from Pentagon stocks and sent to Ukraine. She said final calculations show there was an error of $3.6bn in the current fiscal year and $2.6bn (£2bn) in the 2022 fiscal year, which ended last September.

As a result, the department now has additional money in its coffers to use to support Ukraine as it pursues its counteroffensive against Russia. And it come as the fiscal year is wrapping up and congressional funding was beginning to dwindle.

Read more here:

Pentagon accounting error provides extra $6.2 billion for Ukraine military aid

Ukraine’s Zelensky: Our forces are destroying the enemy in east, south

05:00 , Eleanor Noyce

President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Tuesday that Ukraine‘s forces were destroying Russian forces in the two main theatres of the conflict, the east and south of the country.

“At this time, our soldiers in the south and east are actively destroying the enemy, physically cleansing Ukraine,” Zelensky said in his nightly video message.

“A defence against terror means destroying terrorists. And it is a guarantee that the state of evil will never have the opportunity to bring evil to Ukraine.”

Referring to a conference to take place in London on post-war recovery, Zelensky said rebuilding Ukraine was “a vehicle and a guarantee of security” and a means of “protecting against any repetition of Russian aggression.”

Ukrainian forces ‘gnawing our way meter by meter’, says minister

04:43 , Arpan Rai

Ukrainian forces have pushed Russian troops on a defensive in the battlefield as they recapture territory “metre by metre”, the war-hit country’s deputy defence minister said.

“We are moving forward gradually, with small steps but very confidently. And you can even cite an allegory that “we are gnawing away every meter by meter of land from the enemy,” Hanna Maliar said on Telegram last night.

In an update from the battlefield, the deputy defence minister said that the offensive continues in several directions.

“Everything happens there according to the plan established by the military. There are certain advances in all directions where our military is moving. But the enemy will not give up the occupied positions just like that, and that is why fierce battles and a very powerful duel continue,” Ms Maliar said.

She added that the “enemy mines the fields”, including in the Zaporizhzhia region where “the enemy mines even settlements where people live, without warning them”.

Ukrainian forces ‘destroying the enemy’ in east and south, says Zelensky

04:03 , Arpan Rai

Ukrainian forces were destroying Russian forces in the two main theatres of the conflict, the east and south of the country, president Volodymyr Zelensky said.

“At this time, our soldiers in the south and east are actively destroying the enemy, physically cleansing Ukraine,” Mr Zelensky said in his nightly video message.

“A defence against terror means destroying terrorists. And it is a guarantee that the state of evil will never have the opportunity to bring evil to Ukraine.”

The war-time president also said rebuilding Ukraine was “a vehicle and a guarantee of security” and a means of “protecting against any repetition of Russian aggression”, as he referred to a conference on post-war recovery expected to take place in London.

Cutting army size ‘beggars belief’, former armed forces chief tells MPs

04:00 , Eleanor Noyce

Reducing the size of the army “beggars belief” and the lack of “properly functioning” reserve forces is a “national embarrassment”, a former head of the UK armed forces has said.

Lord Nick Houghton, who was chief of the defence staff between 2013 and 2016, criticised the decision to cut regular troop numbers during an appearance before the House of Commons Defence Committee on Tuesday.

He said: “It beggars belief to me that we have a reduced size of army.

“We have witnessed the first real formalised warfare above the threshold of war in Ukraine and Russia and within weeks both sides have sort of run out of troops.”

Christopher McKeon reports:

Cutting army size ‘beggars belief’, former armed forces chief tells MPs

Russian Navy to get two new nuclear submarines by end of year

03:44 , Arpan Rai

The Russian Navy will receive two new nuclear submarines by the end of this year, a top official told Russia’s state news agency TASS.

The strategic nuclear-powered submarine missile cruiser Emperor Alexander III and the multipurpose nuclear-powered submarine Krasnoyarsk will be operational by the end of 2023, said Alexei Rakhmanov, head of the United Shipbuilding Corporation.

Cyprus president declares 'zero tolerance' policy on evasion of Russia sanctions

03:00 , Eleanor Noyce

The president of Cyprus on Tuesday affirmed a “zero tolerance” policy toward any Cypriot citizen or company helping to evade international sanctions imposed on Russia following last year’s invasion of Ukraine.

President Nikos Christodoulides underscored his administration’s mission to safeguard Cyprus’ name as a “credible business and financial center” after the U.S. and the U.K. recently included a handful of Cypriot nationals and Cyprus-registered companies on a list of “enablers” helping Russian oligarchs skirt sanctions.

Christodoulides told a news conference on his administration’s first 100 days in office that the issue affords Cyprus an opportunity to rebrand itself as a financial node connecting “East and West, the European market with the Middle East, Asia and Africa.”

Read more:

Cyprus president declares 'zero tolerance' policy on evasion of Russia sanctions

Ukraine repatriates three POWs from Russia via Hungary - Kyiv

02:00 , Eleanor Noyce

Kyiv repatriated three Ukrainian prisoners of war from Hungary after a group of POWs was transferred there from Russia without coordination with Kyiv, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday.

Hungary, which under Prime Minister Viktor Orban has forged strong political and economic ties with Moscow, said on 9 June that Budapest had received a group of 11 Ukrainian prisoners of war from Russia.

“The Embassy of Ukraine in Budapest managed to bring back three Ukrainian prisoners of war from Hungary,” Ukrainian foreign ministry spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko wrote on his Facebook page.

Nikolenko said they were already back on Ukrainian soil and were receiving the support they needed.

He said Ukrainian diplomats and other relevant Ukrainian authorities were working to try to bring back the remaining prisoners of war.

Ukraine said on Monday that Hungary has been ignoring its requests for contact with the prisoners of war. It has cast the transfer of the POWs to Hungary as a publicity stunt by Orban.

Hungarian and international media quoted Orban’s chief-of-staff Gergely Gulyas as saying the soldiers arrived in Hungary of “their own free will” and that Kyiv was informed after their transfer.

EU leaders set to call on China to help stop Ukraine war - EU official

01:00 , Eleanor Noyce

EU leaders are set to call on China next week to help bring an end to the war in Ukraine, engage in global challenges, such as climate change, and rebalance its economic relations with the European Union, a senior EU official said on Tuesday.

EU leaders meet for a summit in Brussels on 29-30 June, with China and economic security among the main topics. The call to China is set out in draft conclusions prepared ahead of the summit, which could still change.

The official said the draft conclusions were in line with the Group of Seven (G7) declaration from May, but with more specific EU-China issues, such as rebalancing the economic relationship and the need for reciprocity.

“I think it’s important that we set the notion of de-risking in stone and diversification,” the official said, referring to an EU policy to reduce its economic reliance on China.

The official said leaders were likely to focus their discussions on the role of China towards Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and economic ties. Western leaders have urged China to use its influence over Russia to stop the conflict.

Earlier on Tuesday, the European Commission presented a new economic security strategy, advocating stronger control of exports and outflows of technology. The Commission did not name China, but the country was clearly a focus of its thoughts.

The official said some EU member states were currently quite cautious on the proposal, given that granting of export licences and security are national competences.

Why haven't China and the U.S. agreed to restore military contacts?

Wednesday 21 June 2023 00:01 , Eleanor Noyce

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has wrapped up a closely watched visit to Beijing during which he and President Xi Jinping pledged to stabilize plunging U.S-China ties. But China refused the biggest U.S. request: restoring military-to-military contacts.

Blinken said he raised the issue of military communications “repeatedly” but was rebuffed by the Chinese. “It is absolutely vital that we have these kinds of communications,” he said, adding that it was something the United States will “keep working on.”

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and President Joe Biden have called often over the past few months for China to reestablish military communication channels with the U.S.

China has attributed its refusal to restart military communications to sanctions imposed by Washington, a possible reference to sanctions on its defense minister, Li Shangfu. They were part of a broad package of measures against Russia, predating its invasion of Ukraine, imposed in 2018 over Li’s involvement in China’s purchase of combat aircraft and anti-aircraft missiles from Moscow.

Read more:

Why haven't China and the U.S. agreed to restore military contacts?

Watch: Dom Joly recalls childhood in war-torn Lebanon as he visits Ukraine

Tuesday 20 June 2023 23:00 , Martha Mchardy

What nuclear weapons does Russia have?

Tuesday 20 June 2023 22:00 , Martha Mchardy

The Russian president reportedly has access to the largest stockpile of nuclear weapons in the world.

As of 2023, Russia has about 5,977 nuclear warheads, an estimated 1,500 awaiting dismantling, 2,565 deployed strategic warheads and 466 Intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles, according to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

Ukraine also inherited a large number of nuclear weapons after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 but the country decided to fully de-nuclearise under the 1994 Budapest Memorandum.

A brief history of Putin’s love for nuclear weapons

Tuesday 20 June 2023 21:30 , Martha Mchardy

President Joe Biden has said the threat of Russian President Vladimir Putin using tactical nuclear weapons is “real”, days after denouncing Russia’s deployment of such weapons in Belarus.

Biden called Putin‘s announcement that Russia had deployed its first tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus “absolutely irresponsible”.

“When I was out here about two years ago saying I worried about the Colorado river drying up, everybody looked at me like I was crazy,” Biden told a group of donors in California on Monday.

William Mata reports:

A brief history of Putin’s love for nuclear weapons

Disaster response to destruction of Kakhovka dam ‘disappointing and inadequate,’ says son of Warren Buffet

Tuesday 20 June 2023 21:00 , Martha Mchardy

The son of one of the United States’ richest men criticised the international disaster response to the destruction of the Kakhovka dam in southern Ukraine this month as “disappointing” and inadequate, as he visited the nearby city of Kherson.

Howard Buffett, a businessman and philanthropist made the comments today, two weeks after Kherson and dozens of other settlements were hit by catastrophic flooding when the dam was destroyed on June 6.

Buffett, whose foundation has committed $450 million to Ukraine, was in Kherson taking part in the distribution of aid.

“It’s disappointing. It’s hard to understand, to be honest with you. There are certain organisations that are set up to really respond to emergencies. They do it all over the world and they’ve done it for years,” he said.

Water flows over the collapsed Kakhovka Dam in Nova Kakhovka (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
Water flows over the collapsed Kakhovka Dam in Nova Kakhovka (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Buffett said the international disaster response needed to be stepped up, describing houses that had collapsed in the flooding, others where water was being pumped out of them and others that were still completely submerged.

“There’s just not a lot of activity here. People really need it, they really need the water. It’s a mess,” he said.

“There’s a lot of help needed here. I’ve been really surprised that the international community has not responded with a much broader and stronger help.”

His comments echoed president Volodymyr Zelensky who expressed shock on June 7 at what he said was the failure of the United Nations and the Red Cross to offer rapid help.

Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of deliberately sabotaging the dam, which has been in Russian hands since shortly after the start of Russia’s invasion in February 2022.

Western countries say they are still gathering evidence but believe Ukraine would have had no reason to inflict such a catastrophe on itself.

Buffett has travelled to Ukraine several times during the war. His foundation has delivered farm equipment, combines and tractors and has helped with demining in the Kherson region, he said.

Russian-backed officials: woman killed in Ukraine drone attack on town of Nova Kakhovka

Tuesday 20 June 2023 20:45 , Eleanor Noyce

Ukrainian forces struck the Russian-controlled town of Nova Kakhovka in southern Kherson region with drones on Tuesday, killing one person and wounding four, the local Russian-appointed authorities said.

The morning attack on public service faciliies, reported on the Telegram social platform, was carried out by loitering munitions, also known as kamikaze drones.

Reuters could not independently verify the report.

The officials said the injured were rushed to hospital, while a woman died later from her injuries.

Ukraine downs Russian drones but some get through due to gaps in air protection

Tuesday 20 June 2023 20:30 , Martha Mchardy

Ukrainian air defences downed 32 of 35 Shahed exploding drones launched by Russia early Tuesday, most of them in the Kyiv region, officials said, in a bombardment that exposed gaps in the country’s air protection.

Russian forces mostly targeted the region around the Ukrainian capital in a nighttime drone attack lasting around three hours, officials said, but Ukrainian air defences in the area shot down about two dozen of them.

The attack was part of a wider bombardment of Ukrainian regions that extended as far as the Lviv region in the west of the country, near Poland.

Read the full story:

Ukraine downs Russian drones but some get through due to gaps in air protection

Blinken, Ukraine foreign minister discuss reforms for investment

Tuesday 20 June 2023 20:10 , Eleanor Noyce

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on Tuesday discussed the need for Ukraine to continue to implement reforms to establish an environment for investment, the State Department said.

“They discussed the need for Ukraine to continue to implement reforms in order to establish an environment for investment and sustained economic growth,” the State Department said in a statement.

EU to train 30,000 members of Ukraine’s armed forces this year

Tuesday 20 June 2023 20:00 , Martha Mchardy

EU member states plan to train 30,000 members of Ukraine’s armed forces this year, including from territorial defence units, AFP reports.

“In 2023, the EU Military Assistance Mission for Ukraine plans to train 30,000 Ukrainian armed forces personnel, including soldiers of the territorial defence forces,” the defence ministry in Kyiv said.

The EU made a pledge to train Ukraine’s armed forces in February this year.

Today in pictures

Tuesday 20 June 2023 19:30 , Martha Mchardy

A Leopard 1 A5 battle tank is seen at FFG Flensburger Fahrzeugbau Gesellschaft - a private company that is refurbishing Leopard 1 tanks that are being donated by NATO member countries to Ukraine (EPA)
A Leopard 1 A5 battle tank is seen at FFG Flensburger Fahrzeugbau Gesellschaft - a private company that is refurbishing Leopard 1 tanks that are being donated by NATO member countries to Ukraine (EPA)
Olena Sytnychenko (left) and Anastasia Tutus pose for photographs while dressed in the colours of the Ukraine national flag during day one of Royal Ascot at Ascot Racecourse, Berkshire (PA)
Olena Sytnychenko (left) and Anastasia Tutus pose for photographs while dressed in the colours of the Ukraine national flag during day one of Royal Ascot at Ascot Racecourse, Berkshire (PA)
Flags, including those of the Wagner private mercenary group, for sale on a road outside Moscow (AFP via Getty Images)
Flags, including those of the Wagner private mercenary group, for sale on a road outside Moscow (AFP via Getty Images)
Ukrainian servicemen stand next to an AN/TWQ-1 Avenger mobile air defence missile system during their combat shift (REUTERS)
Ukrainian servicemen stand next to an AN/TWQ-1 Avenger mobile air defence missile system during their combat shift (REUTERS)

UN complains Russia won't let aid workers into areas hit by dam collapse in southern Ukraine

Tuesday 20 June 2023 19:00 , Martha Mchardy

The United Nations has rebuked Moscow for allegedly denying its aid workers access to Russian-occupied areas affected by the recent Kakhova dam collapse in southern Ukraine, which stranded residents, threatened power supplies and caused an environmental calamity as the war approaches 16 months.

The U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Ukraine, Denise Brown, said in a statement late Sunday that the organization has engaged with Moscow and Kyiv, each of which occupies parts of the southern Kherson region where the dam and reservoir are located, to address the “devastating destruction” caused by the breach.

The Russian government “has so far declined our request to access the areas under its temporary military control,” Brown said.

Susie Blann reports:

UN complains Russia won't let aid workers into areas hit by dam collapse in southern Ukraine

Cleverly steps up demands for Putin’s allies to pay reparations to Ukraine

Tuesday 20 June 2023 18:30 , Martha Mchardy

Vladimir Putin and his allies should shoulder the burden of funding the reconstruction of Ukraine after the war, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said.

Although there was a role for international allies and the private sector in rebuilding Ukraine’s economy, Mr Cleverly said a significant amount of the burden – “perhaps even the majority” – should fall on Russians involved in the invasion.

The UK is hosting a major conference on Ukraine’s recovery this week and Mr Cleverly discussed the situation with his US counterpart Antony Blinken in London on Tuesday.

David Hughes reports:

Cleverly steps up demands for Putin’s allies to pay reparations to Ukraine

Cyprus president declares 'zero tolerance' policy on evasion of Russia sanctions

Tuesday 20 June 2023 18:00 , Martha Mchardy

The president of Cyprus on Tuesday affirmed a “zero tolerance” policy toward any Cypriot citizen or company helping to evade international sanctions imposed on Russia following last year’s invasion of Ukraine.

President Nikos Christodoulides underscored his administration’s mission to safeguard Cyprus’ name as a “credible business and financial center” after the U.S. and the U.K. recently included a handful of Cypriot nationals and Cyprus-registered companies on a list of “enablers” helping Russian oligarchs skirt sanctions.

Christodoulides told a news conference on his administration’s first 100 days in office that the issue affords Cyprus an opportunity to rebrand itself as a financial node connecting “East and West, the European market with the Middle East, Asia and Africa.”

Read the full story:

Cyprus president declares 'zero tolerance' policy on evasion of Russia sanctions

Dom Joly recalls childhood in war-torn Lebanon as he visits Ukraine

Tuesday 20 June 2023 17:30 , Martha Mchardy

Dom Joly recalled his childhood in Beirut during Lebanon’s civil war as he travelled to southern Ukraine to meet families who have survived months of intense fighting on the front line of the war.

The Save the Children ambassador visited Mykolaiv and surrounding villages, which have been subjected to relentless shelling and missile attacks, forcing thousands to of families to flee their homes.

“I think what really interests me about it is because I grew up in that sort of situation,” the comedian and writer said.

“It must’ve really affected me.”

Holly Patrick reports:

Dom Joly recalls childhood in war-torn Lebanon as he visits Ukraine

Fighter for Ukraine is jailed for 16 years in Russia

Tuesday 20 June 2023 16:59 , Martha Mchardy

A former deputy commander of a Ukrainian militia unit was sentenced by a Russian court on Tuesday to 16 years in a penal colony for taking part in what Moscow considers an illegal armed group and receiving “terrorist” training, Russian media reported.

Denis Muryga was a senior member of Aidar, one of dozens of volunteer battalions that emerged in Ukraine after fighting broke out in 2014 with Russian-backed groups that declared breakaway “republics” in the east of the country.

The units, some with ultra-nationalist roots, were later absorbed into Ukraine’s armed forces.

Muryga was detained in spring 2022 on the Russia-Ukraine border. Russian military news outlet Zvezda published video of him listening with his head bowed to the sentence, which was slightly less than the 18 years prosecutors had demanded.

The Ukrainian military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the case.

Ukraine says it successfully deploys 1,000 km drone

Tuesday 20 June 2023 16:33 , Martha Mchardy

Ukraine has successfully used a domestically produced drone with a range of 1,000 km (620 miles), state arms producer Ukroboronprom said on Tuesday.

Ukroboronprom spokesperson Natalia Sad posted a selfie with a smiling Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s commander-in-chief, Mykola Oleshchuk, commander for the air force, and Yurii Husev, head of Ukroboronprom on Facebook. She said the picture was taken “after successful use of our drone for 1000 km”.

She provided no other details nor say if use of the drone meant it had been tested or actually deployed in the conflict.

Ukraine’s military, government, and private companies are working to create an arsenal of cheap and easy-to-produce drones whch they hope could become a game changer in the war against Russia. It has already employed drones for both reconnaissance and attacks.

In autumn 2022 Ukroboronprom said it was finalizing work on a new drone that had a range of 1000 km and a warhead weighing 75 kg.

On Tuesday, president Volodymyr Zelenskiy signed into law legislation to exempt domestic drone producers from customs duties and value-added tax, lawmaker Yaroslav Zheleznyak wrote on Telegram.

Ukrainian kickboxing champion killed while fighting Russian forces

Tuesday 20 June 2023 16:13 , Martha Mchardy

A Ukrainian kickboxing champion has been killed fighting Russian forces, a website that tallies athletes killed in the war reported.

Maksym Bordus, who was in his early twenties, was killed on June 11 in “fierce fighting against Russian invaders”, the Sport Angels website said.

“Every day he brought Ukraine’s victory closer with a weapon in his hands, but he himself will not see it,” the website said.

Bordus was killed by a Russian shell while on a combat mission in the southern region of Zaporizhzhia on 11 June.

A petition was posted on president Volodymyr Zelensky’s website calling for Bordus to be posthumously awarded the title of “Hero of Ukraine”.

Sport Angels said he had won dozens of tournaments and was the World Association of Kickboxing (WAKO) champion of Ukraine.

‘You break it, you bought it,’ foreign secretary warns Putin as new sanctions legislation put in place

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:47 , Martha Mchardy

British foreign secretary James Cleverly (REUTERS)
British foreign secretary James Cleverly (REUTERS)

Foreign secretary James Cleverly said the plan to maintain sanctions until Russian reparations were paid to Ukraine “follows that simple premise that you break it, you bought it”.

The Government has set out plans for new laws which will enable sanctions targeted at Russian oligarchs, members of Russian president Mr Putin’s inner circle and those involved in his war machine to remain in place until reparations are made.

The UK is putting in place new legislation which also creates a new route to allow sanctioned individuals to donate frozen funds to Ukrainian reconstruction.

“There is a very strong principle of natural justice, whereby a significant, perhaps even the majority, burden for the rebuilding should sit on the shoulders of those who have been responsible for funding or facilitated this brutal, full scale invasion of Ukraine,” he said.

Putin and his allies should shoulder burden of funding Ukraine reconstruction after war, says foreign secretary

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:37 , Martha Mchardy

Vladimir Putin and his allies should shoulder the burden of funding the reconstruction of Ukraine after the war, foreign secretary James Cleverly said.

Although there was a role for international allies and the private sector in rebuilding Ukraine’s economy, Mr Cleverly said a significant amount of the burden - “perhaps even the majority” - should fall on Russians involved in the invasion.

The UK is hosting a major conference on Ukraine’s recovery this week and Mr Cleverly discussed the situation with his US counterpart Antony Blinken in London today.

Foreign secretary James Cleverly (left) and US secretary of state Anthony Blinken (PA)
Foreign secretary James Cleverly (left) and US secretary of state Anthony Blinken (PA)

Both Mr Cleverly and Mr Blinken spoke of the need for Kyiv to implement reforms so that it had a strong, prosperous democracy.

Mr Blinken said international allies would help Ukraine have “the strongest possible democracy which is actually necessary to achieve a thriving economy and for reconstruction”.

“If Ukraine is going to attract the investment it needs, not just from government, not just from the international financial institutions but from the private sector, it has to build the best possible environment to attract that investment,” he said during a visit to London.

Mr Blinken said he would announce a new “robust US assistance package” for Ukraine on Wednesday.

Major international conference to seek private-sector funds to rebuild Ukraine, says foreign secretary

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:31 , Martha Mchardy

UK foreign secretary James Cleverly said a major international conference this week would seek private-sector funds for the rebuilding of Ukraine.

Ahead of the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London, the foreign secretary said firms needed assurances these investments were “safe” and the Kyiv administration also needed to implement reforms.

Speaking alongside US secretary of state Antony Blinken, he said: “This week is very much about encouraging the private sector to invest in Ukraine’s rebuilding and recovery.

U.S. secretary of state Antony Blinken and British foreign secretary James Cleverly (REUTERS)
U.S. secretary of state Antony Blinken and British foreign secretary James Cleverly (REUTERS)

“We recognise that means we need to demonstrate that those investments will be effective and that they will be safe.

“That means the ongoing assurance that the Ukrainians seek that they will not be reinvaded once they have successfully regained their territory, their further integration into the Euro-Atlantic institutions and European institutions that they understandably aspire to.

“But of course it also means supporting them as they perform the reform of their institutions that will facilitate the investment in their country.”

Ukraine wants to join Nato and benefit from the security guarantee that comes with membership of the alliance.

US and UK ‘stand shoulder to shoulder’ in defence of Ukraine, says foreign secretary

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:28 , Martha Mchardy

The US and the UK “stand shoulder to shoulder in defence of Ukraine”, UK foreign secretary James Cleverly said in a tweet.

Mr Cleverly met with US secretary of state Antony Blinken in London today.

Ukrainian refugees helped push German population up 1.3% last year

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:20 , Martha Mchardy

Large numbers of refugees from Ukraine fleeing Russia‘s war fueled a 1.3% rise in Germany’s population last year, helping push up the number of inhabitants in the European Union‘s most populous country to more than 84.4 million, official statistics showed Tuesday.

Germany’s population expanded by 1.12 million in 2022, the Federal Statistical Office said. That compared with an increase of just 0.1%, or 82,000 people, the previous year.

All of Germany’s 16 states saw their populations increase. The largest proportional increases were in the country’s two biggest cities, Berlin and Hamburg, which both saw rises of 2.1%.

Read the full story:

Ukrainian refugees helped push German population up 1.3% last year

UN has told Moscow its grain deal grievances cannot be solved, says Russia

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:19 , Martha Mchardy

The United Nations has confirmed that it cannot do anything to address some of Russia’s central grievances around the Black Sea grain deal, the state TASS news agency cited Russia’s Foreign Ministry as saying on Tuesday.

The international body is unable, in particular, to ensure the resumption of piped ammonia exports from Russia, the reconnection of its agricultural bank to the SWIFT payment system, or to ensure supplies of spare parts for agricultural machinery, the ministry was cited as saying.

One dead in Russian shelling of rescuer workers in Ukraine’s Kherson - Kyiv

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:18 , Martha Mchardy

At least one emergency worker was killed and several others were wounded in Russian shelling in the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson on Tuesday, the head of the president’s office said.

Russian forces fired at rescuer workers who were clearing mud from flood-hit Kherson and seven people were wounded, the official, Andriy Yermak, said on the Telegram messaging app.

Interior minister Ihor Klymenko said in a separate post that eight of the rescuers were wounded. Russia denies targeting civilians.

Comedian Dom Joly calls for Ukrainian children to be supported

Tuesday 20 June 2023 15:00 , Martha Mchardy

Comedian Dom Joly has called for support for children who are being mentally and physically impacted in Ukraine, saying: “Whatever your views on conflicts... they are not to blame.”

The comic and Save The Children ambassador, who grew up in Beirut during Lebanon’s civil war, recently visited the city of Mykolaiv and surrounding villages which have been subjected to shelling and missile attacks.

Joly documented his time meeting families who are trying to rebuild their homes, school and communities after surviving months of intensive fighting in their hometowns.

He told the PA news agency: “Whatever your views on conflicts, who’s right, who’s wrong, what the political rightness is of the whole situation, kids certainly didn’t ask to be in that situation.

“They are not to blame and they’re not making any choices in that.

“And I think they’re also the most vulnerable.”

Having previously visited eastern Ukraine in 2018 with the charity, he admitted he “didn’t quite realise how challenging it would be” this time round.

Joly noted that he found the impact on mental health was a “massive issue” from just witnessing the children in these affected areas.

“We met kids that had been literally standing on train stations with shells landing around them, not knowing whether their mother had survived,” he recalled.

“But apart from anything else, the fact that you’ve had to leave your house, you leave all your friends, you move to a new area, you have no schooling.

“So just even the fact that kids spent a vast amount of time in shelters at the moment underground in Ukraine, they do most of their education online, so it’s very isolating.”

Today in pictures

Tuesday 20 June 2023 14:40 , Martha Mchardy

A cloud of smoke after a night drone strike in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv (AFP via Getty Images)
A cloud of smoke after a night drone strike in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv (AFP via Getty Images)
An explosion of a drone is seen in the sky over Kyiv during a Russian drone strike (REUTERS)
An explosion of a drone is seen in the sky over Kyiv during a Russian drone strike (REUTERS)
A crater is seen next to destroyed trucks after Russian shelling in Rozumivka, near Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine (AP)
A crater is seen next to destroyed trucks after Russian shelling in Rozumivka, near Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine (AP)
People kneel as servicemen carry the coffin of volunteer soldier Ivan Shulga, a sound producer in TV channels and musician, killed in a battle with the Russian troops near Bakhmut (AP)
People kneel as servicemen carry the coffin of volunteer soldier Ivan Shulga, a sound producer in TV channels and musician, killed in a battle with the Russian troops near Bakhmut (AP)

A brief history of Putin’s love for nuclear weapons

Tuesday 20 June 2023 14:20 , Martha Mchardy

President Joe Biden has said the threat of Russian President Vladimir Putin using tactical nuclear weapons is “real”, days after denouncing Russia’s deployment of such weapons in Belarus.

Biden called Putin‘s announcement that Russia had deployed its first tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus “absolutely irresponsible”.

“When I was out here about two years ago saying I worried about the Colorado river drying up, everybody looked at me like I was crazy,” Biden told a group of donors in California on Monday.

William Mata reports:

A brief history of Putin’s love for nuclear weapons

Russia sees grain deal over by July 18 but more talks possible before then - RIA

Tuesday 20 June 2023 13:56 , Martha Mchardy

Russia considers that the Black Sea grain deal will be finished by July 18, but does not rule out fresh talks with the United Nations on the matter before than, the RIA news agency reported on Tuesday.

RIA was citing Russia’s foreign ministry, which it also quoted as saying that Russia’s demand to restart the Togliatti-Odesa ammonia pipeline as part of the grain deal still stood though Moscow understood it would be impossible to restart it quickly after a blast this month.

Blinken: U.S. to set out a 'robust' assistance package for Ukraine

Tuesday 20 June 2023 13:55 , Martha Mchardy

US secretary of state Antony Blinken said he would set out a new assistance package for Ukraine on Wednesday, as he reiterated Washington’s commitment to support Kyiv during a visit to London.

“President Biden said ... that we would stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes, and both of our countries are deeply committed to that,” Blinken told reporters in a press conference alongside British foreign minister James Cleverly.

“We will continue to deliver on that commitment, including through a new robust US assistance package that I’ll be able to announce tomorrow.”

Russian soldier gets $12,000 for destroying German tank in Ukraine

Tuesday 20 June 2023 13:11 , Martha Mchardy

A Russian soldier who destroyed a German Leopard tank in a battle in Ukraine has been given a one million rouble ($11,842) reward by a private foundation, Russia’s defence ministry said on Tuesday.

Scholz calls on China to raise pressure on Russia over Ukraine war

Tuesday 20 June 2023 12:53 , Martha Mchardy

German chancellor Olaf Scholz on Tuesday said he had called on China to use its influence over Russia more in regards to the war in Ukraine.

Speaking alongside China’s premier Li Qiang after bilateral talks in the German capital, Scholz also said China should not supply weapons to Russia and that the war in Ukraine should not become a frozen conflict.

Chinese Premier Li Qiang (L) and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (Getty Images)
Chinese Premier Li Qiang (L) and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (Getty Images)

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