Prominent Ukrainian leader Andriy Parubiy shot dead in Lviv

3 months ago 37

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Poroshenko, who lost office to Zelensky in 2019, said Parubiy had been instrumental in government in modernising the army so it could go to the front with volunteer battalions in 2014 when Russian forces moved into the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine.

“This crime is not just shots fired at a person. It is a shot at the army. It is a shot at the language. It is a shot at faith. It is a shot at the heart of Ukraine,” Poroshenko said.

Russian forces launched a second large-scale missile and drone attack on Ukraine on Friday night local time (Saturday AEST), and explosions were reported in at least six cities. Authorities said 30 people were injured and one person died in Zaporizhzhia.

This followed a wave of hundreds of missiles and drones earlier in the week, killing 22 people including four children.

The past week has also seen intense fighting in eastern Ukraine, with the Associated Press reporting that Russian forces have broken into another region of the country, citing Ukrainian military official Victor Trehubov.

Russian troops entered the villages of Novoheorhiivka and Zaporizke in the eastern Dnipropetrovsk region, a major Ukrainian industrial centre next to the Donetsk region where fighting has been underway for more than a decade.

The Trump administration approved an arms sale worth $US825 million on Thursday to supply extended-range missiles and other equipment to Ukraine.

The US also imposed 50 per cent tariffs on India on Wednesday to punish the country for buying Russian oil, amid support in Congress for “secondary tariffs” against countries that buy from Russia and thereby support its economy.

Putin has kept up the Russian attacks despite these US measures, while US President Donald Trump is yet to announce any further steps or negotiations to arrange a peace deal after his summit with Putin in Alaska two weeks ago.

The European Union sent a pointed message to the US without naming Trump after a ministerial meeting on Saturday in Copenhagen, as member states prepare to impose more sanctions on Russia.

The EU’s top security and foreign affairs commissioner, former Estonian prime minister Kaja Kallas, said the sanctions would be stronger if matched by “transatlantic” partners.

Kallas also said Russia would lose foreign assets worth €210 billion – about $375 billion – unless it ended the war and compensated Ukraine for the damage done.

“Sanctions work,” she said at a press conference after meeting foreign ministers from EU member states.

“Options include secondary sanctions on those backing Russia’s war, as well as import bans and tariffs on Russian products.”

Kallas also signalled tougher measures against “shadow fleets” – the shipping owners helping Russia export its oil – and said she had asked member states for their proposals next week to maximise pressure on Russia.

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