Ukraine war briefing: Russian strikes kill seven people in Kharkiv and Odesa regions

6 months ago 52

Ukrainian drones kill three people in Russia; top US general warns that Kyiv will be outgunned 10 to one ‘in a matter of weeks’. What we know on day 778

A Russian strike on a grocery store and a pharmacy in the north-eastern Kharkiv region killed three people, including a 14-year-old girl, on Wednesday. The strike on Lyptsi, about 10km from the Russian border, also injured a 16-year-old boy and a woman. Another strike with guided aerial bombs destroyed a hospital in the border town of Vovchansk.

In Ukraine’s southern Odesa region, Russian missiles killed four people, including a girl aged 10, and injured seven more, the governor, Oleg Kiper, said on Telegram. Ukraine’s energy ministry said two facilities in the south had been targeted in strikes during the night, causing power outages in two regions.

In Russia, a Ukrainian drone attack on Wednesday killed three people, including two children, in the Kursk border region, the local governor said. The drone fired a rocket at a civilian car in a village in Korenevski district, the governor, Roman Starovoyt, said on Telegram.

The US top general in Europe has told Congress Ukraine will be outgunned 10 to one by Russia within a matter of weeks if more ammunition and weapons are not sent to Kyiv soon. “The Russians fire five times as many artillery shells at the Ukrainians than the Ukrainians are able to fire back. That will immediately go to 10 to one in a matter of weeks,” Gen Christopher Cavoli said. “We’re not talking about months. We’re not talking hypothetically.”

Joe Biden on Wednesday urged the US House of Representatives to vote immediately on the $60bn Ukraine bill. “There’s overwhelming support for Ukraine among the majority of Democrats and Republicans. There should be a vote now,” the president told reporters. The funds passed the Senate but have languished for months in the House where the speaker, Mike Johnson, has refused to bring a vote to the floor.

Russia’s foreign ministry has criticised plans to hold a Ukraine peace conference in Switzerland as being motivated byelections in the US. The conference is to be held on 15-16 June and Swiss media have said Biden is expected to attend. “American Democrats, who need photos and videos of events that supposedly indicate their project ‘Ukraine’ is still afloat, are behind this,” the Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova told state-run Tass news agency.

Ukrainian politicians have sparked anger by scrapping a clause in a draft law that would have given soldiers serving for more than 36 months the possibility to be discharged. The clause was removed ahead of its second reading and after pressure from the military. The reversal sparked anger across a society exhausted by years of war, and risked sapping morale in the stretched armed forces.

The EU’s top court has removed war-related sanctions against prominent billionaires Petr Aven and Mikhail Fridman. The court of justice ruled that the European Council had not presented enough evidence to establish that the pair were involved in efforts that “undermine or threaten the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine”.

Eight Nordic and Baltic nations are pushing for more support for Ukraine. The Swedish foreign minister, Tobias Billström, said the country supported “an increased role for Nato in providing security related assistance to Ukraine”.

Ukraine and UK signed a framework agreement to cooperate in the defence and arms production sector, officials said in Kyiv, part of a wartime effort to build up Ukraine’s domestic weapons industry by working with allies.

China vowed not to accept “criticism or pressure” over its ties with Russia, after Washington warned that it will hold Beijing responsible if Moscow makes gains in Ukraine.

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