July 29, 2023 Russia-Ukraine news

- Source: CNN " data-fave-thumbnails="{"big": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/230726043658-uk-government-wagner-group-report-intl-gbr.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" }, "small": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/230726043658-uk-government-wagner-group-report-intl-gbr.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" } }" data-vr-video="false" data-show-html="" data-byline-html="
" data-timestamp-html="" data-check-event-based-preview="" data-is-vertical-video-embed="false" data-network-id="" data-publish-date="2023-07-29T21:11:03Z" data-video-section="world" data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2023/07/29/wagner-forces-poland-border-nato-leighton-nr-vpx.cnn" data-branding-key="" data-video-slug="wagner-forces-poland-border-nato-leighton-nr-vpx" data-first-publish-slug="wagner-forces-poland-border-nato-leighton-nr-vpx" data-video-tags="armed forces,baltic states,brand safety-nsf sensitive,brand safety-nsf war and military,continents and regions,domestic alerts,domestic-international news,eastern europe,europe,government organizations - intl,government organizations - us,lithuania,military,misc organizations,nato,northern europe,paramilitary and militia,poland,russia,unrest, conflicts and war,us air force,us department of defense,us federal departments and agencies,wagner group" data-details="">
A man wearing a camouflage uniform walks out of PMC Wagner Centre, which is a project implemented by the businessman and founder of the Wagner private military group Yevgeny Prigozhin, during the official opening of the office block in Saint Petersburg, Russia, November 4, 2022. REUTERS/Igor Russak
Retired colonel explains why Wagner's move toward Poland will help Russia
02:05 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Ukraine is escalating its counteroffensive after a sluggish start, as fresh units equipped with Western armor attempt to breach Russian defenses. Kyiv’s troops are on offense along the southern front lines and near the eastern city of Bakhmut, while Moscow focuses on its land route to Crimea, the Ukrainian military says.
  • Poland’s prime minister said more than 100?Wagner Group?mercenaries have moved toward the Suwa?ki corridor, a small stretch of NATO territory that separates the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad from ally Belarus.
  • A Russian missile strike on an apartment block wounded nine people in Dnipro late Friday, with images showing part of the building reduced to rubble.
  • Moscow vowed to retaliate after an apparent rare example of Ukraine using missiles to attack inside Russian territory, leaving at least 14 wounded in the city of Taganrog.
19 Posts

We’ve wrapped up our live coverage for the day. Catch up on today’s headlines by scrolling through the posts below, or read more here.

Kyiv's forces are consolidating positions in?southeastern Ukraine, military says

A Ukrainian serviceman inspects a destroyed Russian tank in the Zaporizhzhia?region on July 21.

Fighting is raging across the southern and eastern fronts of the war in Ukraine this week, with Kyiv claiming modest gains in areas where it has recently ramped up its counteroffensive.

In southern Ukraine: Kyiv’s troops remain on offense in areas surrounding the cities of Melitopol and Berdiansk in the country’s south, military leaders said in a statement Saturday.

Russia is responding with missiles, rockets and air strikes targeting Ukraine’s troops and populated areas of southern Ukraine, according to the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

“Unfortunately, there were civilian casualties, and residential buildings were destroyed,” it said in an update.

A Ukrainian fighter with a mechanized infantry brigade told CNN Saturday that it has made successful gains on the outskirts of?Robotyno, north of Melitopol in the Zaporizhzhia region. The brigade has also seen progress on the outskirts of?the village of Verbove nearby.?

Ukraine’s military also reported Russian air strikes near Orikhiv in the Zaporizhzhia region, and in the Kherson region’s Antonivka. In those areas, the General Staff said, “the enemy is focusing its main efforts on preventing further advance of our troops.”

Russian forces in both regions have also been focused on holding the land corridor to Crimea, according to Ukraine’s Military Media Center.

In eastern Ukraine: In the Bakhmut area, the Ukrainian military has?pushed Russian forces back almost to the village of Klishchiivka, Ukrainian serviceman?Yevhen Kozhyrnov said on national television Saturday.?

Kozhyrnov said the Ukrainian?armed forces are moving on two flanks — north and south of Bakhmut. Over the past three days, a mechanized infantry brigade has advanced a little less than half a mile on the city’s outskirts, pushing back the enemy and reaching an advantageous height to control access to Bakhmut, Klishchiivka and access roads to the village, he said.

Kozhyrnov acknowledged “the advance is not fast,” adding that Russian forces are “still fighting back.”

CNN cannot independently verify claims on battlefield developments from either side in the conflict.

Putin blames Ukrainian counteroffensive for lack of ceasefire

As Russia’s war against Ukraine rages on, and Kyiv escalates its counteroffensive, Russian President Vladimir Putin says a ceasefire is hard to implement.

He made the claim at a carefully orchestrated press event attended by a small group of Russian media in St. Petersburg.?

Putin said Moscow has never rejected peace negotiations with Ukraine. In order to start the process to end the war, an agreement is needed from both sides, but it’s difficult to reach one while Ukraine’s army is on offense, the Russian leader said.

Putin also claimed Saturday that?Ukrainian forces have lost hundreds of tanks and over 1,000 armored?vehicles since June 4, a majority of them Western-made. CNN cannot independently verify claims on battlefield developments from either side in the conflict.

Key context: South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and several other African leaders have?presented a 10-step peace initiative?to both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

At his?Russia-Africa summit this week, Putin has said the Kremlin is “carefully” considering the African leaders’ proposal, and blamed Kyiv for not coming to the table.

But Zelensky has?ruled out any peace negotiations?with Russia until Moscow’s troops withdraw from his country’s territory. Zelensky said allowing any negotiations while another nation’s military is occupying Ukraine would only “freeze” the war, pain and suffering caused by Putin’s invasion.

Kyiv is claiming modest gains in its counteroffensive. Here's what else you should know

Ukrainian servicemen fire rockets towards Russian troops in the Donetsk region on July 18.

Kyiv is claiming modest gains in areas where it has recently?ramped up its counteroffensive.

Kyiv’s troops remain on offense in areas surrounding the cities of Melitopol and Berdiansk in the country’s south, military leaders said in a statement Saturday.

Russia is responding with missiles, rockets and air strikes targeting Ukraine’s troops and?populated areas?of southern Ukraine, according to the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

Ukraine’s military also reported Russian air strikes near Orikhiv in the Zaporizhzhia region, and in the Kherson region’s Antonivka. In those areas, the General Staff said, “the enemy is focusing its main efforts on preventing further advance of our troops.”

Here are other headlines you should know:

Russian missile strikes: A Russian missile strike on an apartment block in central?Dnipro left at least nine people wounded, according to Serhii Lysak, the head of the region’s military administration. And at least four people have been hurt in Ukraine’s Kherson region after Russian shelling hit residential areas and near a grain terminal in?the Beryslav district on Friday, regional leader?Oleksandr Prokudin said in an update on Telegram. Russian strikes also left two people dead and another person wounded in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia, a local official said Saturday.?

Ukrainian attacks: Ukrainian forces targeted a railroad between the southern Kherson region and Crimea overnight with 12 Storm Shadow?long-range missiles,?which were intercepted by air defenses,?according to a Russia-backed local official. Moscow?also reported an apparent rare example of Ukraine using missiles to attack inside Russian territory, leaving at least 14 wounded in the city of Taganrog.

Wagner Group developments: More than 100?Wagner Group?mercenaries have moved toward the Suwa?ki corridor, a small stretch of NATO territory separating the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad from Belarus, Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said on Saturday. Morawiecki called it “a step toward a further hybrid attack on Polish territory.” He warned, according to the Polish Press Agency, that Wagner mercenaries may try to pose as migrants in order to cross from Belarus into Poland.

Russia-Africa summit:?Russian President Vladimir Putin continued his meetings with?African leaders in St. Petersburg today, including holding discussions on the war in Ukraine.?Putin has been hosting representatives from the continent in a summit this week, seeking to strengthen ties after being left internationally isolated by the Ukraine invasion.

Zelensky visits troops: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he traveled to the Bakhmut area of eastern Ukraine to visit troops and present them with state awards on Saturday, which marks?Special Operations Forces Day in Ukraine. Zelensky said he visited?“advanced positions”?of the forces, but that he could not go into details about their current mission.

Christmas in Ukraine: Ukraine has passed legislation moving its official Christmas holiday to December 25, further distancing itself from the traditions of the Putin-aligned Russian Orthodox Church, which celebrates the holiday on January 7. Zelensky signed the bill into law Friday after it was passed by Ukraine’s parliament earlier this month.

Olga Kharlan update: The Ukrainian fencing champion Olga Kharlan, who was banned from the world championships in Italy for refusing to shake hands with a Russian opponent, has been readmitted to the tournament and given an automatic place at next year’s Paris Olympics.

How Ukraine is using sea drones to ward off Russia's navy in the Black Sea

One of the newest pieces in Ukraine’s arsenal is a remote-controlled sea drone designed to attack Russian forces in the Black Sea.

The Ukrainian-made surface drones, first shown publicly to CNN, are armed with 300 kilograms (about 660 pounds) of explosives and can hit a target 800 kilometers (about 500 miles) away.

A pilot who goes by the call sign “Shark” said the drones are easy to control and have limited the Russian navy’s movements. Equipment on Russian ships is designed to attack other ships, according to the drones’ developer, rendering the vessels’ defenses ineffective.

Naval drones were used to strike the Kerch bridge — which links Crimea to mainland Russia — earlier this month, and they could prove to be vital against Russian threats on ships after the country withdrew from the Black Sea grain deal.

Watch more from Alex Marquardt’s report here:

2 people killed and 1 wounded by Russian strikes in Zaporizhzhia, official says

Local residents inspect a crater left after a Russian missile strike in?Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine on July 29.

Russian strikes left two people dead and another person wounded in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia, a city official said Saturday.?

“The blast wave knocked out windows in high-rise buildings and damaged the building of an educational institution and a supermarket,” he added.?

Further south in the Zaporizhzhia region: On Friday, a Ukrainian commander on the southern front said that his forces are “having some success” in driving back Russian forces, but intense combat continues.

Ukrainian forces this week for the first time reached Russia’s critical “dragon’s teeth” fortification, part of Moscow’s main line of defense.?Satellite imagery had previously shown that Russia installed the “dragon’s teeth” lines — concrete and rebar pyramids designed to block the advance of armored vehicles — across the territory it controls in Ukraine. CNN has geolocated a video to an area just east of the small villages of Nove and Kharkove, near Robotyno, along the Melitopol axis in the Zaporizhzhia?region.?

Christmas in Ukraine will now officially be on December 25, in move away from Russian Orthodox Church

Ukraine has passed legislation moving its official Christmas holiday to December 25, further distancing itself from the traditions of the Putin-aligned Russian Orthodox Church, which celebrates the holiday on January 7.

President Volodymyr Zelensky signed the bill into law on Friday after it was passed by Ukraine’s parliament earlier this month.

The legislation’s sponsors said its passage would help Ukraine “abandon the Russian heritage of imposing the celebration of Christmas on January 7,” and help Ukrainians “live their own life with their own traditions (and) holidays.”

Ukraine and Russia are both majority Orthodox countries, but since Russia illegally annexed Crimea and began supporting separatists in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region in 2014, a large part of the Orthodox community in Ukraine has moved away from Moscow.

Russia’s war in Ukraine further accelerated the divide between the two branches of Orthodox Christianity, especially given that the head of Russia’s Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, fully endorsed the invasion?and framed it as a culture clash between the wider Russian world and Western liberal values.

The new law will effectively formalize what some churches in Ukraine had already begun practicing. A branch of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine allowed its churches to celebrate Christmas on December 25 last year. Ukraine’s main Greek Catholic church said in February it was moving to a new calendar to celebrate Christmas on December 25 as well.

Tetyana, an Orthodox Christian from Kyiv, said the date was not important for her, but she was ready to support the move because of its symbolic value.

Read more on what Ukrainians say about the move.

Zelensky visits troops near Bakhmut area to mark military holiday

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he traveled to the Bakhmut area of eastern Ukraine to visit troops and present them with state awards on Saturday, which marks?Special Operations Forces Day in Ukraine.

Zelensky said he visited “advanced positions” of the forces, but that he could not go into details about their current mission.

Images and video released by his office showed the president talking to soldiers at a local gas station, drinking coffee and taking pictures with them.?Zelensky referred to the meeting as a “traditional coffee talk.”

Zelensky went to a command post for special forces tactical groups in the town of?Chasiv Yar, which is located about 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) west of Bakhmut.

In addition to Chasiv Yar, Zelensky also visited the cities Kramatorsk, Sloviansk, Druzhkivka and Kostiantynivka in the Donetsk region, his office said.?

Anniversary of prison attack: Zelensky also mentioned the anniversary of a strike on a detention center in?Olenivka, where more than 50 Ukrainian prisoners were killed last year.?

“Today is the anniversary of Olenivka, one of the most vile and cruel crimes of Russia. The deliberate, pre-planned killing of captured Azov warriors,” Zelensky said.?

An extensive CNN investigation published in August last year demonstrated that the Russian narrative claiming the camp in?Olenivka?had been hit by a Ukrainian HIMARS rocket did not stand up to scrutiny. The Office of the UN Human Rights Commissioner has also supported the findings of the investigation.?

CNN’s Tim Lister and?Gianluca Mezzofiore contributed reporting.

Over 100 Wagner fighters move toward?border with Poland and Lithuania, Polish prime minister says

A man wearing a camouflage uniform walks out of PMC Wagner Centre in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on November 4, 2022.

More than 100 Wagner Group mercenaries have moved toward the Suwa?ki corridor, a small stretch of NATO territory separating the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad from Belarus, Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said on Saturday.

Morawiecki called it “a step toward a further hybrid attack on Polish territory.”

Poland’s government has used the term “hybrid attack” to describe attempts by the neighboring Belarusian regime to manipulate the flow of migrants through the area, putting pressure on the EU over sanctions against Minsk. Polish officials have said that its ally Russia helps Belarus with this scheme.

So far this year, there have been about 16,000 attempts by migrants to cross the border illegally, “pushed to Poland” by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin,?Mateusz said.?

The prime minister warned, according to the Polish Press Agency, that Wagner mercenaries may try to pose as migrants in order to cross from Belarus into Poland.

Rising tensions: This is the latest example of regional tensions inflamed by Lukashenko welcoming Wagner troops into his country following their short-lived rebellion against Moscow.

Belarus announced earlier in July that its forces will?hold joint exercises?with Wagner fighters?near?the?border with Poland. Putin also made a series of?unsubstantiated allegations?last week, accusing Poland of harboring plans to “directly intervene” in the war and “tear off” parts of Ukraine for itself, also claiming Warsaw has aspirations to annex parts of Belarus.

Germany?has pledged?NATO would defend alliance member Poland in case of an attack.

More on the Suwa?ki corridor: This thin strip of land, also known as the Suwa?ki gap, is the only overland link between the Baltic states — NATO members Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — and the rest of the European Union. The corridor separates the Russian standalone region of Kaliningrad from Belarus and connects Polish and Lithuanian territory.

Kaliningrad was captured by Soviet troops from Nazi Germany in April 1945 and then became part of Soviet territory as a result of the Potsdam Agreement. It was renamed from the German K?nigsberg in 1946.

In 2002, the EU and Moscow reached an agreement on travel between Russia and Kaliningrad, ahead of Poland and Lithuania joining the European Union in 2004. When those countries joined, the exclave became surrounded on three sides by EU territory.

Russia says the 2002 agreement has now been violated, with Lithuania banning the flow of sanctioned goods across its territory. But the government in Vilnius says it is merely upholding EU sanctions introduced following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russia has not acknowledged that it has nuclear weapons based in Kaliningrad, but in 2018 the Federation of American Scientists concluded that Russia had significantly modernized a nuclear weapons storage bunker in the region, based on analysis of satellite imagery.

CNN’s Tim Lister and Rob Picheta contributed reporting to this post.

Russian-appointed official: Ukraine fires Storm Shadow missiles at railroad between Crimea and Kherson region

Ukrainian forces targeted a railroad between the southern Kherson region and Crimea overnight with 12 Storm Shadow?long-range missiles,?which were intercepted by air defenses,?according to a Russia-backed local official.

“All the missiles were shot down by our air defense,” Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed acting head of the Kherson region administration, said in a Telegram post Saturday.

In one area, falling debris “from expensive foreign weapons” damaged a monitoring post and a?cable that electrical locomotives connect to, he added. Saldo said the damage has already been repaired.

“Once again, it is the civilian infrastructure that is being struck by the enemies,” he said.

CNN is not able to independently verify the official’s claims.?

More context: The railway connects the cities of?Henichesk in the Kherson region and?Dzhankoi in Crimea. It is crucial for Russian logistics to and from Crimea.

In May, CNN first reported that the United Kingdom had delivered multiple Storm Shadow cruise missiles to Ukraine, which provide a new long-range strike capability. The Storm Shadow is a cruise missile with stealth capabilities, jointly developed by the UK and France.

Putin and African leaders will release joint statement on Ukraine following talks in St. Petersburg

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a Russia-Africa bilateral meeting, on July 29, in Saint Petersburg, Russia.?

Russian President Vladimir Putin and African leaders will release a joint statement following a meeting on Ukraine in St. Petersburg, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Saturday.?

“A brief joint statement is being prepared following the meeting. It will be released as soon as it is agreed,” Peskov said.

Putin is also expected to talk to journalists later on Saturday, Peskov said.

We will bring you more as we get it.

Some context: Putin has been hosting African leaders in a summit this week, seeking to strengthen ties after being left internationally isolated by the Ukraine invasion.

He told the delegation that the continent will become one of Moscow’s key partners “in a new multipolar world.”

There has been concern in Africa over Russia’s withdrawal from a key grain deal. Putin offered to send grain free of charge to six African nations in the next few months, something the United Nations said would not make up the shortfall.

Just 17 heads of African states attended the summit this year — less than half of the 43 heads of state that attended the 2019 conference.

4 people injured in Russian shelling on Ukraine's Kherson region

At least four people have been injured in Ukraine’s Kherson region after Russian shelling hit residential areas and near a grain terminal in?the Beryslav district on Friday, head of the Kherson regional military administration?Oleksandr Prokudin said in an update on Telegram.?

“The enemy carried out 29 attacks, firing 126 shells from mortars, artillery, tanks, aircraft, and UAVs,” including 11 shells at the city of Kherson, Prokudin said.?

Residential areas of the region’s settlements and the territory of the grain terminal in Beryslav district were hit, he said.?

Some context: There has been an uptick of attacks targeting Ukrainian grain facilities in the wake of the Kremlin’s decision to withdraw from the Black Sea grain deal earlier this month.

The deal allowed for the safe export of Ukrainian wheat to international markets — its collapse has worsened a global food crisis.

Ukraine’s top fencer granted place at Olympics after disqualification for Russia handshake snub

Ukraine's fencer Olga Kharlan speaks during a press conference within the FIE Fencing World Championships at the Fair Allianz MI.CO (Milano Convegni) in Milan, on July 28, 2023.

The Ukrainian fencing champion banned from the world championships in Italy for refusing to shake hands with a Russian opponent has been readmitted to the tournament and given an automatic place at next year’s Paris Olympics.

Olga Kharlan, leader of Ukraine’s national fencing team, was earlier?disqualified?at the tournament after she refused to shake hands with the Russian rival Anna Smirnova she defeated. Smirnova then walked away before staging a sit-down protest for about 45 minutes.

An athlete’s refusal to shake hands after a contest results in a black card and expulsion, according to International Fencing Federation rules.

The symbolic move, made as her country fights back against Russia’s invasion, was risky for Kharlan because her disqualification looked set to also scupper the four-time individual world champion and four-time Olympic medalist’s chances of racking up enough points to qualify for Paris next year.

But the International Fencing Federation said on Friday that while it stands “fully behind the penalty’, it would allow Kharlan to participate in the women’s team sabre competition.

Read the full story here.

Analysis: What Ukraine must do to win in its southern push – and what Russia has in reserve

The Ukrainian military is doubling down on efforts to break through thick Russian defenses in its counteroffensive in the south, which has struggled to gain momentum since being launched at the beginning of June.

Ukrainian officials have said little about what fresh units are being committed to the offensive, but the military has clearly added recently-minted units equipped with Western armor in at least one important segment of the southern front.

The challenges faced by the Ukrainian fighters are perhaps less to do with numbers and more to do with capabilities, training and coordination, factors that are critical when an attacking force is faced with such an array of defenses.

The commitment of new units this week does appear to have enabled Ukraine to make modest advances south of the town of Orikhiv, edging closer to the important Russian hub of Tokmak some 20 kilometers (12 miles) to the south of the current front line.

There are other modest successes further east, but the few frontline accounts to have emerged speak of unceasing Russian aviation and artillery strikes.

Read Tim Lister’s full analysis here.

At least 9 injured in Dnipro attack, Ukrainian military official says

A residential building was partially destroyed after a missile strike in Dnipro, Ukraine, on Friday, July 28, 2023.

A Russian missile strike on an apartment block in central Dnipro has left at least nine people injured, according to Serhii Lysak, the head of the region’s military administration.

Two teenagers were among those hurt. Doctors say the injured victims are in “satisfactory condition” and will be treated at home.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed that another of the buildings hit in the missile strikes was that of the Security Service, although the building was largely empty.

“Dnipro. Friday evening. A high-rise building and the Security Service of Ukraine’s building were hit. Russian missile terror again.”

Zelensky added on Telegram: “Promptly held conversations with the Security Service of Ukraine, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the State Emergency Service, and the military administration head. All necessary services are on site.”

He concluded: “We will do everything to bring Russia to full punishment for aggression and terror against our people. These bastards will answer.”

Some context: Dnipro has seen several serious attacks. In May at least two people died when a hospital and veterinary clinic were hit.

And in January, at least 40 people were killed in a strike on an apartment block.

Moscow vows to retaliate for attack on Russian city that wounded over a dozen people

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman?Maria?Zakharova?attends a news conference in Moscow, Russia, on April 4, 2023.

Moscow reserves the right to take tough measures in response to a missile attack that wounded more than a dozen people in the Russian border region of Rostov on Friday, a foreign ministry spokesperson said.

The official, Maria Zakharova, said the strike on the southwestern Russian city of Taganrog was “directed against the civilian population and peaceful infrastructure. They obviously had no military meaning.”

Zakharova called on the international community to condemn the attack. “The Russian side reserves the right to take tough retaliatory measures,” she said.

Russia has frequently hit Ukrainian civilian targets throughout the conflict.

What we know about the strike: Earlier on Friday, air defenses shot down a missile over Taganrog. The missile’s remnants fell on the center of the city, leaving 14 people wounded, according to the Russian defense ministry.

The ministry says air defense systems also intercepted a second missile in the Rostov region Friday, but that it “fell in a deserted area.” Rostov’s governor confirmed the second attack.

Friday’s strike on Taganrog is believed to be the first time the city – some 40 kilometers (nearly 25 miles) from the border with Ukraine — has been hit since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Ukraine has not commented on the attack, which if conformed would mark a rare case of Kyiv using missiles inside Russia.

EU Council imposes sanctions on Russians over "digital information manipulation campaign"

The European Union Council said on Friday that it imposed sanctions on seven Russian individuals and five entities.

Those sanctioned are accused of conducting a “digital information manipulation campaign” called ‘RRN’ (Recent Reliable News), aimed at distorting information and disseminating propaganda in support of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine,” the council said in a statement.

The statement said the campaign to which “government bodies or bodies affiliated to the Russian state have participated” does rely on “fake web pages usurping the identity of national media outlets and government websites, as well as fake accounts on social media.”

The impacted entities: The sanctioned entities include Infornos?— an online outlet “closely linked to the Russian military intelligence (GRU) and is responsible for setting up more than 270 media proxy online outlets that disseminate propaganda in support of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine,” according to the council.

They also include the Kremlin-linked non-profit ANO Dialog, the Institute of the Russian Diaspora, as well as Social Design Agency and Structura National Technologies —two Russian IT companies and prominent representatives of the above-mentioned entities.

The statement said the EU sanctions toward Russia’s war on Ukraine now apply to about 1,800 individuals and entities altogether.

African Union chairman says Putin is willing to "find a solution" to end war, but needs to convince Ukraine

President of the Union of Comoros Azali Assoumani gestures a joint press conference with other African leaders and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 16, 2023.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is willing to engage in “dialogue and find a solution” to end the war in Ukraine, according to Azali Assoumani, the African Union chairman and president of the Union of the Comoros.

Now the union needs to convince Ukraine to hold negotiations with Russia, he said Friday. Assoumani said the African Union will “act as an intermediary.”

He also said Putin’s offer to help Africa with food supply after pulling out of the key Black Sea grain deal is “not quite enough.”??

Some background: In mid-June, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and several other African leaders traveled to Ukraine to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and present a 10-step peace initiative that several African countries have agreed to participate in.

At his Russia-Africa summit, Putin has said the Kremlin is “carefully” considering the African leaders’ proposal.

But Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has?ruled out any peace negotiations?with Russia until Moscow’s troops withdraw from his country’s territory. Zelensky said allowing any negotiations while another nation’s military is occupying Ukraine would only “freeze” the war, pain and suffering caused by Putin’s invasion.

Welcome to our coverage. Here are some of the key headlines to watch this weekend

Satellite imagery from Maxar shows Russian trenches, dragon's teeth and fortifications 6km/10miles northeast of Tokmak in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia Oblast.?

Kyiv’s counteroffensive appears to be entering a more aggressive new phase.

A new video spreading on social media appears to show, for the first time, Ukrainian forces reaching one of Russia’s sprawling “dragon’s teeth” defensive lines. The concrete anti-tank fortifications are one example of the deeply layered defenses Russia has developed to slow any attempt to take back territory in southern Ukraine.

But Ukraine’s top commander on the southern front says Kyiv’s forces are making some progress in driving back Russian troops. The general on Friday described intense, ongoing combat in the area he commands, which encompasses southern parts of Donetsk and the Zaporizhzhia region.

If you’re just now catching up, here’s what else you should know:

  • Russia-Africa summit: Russian President Vladimir Putin — who is holding a summit with African governments as the Kremlin grows more isolated on the world stage — says leaders from the continent have showed interest in further developing their relations with Moscow. Speaking at a news conference with the chair of the African Union on Friday, Putin laid out the ways he says Russia plans to help African countries.?Putin is also willing to engage in “dialogue and find a solution” to end the war in Ukraine, according to Azali Assoumani, the African Union chairman and president of the Union of the Comoros. Now the union needs to convince Ukraine to hold negotiations with Russia, he added. Kyiv has said it won’t negotiate while a foreign military occupies its country.
  • Dnipro missile attack: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed that one of the buildings hit in a missile strike on central Dnipro Friday was that of the Ukrainian Security Service?(SBU). Maksym Buzhansky, a member of?parliament who is in Dnipro, said the explosions were “very loud” and that he has not been informed of any injuries or deaths yet. Three people have requested medical assistance so far, according to Ihor Klymenko, the Ukrainian interior minister. He said rescuers were going door-to-door in the building.
  • Taganrog missile attack: The Russian defense ministry said Kyiv fired a missile at the Russian city of Taganrog, which is located in the southwestern Rostov region near the border with Ukraine. Russian air defense systems intercepted the missile, fragments of which fell on the city and damaged buildings, the defense ministry said. Moscow threatened to take tough measures in response to the missile attack, which wounded more than a dozen people.
  • Declined extradition: Brazilian authorities have declined a US request to extradite Russian national Sergey Vladimirovich Cherkasov, who is accused of entering the US under a false identity to spy on Americans in the leadup to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Brazil’s government?said Thursday it has already approved Cherkasov’s eventual extradition to Russia, where he is accused of drug trafficking, according to Russian state media. The Biden administration has been searching for high-value Russian nationals that could entice Moscow to release two detained Americans, as the war leads relations to further deteriorate between the countries.
  • Sanctions: The European Union said on Friday that it imposed sanctions on seven Russian individuals and five entities for what it called a “digital information manipulation campaign.”
  • Ukraine aid: Qatari Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani promised his country would donate $100 million to help rebuild Ukraine, during a visit to Kyiv.?

Here’s a look at the latest map of control in Ukraine:

Read more:

Putin thanks North Korea for supporting Ukraine war as Pyongyang displays its nukes in parade
South Africa’s stance on Russia puzzles many. Could a mine in the desert hold answers?
Russia says it shot down Ukrainian missile over southern city with 14 injured
Wagner chief Prigozhin seen back in Russia for first time since rebellion
Isolated Putin tries to shore up African support as Kremlin seethes over poor summit turnout

Read more:

Putin thanks North Korea for supporting Ukraine war as Pyongyang displays its nukes in parade
South Africa’s stance on Russia puzzles many. Could a mine in the desert hold answers?
Russia says it shot down Ukrainian missile over southern city with 14 injured
Wagner chief Prigozhin seen back in Russia for first time since rebellion
Isolated Putin tries to shore up African support as Kremlin seethes over poor summit turnout