President Volodymyr Zelensky made an unannounced visit to Kherson Monday to celebrate Ukraine’s recapture of the strategic southern city.
Kherson is now a frontline city in the war in Ukraine after Russian forces withdrew from the region west of the Dnipro River late last week. A CNN crew saw joyful scenes in the city following the pullback.
Ukrainian officials are restoring key services in parts of the region, but the military warns that Russian attacks are a present danger even in liberated areas.
The G20 summit begins this week, and it’s not yet clear whether Russian President Vladimir Putin will attend virtually —?or how Western leaders would react.
Zelensky: All critical infrastructure in Kherson was destroyed under Russian occupation
From CNN's Dennis Lapin
(Ukrainian Presidential Office)
All critical infrastructure in the city of Kherson was destroyed while under Russian occupation, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address on Monday after visiting the city.?
“This is what the Russian flag means — complete devastation. There is no electricity, no communication, no internet, no television. The occupiers destroyed everything themselves — on purpose. This is their special operation. Before the winter, the Russian occupiers destroyed absolutely all critical infrastructure. Absolutely all important facilities in the city and the region are mined,” Zelensky said.?
The Ukrainian president added that efforts are being made to return life to normal in Kherson.
Earlier on Monday, officials said they were working to repair damaged bridges and restore Kherson’s electricity supply.?
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Russian?tennis?player?writes?"Peace?Peace?Peace All We?Need"?after?win at?ATP Finals
From CNN’s Matt Foster
Rublev returns the ball to Daniil Medvedev during their singles tennis match at the ATP World Tour Finals, in Turin, Italy, Monday, November 14.
(Antonio Calanni/AP)
Russian?tennis?star Andrey Rublev spoke out against his country’s invasion of Ukraine on Monday after?his?win?against compatriot Daniil Medvedev?at?the?ATP?Finals?in Turin, Italy.
Rublev, who is ranked seventh in the world, completed a comeback against Medvedev. After the match, he signed the camera lens with the words: “Peace?Peace?Peace?All?We?Need.”
In his?interview?after?the match, Rublev said the gesture wasn’t planned.
He added:
?This is not the first time that?Rublev has spoken out against Russia’s invasion.
In?February, shortly?after?the conflict began, he wrote, “No war please” on a camera?after?a?win?at?an?ATP tournament in Dubai.
The?ATP?Finals?is the season-ending event for the premier men’s?tennis?tour in the world. It is competed in by the eight highest-ranked singles?players and eight highest-ranked doubles pairs in the world. The event concludes Sunday.
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US studying how to modify powerful armed drone as Ukrainian demand grows
From CNN's Alex Marquardt
Contactors from General Atomics load Hellfire missiles onto an MQ-1C Gray Eagle at Camp Taji, Iraq, in February 2011.
(Lt. Jason Sweeney/US Army)
As Russian forces have retreated in Ukraine’s south, the Biden administration has announced a slew of new military aid packages for Ukraine — but all were missing a piece of weaponry that Ukraine’s military has long sought: the multi-use Gray Eagle drone, armed with Hellfire missiles.
According to two officials, the US has been looking into modifications that can be made to the deadly drone. Changes that would make the potential of losing any — with their sensitive onboard technology — less of a danger and possibly increase the likelihood of Ukraine receiving them.
A US official confirmed that the Army is leading the efforts to study what changes are possible to the drone, which is made by General Atomics and referred to in the Army as the MQ-1C.?
“When you’re talking drones, this is about as good as you can get,” says Seth Jones, the director of the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “These are really sophisticated drones.”
Without any changes, however, the Gray Eagle, which can carry four Hellfire missiles and fly at 25,000 feet for almost 30 hours, would likely not be on upcoming lists of military aid allocated to Ukraine.
Ukrainian commander tells US counterpart Russia must leave all occupied areas as condition for negotiations
From CNN's Denis Lapin in Kyiv
The Commander of Ukrainian forces,?General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, says he has reiterated to his US counterpart, General Mark Milley, that Ukraine’s “goal is to liberate the entire Ukrainian land from Russian occupation.”
Zaluzhnyi said he had told General Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that the “Ukrainian military will not accept any negotiations, agreements or compromise decisions. There is only one condition for negotiations – Russia must leave all the occupied territories.”
Zaluzhnyi said he had told Milley that the situation at the front is stable and controlled.
“We closely monitor the actions of the enemy on the border with the Republic of Belarus and build a reliable shield to protect Ukraine from the north,” he said on his Telegram channel.
Zaluzhnyi said Russian forces were actively attacking along several fronts in the Donetsk region, but were unsuccessful.
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Russia becoming a "pariah state," British PM Sunak says as he attends G20 summit
From CNN’s Allegra Goodwin in London??
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks with political journalists on board a government airplane inflight to Indonesia, on November 13.
(Leon Neal/Getty Images)
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Monday that Russia is becoming a “pariah state,” the UK’s PA news agency reported.??
In comments made to reporters traveling with him to the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia — the first since Russia invaded Ukraine in February — Sunak said it was “telling” that Putin would not attend the event, PA reported.??
When asked how he planned to interact with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the G20, Sunak said he was going to “take the opportunity to unequivocally condemn the Russian state and Putin for their abhorrent and illegal war.”?
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Russian media says Ukrainians are firing on town near Kherson
From CNN's Katharina Krebs?
The Russian state news agency RIA Novosti says that Ukrainian forces are “conducting intense artillery fire on the area of the town of Oleshky” in Kherson.
Oleshky is on the east bank of the river Dnipro, eight kilometers (five miles) from Kherson city, which is on the opposite bank and was recently recaptured by Ukrainian forces.
A RIA Novosti correspondent on the ground reported that explosions were heard in the town, including “the sounds of firing from a large-caliber machine gun.”
“They are attacking day and night continuously, you see, the forest is burning on the outskirts,” an employee of a gas station told RIA Novosti.
Cellular communication does not work in the town while shops and the market are closed, the agency reported.
A spokesperson of the Odesa Regional Administration Serhiy Bratchuk said there had been strikes against Russian military facilities in Hola Prystan and Hornostayivka, two towns on the opposite bank of the river from Kherson city. Bratchuk said there had been casualties.?
The Ukrainian General Staff —?in its evening update — said that further upstream the Russians had shelled a number of settlements within a few miles of the river’s banks.
There are also reports of heavy fighting in the Donetsk region, where the General Staff says that Russian forces were conducting offensive operations in the Bakhmut, Avdiivka and Novopavlivka directions.
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Ukrainian railways begin repairs on Kherson line, infrastructure minister says
From CNN's Denis Lapin in Kyiv
Ukraine’s state railway service, Ukrzaliznytsia, has begun repairing damaged rail tracks & infrastructure on the Kherson line, according to the Infrastructure minister, Oleksandr Kubrakov. It expects to restore rail services to Kherson within 10 days.?
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Russia bans entry to 100 Canadians, including actor Jim Carrey
From CNN's Katharina Krebs in London
Jim Carrey attends a screening of the film "Sonic The Hedgehog" in Westwood, California, on February 12, 2020.
(Rich Fury/WireImage/Getty Images)
Russia said on Monday that it was imposing entry bans on an additional 100 Canadian citizens, including American-Canadian actor Jim Carrey, in response to Canada’s sanctions on Moscow.
The Russian foreign ministry said in a statement that it has added more Canadians to its “black list,” which contains hundreds of Western officials and notable individuals.
Moscow in March added Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to the travel ban.
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EU has sent $8 billion worth of military support to Ukraine, bloc's top diplomat says?
From CNN’s Allegra Goodwin in London??
EU Commissioner for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Vice President Josep Borrell speaks to media at the EU Council headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on November 14.
(Thierry Monasse/Getty Images)
The European Union and its member states have sent at least $8 billion worth of military equipment to Ukraine amid Vladimir Putin’s war, the bloc’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said Monday.??
Speaking at a news conference in Brussels after a meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council, Borrell said this was about 45% of the amount provided to Kyiv by the United States.??
Borrell added the EU would “continue isolating Russia internationally,” and continue imposing “restrictive measures,” against Russia’s economy.??
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New US sanctions target Russia's military industry and networks supporting sanctioned Russian oligarchs
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
Russian billionaire Suleyman Kerimov in Derbent, Dagestan, Russia, on April 14, 2021.
(Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images)
The Biden administration on Monday released new sanctions meant to target Russia’s military industry as well as networks that support two sanctioned Russian oligarchs as the Kremlin’s war against Ukraine continues.
The US Treasury and State Departments imposed sanctions on “a transnational network procuring technology that supports the Russian military-industrial complex,” according to a press release from Treasury, adding that this affects 14 people, 28 entities and eight aircraft.
Here’s a look at some of those affected by the sanctions:
Sanctioned Kremlin elite Suleiman Abusaidovich Kerimov’s network: Kerimov’s immediate family; four French real estate companies belonging to one of Kerimov’s daughters, and the president of those real estate companies; the Swiss-based firm belonging to that individual; Kerimov’s nephew and his UAE-based firm; Swiss national Alexander-Walter Studhalter, who has “allegedly laundered significant amounts of money on Kerimov’s behalf”; Studhalter’s two sons
AO PKK Milandr: US Treasury described this company as “a Russian microelectronics company that has been described as part of the Russian military research and development structure defense technology firm.”
Armenia-based Milur Electronics
Mikhail Ilyich Pavlyuk, the general director of Milandr and Milur Electronics
Milur SA: “The Switzerland-based primary shareholder of Milur Electronics” which “has been utilized by employees and business associates of Milandr to coordinate financial transfers to Milur Electronics,” according to the Treasury.
Jacques Pasche and Holger Leng, two officials at Milur SA
Sharp Edge Engineering Inc., “a Taiwan-based front company used to purchase microelectronic components from Asian companies” that has been used by Milandr employees “to procure equipment.”
Russian Murat Magomedovich Aliev and five businesses associated with him.?
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US citizen held during Russian occupation of Kherson has been freed, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's Victoria Butenko, Denis Lapin and Jennifer Hansler
A member of Ukraine’s parliament says that a US citizen has been freed from detention thanks to the liberation of Kherson.
“With the liberation of Kherson, one of the prisoners was released, a US citizen Suedi Murekezi,” Alexandr Kovaliov said on his Facebook page.
Kovoliav added that Murekezi had “defended the independence of our country, for which he was arrested.”
“The coordinated actions of our team led to the release of another US citizen from captivity. Today he is already free and returning home,” Kovaliov added.?
Kovaliov said Murekezi had been arrested in Kherson, “and for a long time there was no contact with him. But thanks to the efforts of our team, Mr. Murekezi’s location was established and he was returned from captivity.”
According to published reports, Murekezi was detained in Kherson in July.?
The State Department is aware of “unconfirmed reports” about the release of a US citizen who was held in Kherson during the Russian occupation.?
A State Department spokesperson said they had “no further comment on the matter “due to privacy considerations.”
“We also once again reiterate U.S. citizens should not travel to Ukraine due to the active armed conflict and the singling out of U.S. citizens in Ukraine by Russian government security officials, and that U.S. citizens in Ukraine should depart immediately if it is safe to do so using any commercial or other privately available ground transportation options,” the spokesperson said.
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Kherson resident says home was damaged by renewed Russian shelling on Monday
From CNN's Nic Robertson and Kareem Khadder in Kherson
A resident of Kherson city in southern Ukraine has told CNN that his home was damaged when several shells landed in the neighborhood on Monday afternoon.
The shells landed in an area on the northeastern outskirts of the city
The resident, who asked not to be named, said he thought the shelling had come from the east bank of the Dnipro river, where Russian forces have been redeployed after withdrawing from the city last week.
Ukrainian officials have not commented on any shelling of the city or its surroundings since it was liberated. Ukrainian forces began arriving in the city on Friday.?
Russian forces are just a few kilometers from the city center in newly fortified positions.
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Ukraine seeing a lull in Russian missile attacks, air force says
From CNN's Tim Lister
Firefighters work to put out a fire at CHP power station hit by a Russian missile on October 10, in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Ukraine’s air force says it is seeing a lull in Russian missile attacks, which were heavy and persistent through October.
Yurii Ihnat, a spokesperson for the Air Force Command, said at a briefing in Kyiv: “Now we see some kind of a lull, nothing much is happening.”
Ihnat said there were still “shelling and rocket attacks on the frontline cities with rocket artillery and S-300 anti-aircraft systems. The enemy launches this type of missiles on a ballistic trajectory.”
And he said that on Saturday there had been one attack on a central region by “TU-22M3 bombers; several X-22 missiles were launched.”
But Ilhat said that “over the past week we haven’t seen the use of cruise missiles or Shahed drones. The enemy is unable to constantly launch massive missile strikes due to the shortage of weapons.”
He said the Russians were running short of ballistic missiles and air-launched cruise missiles.
Ihnat said Ukrainian defense forces had destroyed over 330 self-detonating drones and that “in total, the enemy launched over 400 Iranian UAVs in Ukraine,” from the south, east and north.
Ihnat said Ukrainian air defenses were being improved with the arrival of advanced western systems.
“Ukrainian air defense will be strengthened by American Avenger systems,” he said. “The Avengers supplied by our American partners have their own radar, can effectively operate eight Stinger missiles at once on their base; they are extremely mobile. “
He said the German-supplied IRIS-T system had destroyed 100 percent of targets.
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Russian soldier disguised as local arrested in Kherson, Ukrainian security service says
From CNN's Tim Lister
The Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) says its officers have detained a Russian serviceman in liberated Kherson in southern Ukraine. The man was dressed in a civilian uniform and tried to pretend to be “local,” it said in a statement.??
The SBU said the man admitted that he was a soldier from the 69th separate brigade of the Russian armed forces.?
The Security Service said it had established that his task in Kherson “was to collect information, [help] adjust fire on the Armed Forces of Ukraine and carry out sabotage.”?
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Starlink terminals help residents of Kherson reconnect with families?
From CNN's Denis Lapin in Kyiv
Mikhail Fedorov, Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, said mobile Starlink terminals are being deployed in Kherson city to help people reconnect with their families.?
Mobile operators Kyivstar and Vodafone have launched the first base stations in Kherson, Fedorov said, noting that “there is still no electricity in the city, so the stations are operating on generators and Starlink terminals.”
Fedorov said his ministry immediately sends Starlink terminals to the de-occupied settlements. “Starlink terminals help to maintain communication while operators restore the damaged optical cable.”
“We are returning the connections to Kherson,” he said. “People who had been under occupation for nine months were finally able to call their relatives and say that they are alright. While there are problems with other infrastructure in the city, even a one-minute conversation helps Kherson residents to feel at home again.”
Fedorov said there were problems with the sabotage of mobile base stations in the area. “The occupants destroyed part of the infrastructure and mined the rest. The State Emergency Service finds tripwires with grenades at mobile base stations. This slows down the process of restoring communication, but heroic rescuers and telecom operators work 24/7,” the official said.
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Biden: Ukrainian liberation of Kherson is "a significant, significant victory for Ukraine"
From CNN's DJ Judd
U.S. President Joe?Biden?speaks during a news conference following his meeting with Chinese president Xi Jinping, ahead of the G20 leaders' summit, in Bali, Indonesia, on November 14.
(Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
The Ukrainian liberation of Kherson “was a significant, significant victory for Ukraine,” President Joe Biden told reporters traveling with him to the G20 summit in Bali Monday. He emphasized that any negotiations towards a ceasefire will require Ukraine have a seat at the table.
“First of all, it was a significant, significant victory for Ukraine – a significant victory – and I can do nothing but applaud the courage, determination and capacity of Ukrainian people and Ukrainian military. I mean, they’ve really been amazing,” Biden said. “I’ve been very clear that we’re going to continue to provide the capability for the Ukrainian people to defend themselves – and we are not going to engage in any negotiation. There’s nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine, this is a decision Ukraine has to make.”?
During a news conference earlier Monday, Oleh Nikolenko, spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, said that Russia is “in no position” to be setting rules for negotiations.
“The peace formula for Ukraine remains unchanged: Immediate cessation of the war, withdrawal of all Russian troops, restoration of Ukrainian territorial integrity, damages reimbursement and provision of effective guarantees of non-repetition of aggression,” Nikolenko said.
Still, Biden said Monday in Bali, he believes hostilities in the region will “slow down a bit because of the winter months, and the inability to move as well, as easily around the country,” later adding he remains confident “that Russia will not occupy or defend Ukraine as they intended from the beginning.”
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CIA Director Bill Burns meeting with Russian counterpart today
From CNN's Natasha Bertrand
Central Intelligence Agency Director William Burns prepares for a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on worldwide threats, at the U.S. Capitol, in Washington, D.C., on March 10.
(Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/AP)
CIA Director Bill Burns is meeting with his Russian intelligence counterpart, Sergey Naryshkin, in Ankara today as part of an ongoing effort by the US to “communicate with Russia on managing risk” and to discuss the cases of “unjustly detained US citizens,” a National Security Council spokesperson tells CNN.?
“We have been very open about the fact that we have channels to communicate with Russia on managing risk, especially nuclear risk and risks to strategic stability,” the spokesperson said.?“As part of this effort Bill Burns is in Ankara today to meet with his Russian intelligence counterpart.”
CNN has previously reported that National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan has also been in touch with his Russian counterparts to warn them of the consequences should Russia use a nuclear weapon in Ukraine.?
The spokesperson emphasized that Burns “is not conducting negotiations of any kind.”??
“He is not discussing settlement of the war in Ukraine.?He is conveying a message on the consequences of the use of nuclear weapons by Russia, and the risks of escalation to strategic stability.?He will also raise the cases of unjustly detained US citizens,” the spokesperson added, saying that the US briefed Ukraine on the meeting in advance of Burns’ trip.?
“We firmly stick to our fundamental principle: nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine,” the spokesperson said.?
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It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky made an unannounced visit to the formerly Russian-occupied city of Kherson on Monday, where work is underway to restore the power supply as NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg warns that Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to “leave Ukraine cold and dark this winter.”
Here are the latest headlines:
Zelensky visits?Kherson: Ukraine’s president visited the formerly Russian-occupied city of Kherson on Monday.?“We are going forward. We are ready for peace. But our peace for our country is all our country, all our territory,” he said.
Kherson still “Russian territory,” says Kremlin: Asked to comment on Zelensky’s visit to Kherson on Monday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov responded: “No comment. This is Russian territory.”
Ukraine warns of?Russian attacks in?Kherson region: The Ukrainian military has warned that Russia may be planning to step up attacks on newly liberated parts of the southern Kherson region.?“The enemy is intensifying aerial reconnaissance, which may indicate that they are planning to strike at both military and civilian targets,” the Ukrainian military’s General Staff said in its regular update on Monday.
Work continues to restore power to Kherson: “All possible measures” are being undertaken to restore electricity supply to Kherson, Ukraine’s top official in the region said Monday. “We must understand that all four power lines that supplied electricity to Kherson region are destroyed,” said Yaroslav Yanushevych, head of the Kherson region military administration.
NATO chief highlights Russian strategy: Putin’s aim is to “leave Ukraine cold and dark this winter,” NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday.?Russia’s withdrawal from Kherson has shown the “incredible courage of Ukrainian armed forces,” said Stoltenberg. However, “it also shows the importance of our continued support to Ukraine.”
Slow progress in Luhansk region: Ukrainian forces have recaptured 12 settlements in Luhansk since initiating a counteroffensive in September, said Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk regional military administration.?“The advance is not easy,” said Hayday. “Every meter passed in the Luhansk region is a continuous struggle for the AFU [Armed Forces of Ukraine].”?
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Ukraine jails pro-Russian tank gunner who fired at residential buildings in Mariupol
A pro-Russian tank gunner who was accused of firing into residential buildings in Mariupol will spend 12 years in prison, Ukraine’s?State Security Service (SBU) said on Monday.
“The Security Service of Ukraine collected indisputable evidence of crimes committed by the militant of the ‘DPR’ [Donetsk People’s Republic] terrorist organization nicknamed ‘Phil,’” the SBU said in a statement. “The evidence allowed the court to imprison him for 12 years.”
As the gunner of a T-72 tank, the SBU said that the man “fired at least 20 shots at residential high-rise buildings in Mariupol.”
The SBU said that he was found guilty of high treason and the “creation of unauthorized armed groups or participation in its activities.”
He was taken captive near the eastern village of Rivnopil in April after his tank came under attack by the Ukrainian military.
The SBU said that the man joined separatist, pro-Russian militants in 2014, and then joined Russia’s 8th?Army after the full-scale invasion this February.
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Russia "in no position" to be setting rules for negotiations, Ukraine says
Russia is “in no position” to be setting rules for negotiations, said a Ukrainian foreign ministry spokesperson on Monday.
“Russia is in no position to laying down the rules,” Oleh Nikolenko, spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, said during a press conference.
“The peace formula for Ukraine remains unchanged: Immediate cessation of the war, withdrawal of all Russian troops, restoration of Ukrainian territorial integrity, damages reimbursement and provision of effective guarantees of non-repetition of aggression.
“Achieving sustainable peace is impossible under any other conditions.”
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UN working "nonstop" to renew the "essential" Black Sea Grain Initiative, says UN chief
From CNN's Niamh Kennedy in London?
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio?Guterres?speaks during a news conference ahead of the G20 leaders' summit in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, on November 14.
(Willy Kurniawan/Reuters)
The United Nations is “working nonstop” to renew the “essential” Black Sea Grain Initiative, according to UN chief António Guterres.?
Speaking during a press conference at the G20 summit in Bali on Monday, Guterres said the UN is trying to resolve all remaining issues around payments and to “renew the Black Sea Grain Initiative.”?
Guterres stressed the effectiveness of the UN brokered grain deal in helping?“to stabilize markets and bring food prices down.”?
“The Black Sea grain initiatives and efforts to ensure Russian food and fertilizers can flow to global markets are essential to global food security,” Guterres stressed.?
He expressed his hope to meet with both the Russian and Ukrainian delegations during the summit and “remove the last obstacles” blocking the restoration of the deal.?
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Ukraine working to restore power lines to Kherson after all four were destroyed
Damaged power lines in the northern Kherson region, Ukraine, on November 7.
(Hannibal Hanschke/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
“All possible measures” are being undertaken to restore electricity supply to the formerly occupied southern city of Kherson, Ukraine’s top official in the region said Monday.
“We must understand that all four power lines that supplied electricity to Kherson region are destroyed,” said Yaroslav Yanushevych, head of the Kherson region military administration, standing alongside President Volodymyr Zelensky.
“In cooperation with NPC Ukrenergo (Ukraine’s national energy company) we are working on solving this problem day and night,” said Yanushevych. “The power will be restored in the near future.”
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Putin’s aim is to “leave Ukraine cold and dark this winter,” says NATO chief
From CNN’s Alex Hardie in London
NATO Secretary General?Jens?Stoltenberg?speaks during a joint news conference in The Hague, Netherlands, on November 14.
(Piroschka Van de Wouw/Reuters)
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aim is to “leave Ukraine cold and dark this winter,” NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday.
Russia’s withdrawal from Kherson has shown the “incredible courage of Ukrainian armed forces,” said Stoltenberg. However, “it also shows the importance of our continued support to Ukraine.”
The NATO chief was speaking during a press conference in The Hague with Dutch Foreign Minister?Wopke Hoekstra and Dutch Defense Minister Kajsa Ollongren.
“We should not make the mistake of underestimating Russia. The Russian armed forces retain significant capabilities as well as a large number of troops and Russia has demonstrated the willingness to bear significant losses. They have also shown extreme brutality,” Stoltenberg said.
“The coming months will be difficult. Putin’s aim is to leave Ukraine cold and dark this winter so we must stay the course,” he added.
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"This is Russian territory," says Kremlin after Zelensky visits Kherson
From CNN's Anna Chernova
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky in central Kherson, Ukraine, on November 14.
(President of Ukraine)
Asked to comment on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s visit to the?formerly Russian-occupied city of Kherson on Monday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the city was “Russian territory.”
Some context: Ukrainian forces swept into the city of Kherson on Friday as the Russian military withdrew from the west bank of the Dnipro River in the Kherson region.
Elated civilians who had survived months of Russian occupation descended on Kherson’s central square, hugging newly arrived Ukrainian soldiers, snapping selfies with them, and waving Ukrainian flags.
The withdrawal delivered a major victory to Kyiv and marked one of the biggest setbacks for Russian President Vladimir Putin since his invasion began.
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Zelensky visits newly-retaken Kherson city, says "we are going forward"
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, center left, visits Kherson, Ukraine, on November 14.
(Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the formerly Russian-occupied city of Kherson on Monday.
In a video circulating on Telegram, Zelensky told a group of reporters that he thought it was necessary to visit the city.
“I would also like, in a human way, to get the emotion, the energy from people. It is motivating.”
Zelensky said that “peace for our country is all our country, all our territory.”
“We are step by step coming to our country, to all the temporarily occupied territories,” he told the media during an unannounced visit to the city. “And of course it’s a pity, but it’s a long way, a difficult way, because this war took the best heroes of our country.”
“We are going forward. We are ready for peace. But our peace for our country is all our country, all our territory,” added Zelensky.
“We respect the law and respect sovereignty of all the countries. But now we are speaking about our country. That’s why we are fighting against Russian aggression.”
But life remains far from normal, with authorities warning residents to be wary of explosives littering the city, and Russian forces still nearby — just across the strategically important Dnipro River.
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Ukraine claims 12 Luhansk settlements recaptured since start of counteroffensive
Ukrainian forces have recaptured 12 settlements in Luhansk since initiating a counteroffensive in September, the top Ukrainian official for the eastern region said Monday.
“The advance is not easy,”?said Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk regional military administration, on national television. “Every meter passed in the Luhansk region is a continuous struggle for the AFU [Armed Forces of Ukraine].”
The Ukrainian military began a slow probe into the Luhansk region in September, after a rapid advance in the neighboring Kharkiv region.
The village of Makiivka was liberated Sunday, according to the military administration, and Ukrainian forces have in recent weeks been pushing towards the road connecting Svatove and Kreminna. For several weeks, they have said that the road is under their “fire control,” meaning that?the Russian military can only use it with a high risk of coming under fire.
“There is heavy fighting in Luhansk region every day,” Hayday said. “The recently de-occupied settlements are being heavily shelled.”
“The occupiers know exactly where they are firing, as they were knocked out of these settlements a few days ago and they know how many civilians are there and where they are. That is why we are trying to establish evacuation.”
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"I am not afraid of the dark anymore": Orphaned Ukrainian boy finds hope with new family
From CNN's Salma Abdelaziz?and?Dennis Lapin in Kyiv
Ilya, center, has found new happiness with Vladimir Bespalov and Maria Bespalaya after losing both parents in the first week of the war.
(Maria Bespalaya)
When Russian forces invaded their country in late February, Vladimir Bespalov and Maria Bespalaya feared their long-held dream of starting a family through adoption was over.
Instead, the situation pushed the couple to try to do it sooner, he said. “We were waiting to earn more money, have a better car, buy a house, and build something to give our children first. But when the war started, we thought why not adopt a child now and accomplish these things together as a family.”
That day, the married couple, who were living in eastern Ukraine, posted an appeal on social media.
“We want to adopt any boy or girl, any newborn or child,” it read.
Weeks later that message would reach a volunteer helping those fleeing Mariupol, a southern city that became emblematic of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ruthless campaign to take Ukrainian land, no matter the cost.
Residents were forced underground for weeks while Russian troops pummeled the city with artillery. It is now a virtual wasteland, with nearly every building damaged or destroyed, and an unknown number of dead beneath the rubble.
Among the survivors was 6-year-old Ilya Kostushevich, orphaned and alone. Both his parents were killed in the first week of the war.
His mother was struck down by Russian artillery after she left home to find food for her family, Bespalov and Bespalaya were later to learn from police.
Unaware of his wife’s fate, Ilya’s father went looking for her the next day, only to be killed by shelling from Moscow’s army, too, police said.
Little Ilya has told how he was left at a neighbor’s house, where he sheltered in a cold, dark basement with strangers for weeks.
He got so hungry he started to eat his toys, Bespalaya said.
Ukraine's military warns Russia may increase attacks in liberated Kherson
Local residents surround Ukrainian soldiers as they celebrate the liberation of Kherson on November 13.
(AFP/Getty Images)
The Ukrainian military on Monday warned that Russia may be planning to step up attacks on newly liberated parts of the southern Kherson region.
On Sunday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned the situation in Kherson “is still very dangerous,” adding that the “detention of Russian soldiers and mercenaries who were left behind, and neutralization of saboteurs, are also ongoing.”
In its update Monday, the General staff said the threat from mines “remains high” in liberated parts of Kherson.
“Units of the Defense Forces continue to carry out stabilization measures,” it said.
The warning comes after a family of four, including an 11-year-old child, were injured in an explosion after their car hit a mine in Kherson on Sunday, according to Ukrainian officials.
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Mine explosion injures family of 4 in Kherson, Ukrainian official says
A family of four people traveling by car was injured in a mine explosion Sunday in an area of the southern Kherson region formerly occupied by Russian troops, according to a top Ukrainian official.
Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of the President’s Office, said an 11-year-old child was among those wounded.
Some context: On Saturday, crowds celebrated the liberation of Kherson city after Ukrainian forces swept into the regional capital and?Russian troops retreated to the east. But life remains far from normal, with authorities warning residents to be wary of explosives littering the city, and Russian forces still nearby — just across the strategically important Dnipro River.
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Ukrainian mayor says Russian occupiers have turned Melitopol into a "giant military base"
From CNN's Mariya Knight in Atlanta?
A Russia flag flies in the city of?Melitopol,?on October 13.
(Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters)
The mayor of the southern Ukrainian city of Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, says Russian forces have turned the city into a “huge military base” while under their occupation.
Melitopol has been held by Russian forces since the early days of the invasion.?
Fedorov also reported that “civilians are prohibited from approaching the area of ??the Melitopol airfield.”?
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Zelensky: Investigators found evidence of more than 400 war crimes in liberated Kherson
From CNN’s Mariya Knight
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky addresses the nation in his nightly address on November 13.
(President of Ukraine)
Investigators?have uncovered?more than 400 cases of?alleged?Russian war crimes in the Kherson region since the exit of Moscow’s forces from the area, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday.
The president added that “detention of Russian soldiers and mercenaries who were left behind, and neutralization of saboteurs, are also ongoing.”
Zelensky warned “the situation in the Kherson region is still very dangerous.”
“First of all,?there?are mines. Unfortunately, one of our sappers?was killed, and four others were injured while clearing mines,” he said.
Zelensky was echoing?warnings voiced by a local Ukrainian official?earlier Sunday, who told Kherson region residents to beware of encounters with Russian soldiers and to look out for mines or missile strikes from Moscow’s military.
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Ukrainian military says it has liberated 179 settlements on the west bank of the Dnipro River
From CNN's Mariya Knight
The Ukrainian military?says it has liberated?179 settlements on the west bank of the Dnipro River in the past week.
Meanwhile, military spokesman Vladyslav Nazarov says the Russians “continue defensive operations and the construction of fortifications on the left (east) bank” of the river.
According to Nazarov, Russians have “14 ships on combat duty and one missile carrier equipped with eight cruise missiles ready for use” stationed in the Black Sea.?
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After liberation, Kherson's residents now face severe shortages and threat from mines
From CNN's Mariya Knight,?Amy Woodyatt?and?Nic Robertson
A resident hugs a Ukrainian serviceman after Russia's retreat from?Kherson, in central?Kherson, on Sunday.
(Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)
Residents of the?newly liberated city of Kherson?are almost without water and face shortages of bread and medicines, officials warned, as efforts continued Sunday to remove mines and restore critical infrastructure following the withdrawal of Russian forces.
But life remains far from normal, with authorities warning residents to be wary of explosives littering the city, and Russian forces still nearby — just across the strategically important Dnipro River.
This is not the end of the struggle against the Russian occupation in the country, reports CNN’s Nic Robertson, who witnessed emotional scenes Saturday in Kherson’s central square as residents hailed their liberation.
Uncertainty surrounds whether Putin will virtually attend G20 — and how Western nations would react
From CNN's MJ Lee
Russian President Vladimir Putin during the award ceremony marking the 75th anniversary of Russia's Federal Medical-Biological Agency (FMBA) at the Kremlin in Moscow on Wednesday.
(Contributor/Getty Images)
US National security adviser Jake Sullivan on Sunday would not comment on the possibility of any European nations declining to participate in the G20 summit in order to send a message to Russia, saying that was not a move he had heard about directly from his European counterparts.?
Sullivan added that Russian President Vladimir Putin virtually participating in the G20 was a “hypothetical” at this point, so he couldn’t comment on what, if any reaction, US President Joe Biden would have if that were to come to fruition.?
Sullivan said US officials did not have any substantive conversations with?Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at the ASEAN summit just attended by Biden in Cambodia.
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Ukrainian women on the front line struggle to find uniforms that fit. One couple aims to fix that
From CNN's Christiane Amanpour,?Maddie Araujo?and?Christian Streib
Roksolana, left, tries on her new boots while Kseniia Drahanyuk, the co-founder of the Zemlyachki NGO, helps her fill a suitcase with various items.
(Christian Streib/CNN)
Andrii Kolesnyk and Kseniia Drahanyuk both beam with excitement as they crouch over a box.
They are about to unpack Ukraine’s first ever military uniform for pregnant women, which they recently commissioned after a pregnant sniper got in touch.
The young couple, both TV journalists before the war started, are now fully dedicated to their independent NGO, “Zemlyachki,” or “Compatriots,” which procures vital items for?women in the armed forces.
The initiative started when Andrii’s sister was sent to the front on Feb. 24, the day?Russia invaded Ukraine.
It soon became clear that servicewomen needed a lot more than uniforms. Everything from smaller boots to lighter plates for bulletproof vests to hygiene products is in demand.
So, the couple turned to private company donations, charity funds and crowdfunding to purchase goods independently of the military. Some customized gear such as women’s fatigues is produced under their own brand by a factory in Kharkiv in the country’s east — including the new pregnancy uniform.