19 min read

Governor of Donetsk urges 350,000 civilians to evacuate as Russian troops advance Latest 8-hour News

Governor of Donetsk urges 350,000 civilians to evacuate as Russian troops advance Latest 8-hour News

The Guardian - Maya Yang (now); Léonie Chao-Fong, Martin Belam and Samantha Lock (earlier) Tue 5 Jul 2022 22.03 BS

The Governor of Donetsk urges 350,000 civilians to evacuate

  • 3h ago19.25

Pavlo Kyrylenko says getting the 350,000 people remaining in Donetsk out is necessary to save lives and to enable the Ukrainian army to better defend towns

A day after Russian President Vladimir Putin declared victory in seizing an eastern Ukraine province essential to his wartime aims, his troops escalated their offensive in the neighboring province Tuesday, prompting the governor to urge more than a quarter-million residents to evacuate.

Associated Press reports:

Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko said that getting the 350,000 people remaining in Donetsk province out is necessary to save lives and to enable the Ukrainian army to better defend towns from the Russian advance.

“The destiny of the whole country will be decided by the Donetsk region,” Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko told reporters in Kramatorsk, the province’s administrative center and home to the Ukrainian military’s regional headquarters.

“Once there are fewer people, we will be able to concentrate more on our enemy and perform our main tasks,” Kyrylenko said.

Another Donetsk city in the path of Moscow’s offensive came under sustained bombardment Tuesday.

Mayor Vadim Lyakh said on Facebook that “massive shelling” pummeled Sloviansk, which had a population of about 107,000 before Russia invaded Ukraine more than four months ago. The mayor, who urged residents hours earlier to evacuate, advised them to take cover in shelters.

At least one person was killed and another seven wounded Tuesday, Lyakh said. He said the city’s central market and several districts came under attack, adding that authorities were assessing the extent of the damage.

  • Updated at 19.31 BST
  • 30m ago22.03

Teachers from Russia have arrived at the Polonaricy district of Zaporizhzhia region that is occupied by Russia.

According to Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense, children will go to kindergartens and schools to study under a Russian curriculum.

“In case of parental disagreement, the occupation administration threatens to remove children from their families and send them to boarding schools. The parents themselves are promised to be punished by administrative measures - men will be sent to the “army of the DPR [Donetsk People’s Republic]”, women will be sent to communal work related to cleaning the city,” the defense ministry reports.

  • 1h ago21.38

Satellite images have revealed that a large part of the Russian land force has been redeployed from the Alakurtti military base in Russia near the Finnish border, Euromaidan reports.

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Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has demanded an explanation from the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces regarding conscripts’ travel restrictions, the Kyiv Independent reports.

“I ask the General Staff not to make similar decisions without me in the future,” he said.

Only July 5, the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces said that individuals subject to military service, conscripts, and reservists would have to obtain permission from the local military registration and enlistment office in order to leave their place of residence.

  • 2h ago20.19

The UN rights chief condemned Russia’s “senseless war” in Ukraine on Tuesday while demanding an end to “unbearable” civilian suffering as a result of the Russian invasion.

“As we enter the fifth month of hostilities, the unbearable toll of the conflict in Ukraine continues to mount,” Michelle Bachelet, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said in her final appearance before the UN Human Rights Council.

“In the name of every victim of this senseless war, the killings, the torture, the arbitrary detentions must stop.”

Bachelet presented a report on Ukraine’s human rights situation since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. in the context of Russia’s attack, from the February 24 invasion to May 15.

“The high numbers of civilian casualties and the extent of destruction caused to civilian infrastructure continue to raise significant concerns that attacks conducted by Russian armed forces are not complying with international humanitarian law,” Bachelet said.

“While on a much lower scale, it also appears likely that Ukrainian armed forces did not fully comply with IHL in eastern parts of the country.”

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet attends a session of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, February 27, 2020.
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet attends a session of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, February 27, 2020. Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters
  • 3h ago19.25

The Governor of Donetsk urges 350,000 civilians to evacuate

A day after Russian President Vladimir Putin declared victory in seizing an eastern Ukraine province essential to his wartime aims, his troops escalated their offensive in the neighboring province Tuesday, prompting the governor to urge more than a quarter-million residents to evacuate.

Associated Press reports:

Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko said that getting the 350,000 people remaining in Donetsk province out is necessary to save lives and to enable the Ukrainian army to better defend towns from the Russian advance.

“The destiny of the whole country will be decided by the Donetsk region,” Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko told reporters in Kramatorsk, the province’s administrative center and home to the Ukrainian military’s regional headquarters.

“Once there are fewer people, we will be able to concentrate more on our enemy and perform our main tasks,” Kyrylenko said.

Another Donetsk city in the path of Moscow’s offensive came under sustained bombardment Tuesday.

Mayor Vadim Lyakh said on Facebook that “massive shelling” pummeled Sloviansk, which had a population of about 107,000 before Russia invaded Ukraine more than four months ago. The mayor, who urged residents hours earlier to evacuate, advised them to take cover in shelters.

At least one person was killed and another seven wounded Tuesday, Lyakh said. He said the city’s central market and several districts came under attack, adding that authorities were assessing the extent of the damage.

  • Updated at 19.31 BST
  • 4h ago18.59

Summary

It’s 9 pm in Kyiv. Here’s where we stand:

  • At least two people were killed and seven injured after Russian forces struck a market and a residential area in the eastern Ukrainian city of Sloviansk, local authorities said. The mayor of Sloviansk called on its remaining residents to evacuate as the Russian invaders stepped up their shelling of the frontline Ukrainian city. Ukraine said on Monday it had retreated from Lysychansk, prompting speculation that Russia would now focus on Sloviansk and Kramatorsk to the south, the two main cities in Donetsk held by Kyiv.
  • Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, has declared victory in the eastern Ukrainian region of Luhansk. On Monday, Russia’s defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, told Putin that “the operation” in Luhansk was complete. Putin said the military units “that took part in active hostilities and achieved success, victory” in Luhansk “should rest, increase their combat capabilities”.
  • Ukrainian forces have taken up new defensive lines in Donetsk, where they still control major cities and plan to launch counter-offensives in the south of the country. The Luhansk governor, Serhiy Haidai, said the weeks-long battle for Lysychansk had drawn in Russian troops that could have been fighting on other fronts and had given Ukraine’s forces time to build fortifications in the Donetsk region to make it “harder for the Russians there”.
  • Ukrainian forces are set to raise the country’s flag on Snake Island, a strategic and symbolic outpost in the Black Sea that Russian troops retreated from last week after months of heavy bombardment. Ukraine has considered control of the island as a critical step in loosening Moscow’s blockade on its southern ports.
  • Ukrainian forces will be able to fall back to a more readily defendable, straightened front line following Russia’s capture of Lysychansk and control of Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region, according to British intelligence. Russia’s “relatively rapid capture” of Lysychansk has allowed its forces to extend its control across virtually all of the territory of Luhansk, according to the UK Ministry of Defence.
  • Only 3% of Mariupol residents have access to water, according to the Russian-occupied southern Ukrainian city’s mayoral adviser, Petro Andriushchenko. There are no doctors left in the city, he said, leaving more than 100,000 people without healthcare and medication.
  • Russian-backed separatists have seized two foreign-flagged ships in the Russian-occupied port city of Mariupol and claimed they are “state property”. The self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) informed two shipping companies that their vessels were the subject of “forcible appropriation of movable property with forced conversion into state property”.
  • A Russian-flagged ship carrying thousands of tonnes of grain is being held and investigated by Turkish authorities over claims its cargo was stolen from Ukraine. Turkish customs officials acted after Kyiv claimed the Zhibek Zholy was illegally transporting 7,000 tonnes of grain out of Russian-occupied Berdiansk, a Ukrainian port in the southeast of the country.
  • The head of the Russian-imposed administration of the occupied Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine, Yevgeny Balitsky, has said the region plans to sell Ukraine’s grain to the Middle East. The main countries involved in the deal were Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. Ukraine has repeatedly accused Russia of stealing grain, a charge that Moscow has denied.
  • Russia is planning to launch a railway link between the Rostov region and the areas of Donetsk and Luhansk it occupies in eastern, Russian state media reported. Building transport links has also been a priority for the Russian occupiers between Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, and the areas of Kherson which it occupies.
  • The 30 Nato member countries have signed accession protocols for Finland and Sweden, sending the membership bids of the two Nordic countries to allied parliaments for approval. Nato’s secretary-general, Jens Stoltenberg, urged allies to swiftly ratify and assured the two countries of the alliance’s support in the meantime.
  • The UN has documented 270 cases of “arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance” of civilians in parts of Ukraine held by Russian and Russian-backed forces, according to the UN’s human rights chief, Michelle Bachelet. In a speech at the same session at the UN’s human rights council, Ukraine’s deputy foreign minister, Emine Dzhaparova accused Russia of kidnappings on a “massive” scale.
  • 4h ago18.26

Britain has added two Russian individuals to its sanctions list – Denis Gafner and Valeriya Kalabayeva.

The sanctions list has been updated to add Gafner and Kalabayeva, both of whom the UK government said were involved in spreading disinformation and promoting Russian actions in Ukraine.

  • 4h ago18.10

The UN has documented 270 cases of “arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance” of civilians in parts of Ukraine held by Russian and Russian-backed forces, according to the UN’s human rights chief, Michelle Bachelet.

The findings were based on information gained from field visits and interviews conducted with more than 500 victims and witnesses of human rights violations, as well as other sources of data, Bachelet told the UN’s human rights council in an update on the situation in Ukraine.

In a speech at the same session, Ukraine’s deputy foreign minister, Emine Dzhaparova accused Russia of kidnappings on a “massive” scale.

Russia has denied deliberately attacking civilians since the start of the war.

  • 5h ago17.31

At least two people were killed during multiple Russian strikes on Sloviansk, say officials

At least two people were killed and seven injured after Russian forces struck a market and a residential area in the eastern Ukrainian city of Sloviansk, local authorities said.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of the Donetsk region, wrote on Telegram:

Once again the Russians are intentionally targeting places where civilians assemble. This is terrorism pure and simple.

Earlier, police said an attack on a market in Sloviansk had left one woman dead and three people wounded.

  • Updated at 17.37 BST
  • 5h ago17.20
A Ukrainian serviceman looks at the rubble of a school that was destroyed some days ago during a missile strike in the outskirts of Kharkiv.
A Ukrainian serviceman looks at the rubble of a school that was destroyed some days ago during a missile strike in the outskirts of Kharkiv. Photograph: Andrii Marienko/AP

A shelling hole near a college following a Russian rocket hit a residential area of Kharkiv, Ukraine.
A shelling hole near a college following a Russian rocket hit a residential area of Kharkiv, Ukraine. Photograph: Sergey Kozlov/EPA
  • 6h ago16.57

Russian-backed separatists have seized two foreign-flagged ships in the Russian-occupied port city of Mariupol and claimed they are “state property”, Reuters reports.

The self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), a pro-Russia quasi-state, informed two shipping companies that their vessels were the subject of “forcible appropriation of movable property with forced conversion into state property”, without any compensation to the owners.

The owner of the Liberia-flagged Smarta bulk vessel, one of the two vessels taken, said it was informed of the seizure by email on 30 June, calling it unlawful and “against all norms of international law”.

It said the ship was hit by shelling on 20 March and that its 19-member crew had been forcibly taken by the Russian military to Donetsk and released a month later.

The seizure of Smarta is “in breach of fundamental human rights in so far as property rights are concerned” and a “serious threat to shipping and to maritime safety”, the company said in a statement.

The other vessel seized was the Panama-flagged Blue Star I, the news agency reports.

A spokesperson with the UN’s shipping agency (IMO) said it was “aware of at least one ship departing from Mariupol, however little else has changed”. More than 80 foreign-flagged ships remain stuck in Ukrainian ports, IMO data showed.

  • 6h ago16.28
Lorenzo Tondo

Lorenzo Tondo

It is remote, inhospitable, windswept, and largely uninhabited, but it has been fought over for centuries. Legend has it that the rocky outcrop in the Black Sea was created by the sea god Poseidon as a home for the greatest of all Greek warriors: Achilles. And just like the demigod, the small, cross-shaped island has seen its share of wars.

Today, the tiny piece of land is known as Snake Island (Zmiinyi Island), and on Monday Ukrainian forces raised the country’s flag there once again after seizing the island back from Russian occupiers, driven away after months of heavy bombardment.

Smoke rises from Snake Island in this satellite image taken on 29 June.
Smoke rises from Snake Island in this satellite image taken on 29 June. Photograph: Planet Labs PBC/Reuters

The fight for Snake Island has strategic value, but most importantly it is of national significance for all Ukrainians, especially in their country’s darkest hour, with their back to the wall in Donbas. However, in the tiny fishing village of Vylkove, on the Ukrainian side of the Danube River and the closest inhabited area to the Island, the battle to regain control over this outcrop has upended the lives of its inhabitants.

The intense fighting on the island between Russian and Ukrainian forces, which began on the first day of the war, has shaken the homes of villagers, in some cases opening cracks in their walls. In Vylkove, 31 miles from Snake Island, shock waves from blasts on the open sea, with nothing to absorb them, have reached the coastline.

Yuri Suslov, 43, has been fishing the waters of the Black Sea since he was a boy. “This is a very quiet town, so when they start bombing Snake Island it was very loud around here,” he said.

Girls enjoy a swim in one of the many channels of Vylkove.
Girls enjoy a swim in one of the many channels of Vylkove. Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

Yuri knows Vylkove’s channels like the back of his hand. On his boat, he navigates the narrow waterways that in the summer months resemble those of Vietnam or Cambodia. Reeds and pile dwellings line the edge of the river as children play in the water. Every family in Vylkove has a boat, the city’s principal means of transportation.

Today, Vylkove’s waterways that flow to the mouth of the Danube, giving access to the Black Sea in the direction of Snake Island, are blocked by military checkpoints, with the coast patrolled day and night.

“It’s a scary situation, but I don’t think the Russians are going to attack us,” said Yuri. “You know why? Because we are too close to Romania, and if they accidentally hit Romania, it will be Nato war.’’

Read the full story by Lorenzo Tondo: How Ukraine’s ‘Venice’ has borne the brunt of the fight for Snake IslandHow Ukraine’s ‘Venice’ has borne the brunt of the fight for Snake IslandRead more

  • 6h ago16.06

The UN’s food agency said it had received $17m (£14m) from Japan to address grain storage problems in Ukraine and increase its exports.

The United Nations’ food and agriculture organization (FAO) said the funds would help Ukraine store produce from the July-August harvest in plastic sleeves and modular storage containers.

Ukraine’s farmers are “feeding themselves and millions more people around the world”, the head of the FAO’s emergencies and resilience office, Rein Paulsen, said. He added:

Ensuring they can continue production, safely store and access alternative markets is vital to strengthen food security within Ukraine and ensure other import-dependent countries have sufficient supply of grain at a manageable cost.

Ukraine, the world’s fourth-largest grains exporter, is trying to export its crop via road, river, and rail since its Black Sea ports stopped operating after Russian troops invaded the country.

  • Updated at 16.14 BST
  • 7h ago15.59

Today so far...

It’s 6 pm in Kyiv. Here’s where we stand:

  • The mayor of Sloviansk has called on its remaining residents to evacuate as the Russian invaders stepped up their shelling of the frontline Ukrainian city. Ukraine said on Monday it had retreated from Lysychansk, prompting speculation that Russia would now focus on Sloviansk and Kramatorsk to the south, the two main cities in Donetsk held by Kyiv.
  • Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, has declared victory in the eastern Ukrainian region of Luhansk. On Monday, Russia’s defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, told Putin that “the operation” in Luhansk was complete. Putin said the military units “that took part in active hostilities and achieved success, victory” in Luhansk “should rest, increase their combat capabilities”.
  • Ukrainian forces have taken up new defensive lines in Donetsk, where they still control major cities and plan to launch counter-offensives in the south of the country. The Luhansk governor, Serhiy Haidai, said the weeks-long battle for Lysychansk had drawn in Russian troops that could have been fighting on other fronts and had given Ukraine’s forces time to build fortifications in the Donetsk region to make it “harder for the Russians there”.
  • Ukrainian forces are set to raise the country’s flag on Snake Island, a strategic and symbolic outpost in the Black Sea that Russian troops retreated from last week after months of heavy bombardment. Ukraine has considered control of the island as a critical step in loosening Moscow’s blockade on its southern ports.
  • Ukrainian forces will be able to fall back to a more readily defendable, straightened front line following Russia’s capture of Lysychansk and control of Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region, according to British intelligence. Russia’s “relatively rapid capture” of Lysychansk has allowed its forces to extend its control across virtually all of the territory of Luhansk, according to the UK Ministry of Defence.
  • Only 3% of Mariupol residents have access to water, according to the Russian-occupied southern Ukrainian city’s mayoral adviser, Petro Andriushchenko. There are no doctors left in the city, he said, leaving more than 100,000 people without healthcare and medication.
  • A Russian-flagged ship carrying thousands of tonnes of grain is being held and investigated by Turkish authorities over claims its cargo was stolen from Ukraine. Turkish customs officials acted after Kyiv claimed the Zhibek Zholy was illegally transporting 7,000 tonnes of grain out of Russian-occupied Berdiansk, a Ukrainian port in the southeast of the country.
  • The head of the Russian-imposed administration of the occupied Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine, Yevgeny Balitsky, has said the region plans to sell Ukraine’s grain to the Middle East. The main countries involved in the deal were Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. Ukraine has repeatedly accused Russia of stealing grain, a charge that Moscow has denied.
  • Russia’s defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, has claimed some of the weapons the west is sending to Ukraine are ending up on the black market. Shoigu said some of the weapons were appearing in the Middle East, without providing any details to back up his claim. He also claimed Russian conscripts are not being sent to fight in Moscow’s “special military operation” in Ukraine.
  • Russia is planning to launch a railway link between the Rostov region and the areas of Donetsk and Luhansk it occupies in eastern, Russian state media reported. Building transport links has also been a priority for the Russian occupiers between Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, and the areas of Kherson which it occupies.
  • Russia’s parliament has approved the first stage of laws that would allow the country to move to a war economy. The two bills would authorize the government to oblige businesses to supply the military with goods and their employees to work overtime to support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
  • The 30 Nato member countries have signed accession protocols for Finland and Sweden, sending the membership bids of the two Nordic countries to allied parliaments for approval. Nato’s secretary-general, Jens Stoltenberg, urged allies to swiftly ratify and assured the two countries of the alliance’s support in the meantime.
  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, held further talks with Britain’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, about the latest situation in Ukraine. A Downing Street spokesperson said Johnson told Zelenskiy that he believed Kyiv’s military could retake territory recently captured by Russian force.
  • A British citizen who has been sentenced to death by a Russian proxy court in eastern Ukraine has launched an appeal against the verdict. Aiden Aslin, 28, a British-Ukrainian former care worker from Nottinghamshire who was a Ukrainian marine, was captured by Russian forces in the besieged city of Mariupol in April.

Hello, it’s Léonie Chao-Fong still with you with all the latest developments from the war in Ukraine. I’m on Twitter or you can email me.

  • Updated at 16.17 BST
  • 7h ago15.34
Patrick Wintour

Patrick Wintour

Ukrainian plans to seize as much as $500bn (£418bn) in frozen Russian assets to fund the country’s recovery have met firm resistance from Switzerland, the hosts of an international two-day Ukraine recovery conference.

The Swiss president, Ignazio Cassis, pushed back on the plan, saying protection of property rights was fundamental in a liberal democracy. He underlined at a closing press conference the serious qualms of some leaders that proposals to confiscate Russian assets will set a dangerous precedent and need specific legal justification.

“The right of ownership, the right of property is a fundamental right, a human right,” he said in Lugano, adding that such rights could be violated, as they had during the pandemic, but only so long as there was a legal basis.

He added: “You have to ensure the citizens are protected against the power of the state. This is what we call liberal democracies.”

Switzerland is one of many countries with tight banking secrecy laws that is not enthusiastic about seizing private property for political purposes.

The idea has won the endorsement, in principle, of the UK foreign secretary, Liz Truss.

Read the full article by Patrick Wintour: Switzerland resists Ukrainian plan to seize frozen Russian assetsSwitzerland resists Ukrainian plan to seize frozen Russian assets.

  • 7h ago15.19

Russia’s defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, has claimed some of the weapons the west is sending to Ukraine are ending up on the black market.

Shoigu said Ukraine had received more than 28,000 tonnes of military cargo so far, and some of the weapons were appearing in the Middle East. He did not provide any details to back up his claim.

Speaking in televised remarks, Shoigu said:

According to information at our disposal, some of the foreign weapons supplied by the west to Ukraine are spreading across the Middle Eastern region and are also ending up on the black market.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu in Moscow on Tuesday.
Russian defence minister Sergei Shoigu in Moscow on Tuesday. Photograph: Russian Defence Ministry/Reuters
  • Updated at 15.32 BST
  • 8h ago15.04

Sloviansk mayor urges residents to flee the city

The mayor of Sloviansk has called on its remaining residents to evacuate as the Russian invaders stepped up their shelling of the frontline Ukrainian city following the capture of Lysychansk on Sunday, Dan Sabbagh and Lorenzo Tondo report.

Vadim Lyakh said 40 houses had been shelled on Monday, a day after six people were killed and 20 injured in missile attacks aimed at one of the main population centers in the Donbas still outside Russian control.

“It’s important to evacuate as many people as possible,” Lyakh said in an interview with Reuters, noting that 144 people had been evacuated on Tuesday, including 20 children, from a city now deemed at risk from Russian bombardment.

A resident walks among debris next to a destroyed house in Sloviansk on 4 July.
A resident walks among debris next to a destroyed house in Sloviansk on 4 July. Photograph: Genya Savilov/AFP/Getty Images

Russia had concentrated its forces to capture the cities of Lysychansk and Sievierodonetsk between May and July, the last two cities in Luhansk province it did not control, through an unrelenting and often untargeted artillery barrage.

Ukraine said on Monday it had retreated from Lysychansk, prompting speculation that Russia would now focus on Sloviansk and Kramatorsk to the south, the two main cities in Donetsk held by Kyiv. The provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk make up Ukraine’s industrial Donbas region.

Sloviansk had a population of 107,000 and Kramatorsk 210,000 before the war. Despite the threat of a Russian attack, thousands had remained, reluctant to abandon their homes despite being just a few miles from the frontlines.

It is unclear if Moscow will immediately attempt to seize Sloviansk. The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, said on Monday that Russian troops who fought in Luhansk needed to “take some rest and beef up their combat capability”.Sloviansk mayor urges residents to flee the city as Russia steps up shellingRead more

  • Updated at 15.34 BST
  • 8h ago14.47

Here are some of the latest images to be sent to us from Ukraine over the newswires.

Ihor (left) and Olga (right) stand on the remains of their house in Kukhari village, Kyiv region
Ihor (left) and Olga (right) stand on the remains of their house in Kukhari village, Kyiv region. Photograph: Oleg Petrasyuk/EPA

Residents of Donetsk stand in line at a migration service office to receive a passport of a citizen of the Russian Federation, in Donetsk, in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces, eastern Ukraine.
Residents of Donetsk stand in line at a migration service office to receive a passport of a citizen of the Russian Federation, in Donetsk, in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces, eastern Ukraine. Photograph: AP

Smoke rises from the territory of an automotive centre following recent shelling in Donetsk
Smoke rises from the territory of an automotive centre following recent shelling in Donetsk. Photograph: Kazbek Basayev/Reuters

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Editor Commentary:

What everybody must be aware of is that this is not a war to prevent Putin from occupying Ukraine, but an attempt by the evil Khazarian Jews/WEF/NATO to control yet another country in their growing New World Order. They are simply using Ukraine as a battlefield. Their plan is to destroy totally the world's economy and turn the population into slaves. Like the Freemasons, they have also life-threatening rules in their membership, one being REVENGE, 10 times harder than was ever perpetrated on them. Russia in particular, in the past, has expelled the Khazars several times. I have all 7 detailed articles in book format on the Khazarian Jews if anybody is interested in further information. Putin, and earlier also Trump, are the ONLY Presidents who have enough guts to see what they are attempting to do to the world population and have sufficient courage to do something about it.

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WHO and WHAT is behind it all? : >

The bottom line is for the people to regain their original, moral principles, which have intentionally been watered out over the past generations by our press, TV, and other media owned by the Illuminati/Bilderberger Group, corrupting our morals by making misbehavior acceptable to our society. Only in this way shall we conquer this oncoming wave of evil.

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