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Event title

Ukraine - Day 393 of the Invasion of Ukraine: At Least 14 Dead after Russian Strikes on Civillian Infrastructure

Event category

Social incident - War

Event date (UTC)

2023-03-23 08:55:59

Last update (UTC)

2024-04-24 19:53:57

Severity

High

Latitude

49.026898

Longitude

31.374926

Area range

Country wide event

Address/Affected area(s)

Ukraine

Day 393 of the invasion of Ukraine. Summary of key events in the last 24 hours:

Ukraine will respond to all Russian attacks, Zelensky said
14 killed in Russian drone and missile attack in Ukraine
Bartholomew: The Russian Church shares the blame for the crimes in Ukraine
Russia will deploy additional missile systems on the Kuril Islands
Lavrov on the supply of depleted uranium munitions: A step towards a serious escalation in Ukraine
Blinken: China has not "crossed the line" on military aid to Russia


Ukraine will respond to all Russian attacks, Zelensky said

Ukraine will respond to all Russian attacks, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said last night, quoted by AFP.

"We will respond with certainty to every strike of the occupiers against our cities. Today's Russian strikes on Zaporizhzhia, the night attack on the Kyiv region. All Russian strikes will receive a military, political and legal response," Zelensky said in his evening address.

Yesterday, he visited the front line near the city of Bakhmut and met with Ukrainian military personnel.

14 killed in Russian drone and missile attack in Ukraine

Russian forces attacked Ukrainian cities in addition to missiles and Iranian drones. Ukrainian air defense has shot down 16 out of a total of 21 drones. At least 14 people were killed in the air strikes. Ukraine, for its part, attacked Sevastopol with drones.

Two dormitories and a vocational high school in Kyiv region are among the sites hit by Russian drone attacks. The strikes took place in the city of Rzhyshchiv, 80 kilometers from Kyiv. At least four people died in the attack there.

"The drones started attacking around 3 a.m. in the morning. Three people died on the spot. Most people went down to the basement, we evacuated 200 people from there. Unfortunately, some remained on the upper floors. One of them, the fourth victim, is a 40-year-old driver , buried by debris on the fifth floor," said Irina Pryanishnikova, a spokeswoman for the Kyiv Oblast police.Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the attack was an example of Moscow's lack of interest in restoring peace.

A Russian missile hit an apartment block in Zaporizhzhia. At least one person died and 33 were injured.

"Everything started to fall and I had to go down somehow. I went through the ruins. We no longer have an apartment, we have no balcony, nothing," said Artem Meiboroda from Zaporizhzhia.Ukraine responded with an over-the-air drone strike against Sevastopol, on the annexed Crimean peninsula. The city's Moscow-appointed administration said the attack had been repelled. Ferries in the area have been suspended.

Volodymyr Zelensky was once again at the frontline positions of Ukrainian soldiers in the Bakhmut region, where the bloodiest and longest battles since the beginning of the Russian invasion have been taking place.

"I have the honor to thank you, to shake your hands. Thank you for protecting our country," Zelensky said.

Zelensky awarded the servicemen with orders. His meeting with the defenders comes as Russian mercenaries from Wagner claim to have taken over 70% of Bakhmut.

Bartholomew: The Russian Church shares the blame for the crimes in Ukraine

The spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians said that the influential Russian Orthodox Church shares responsibility for the conflict in Ukraine, but added that he is ready to help with the post-war "spiritual recovery" of Russia, Reuters reported, quoted by BTA.

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew has rebuked Russian Patriarch Kirill, whose loud blessing of Moscow's invasion of Ukraine has divided Orthodoxy around the world.

Bartholomew, who angered Moscow in 2019 by recognizing the newly proclaimed Orthodox Church of Ukraine, said Russian authorities were using the church as a "tool for their strategic goals".

"Church and state in Russia have cooperated in criminal aggression and share responsibility for subsequent crimes, such as the shocking abductions of Ukrainian children. Our interfaith dialogue must focus on ways to counter and neutralize the capacity of the leadership of the Moscow Patriarchate to undermine our unity and through theology to legitimize criminal behavior," Bartholomew said at a conference organized by the Lithuanian parliament.

The Russian Orthodox Church did not immediately comment on the words of the Ecumenical Patriarch, according to Reuters.

The Ecumenical Patriarch is based in Istanbul and is considered "first among equals" in the Orthodox Church, which has about 260 followers worldwide, of which about 100 million are in Russia.

"The Mother Church in Constantinople is ready to help her children in Ukraine and Russia again, as she has done many times in the past. It is our common Christian duty to use the power of dialogue to bring our Russian brothers and sisters back to our shared values", he added, stressing the need for "spiritual recovery" in both Russia and Ukraine.

Russia will deploy additional missile systems on the Kuril Islands

Paramushir, one of the Kuril Islands in the North Pacific Ocean, is home to a unit of its Bastion coastal defense missile systems, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said the move was part of a broader strengthening of Russian defenses in the vast Far Eastern regions. It is being held in response to what he calls US efforts to "contain" Russia and China.

Shoigu spoke to Russia's top military command a day after President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping cemented their "limitless" partnership at Kremlin talks with agreements to deepen energy and military cooperation.

"To deter Russia and China, the United States is significantly increasing its military presence in the Asia-Pacific region, strengthening its political and military ties with its allies, while continuing to create a new American security architecture in the region," Shoigu said in a video on his address, published by the Russian Ministry of Defense.

He declared that the Bastion system would strengthen Russian security around the Kuril island chain.

Japan, a close US ally, claims the four southern Kuril Islands, which were seized by Soviet forces at the end of World War II, but not Paramushir, one of the northern islands.

The issue still prevents Moscow and Tokyo from signing a peace treaty that would formally end hostilities.

Modernization

Over the past year, Russian armed forces in the eastern part of the country have received about 400 units of advanced military equipment, including SU-57 fighter jets and anti-aircraft missile systems, according to Shoigu.

"The military potential of the Eastern Military District has greatly increased," he assured.

According to the statement, the modernization of Moscow's air defense system will be completed this year. Russian officials have blamed Kyiv for a series of drone strikes deep inside Russian territory since the start of the military campaign.

Regarding the war in Ukraine, Shoigu claimed that Russian aerospace forces have so far destroyed more than 20,000 Ukrainian military sites since the start of what Moscow calls its "special military operation".

Lavrov on the supply of depleted uranium munitions: A step towards a serious escalation in Ukraine

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov sharply criticized Britain's intention to supply Ukraine with depleted uranium munitions, and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced a successful repulse of a Ukrainian drone attack on Sevastopol.

Sergey Lavrov defined London's decision as a step towards a serious increase in escalation in Ukraine. Asked how Russia would respond, he stated:

"As for our reaction to such deliveries, we will of course take that into account in our actions. We have a commitment to the international norms of waging war, we have our military doctrine and as the president (Vladimir Putin) and the minister of defense (Sergei Shoigu), we will be forced to consider that our British colleagues are raising this escalation to a new, very serious level".

Lavrov confirmed that there is currently no international convention banning the use of depleted uranium projectiles and added.

"It is significant that in the absence of a convention, the UN General Assembly regularly considers resolutions calling for the production and use of depleted uranium munitions. Great Britain, the United States and France always vote against such resolutions," noted the Russian first diplomat.

Meanwhile, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu reported that a Ukrainian drone attack against the port of Sevastopol had been successfully repelled. He emphasized that two of the three drones were shot down by female servicemen.

In addition, Shoigu awarded orders for courage and heroism to the two fighter pilots who neutralized an American reconnaissance drone over the Black Sea last week.

Blinken: China has not "crossed the line" on military aid to Russia

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said China has not yet provided significant military aid to Russia, although diplomatic support from Beijing is increasing, AFP reported.

"Until today, they have not crossed that line," Blinken said in response to a Senate committee question on whether China was providing "lethal aid" to Russia.

For weeks, the US has warned publicly that China is considering Russian requests for weapons to fight in Ukraine, with some reports pointing to limited supplies from Chinese companies to Moscow.

This week, President Xi Jinping paid a visit to Moscow during which he pushed a Chinese proposal for a ceasefire in the war, a call met with skepticism by Washington, which fears Russia will use the pause to regroup its shattered forces on the ground.

"I think their diplomatic support, political support and to some extent material support for Russia is certainly against our interests in ending this war," Blinken said of China.

According to him, the United States will encourage other countries to extradite Russian President Vladimir Putin if he visits them following the arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

"I think that anyone who is a party to a lawsuit and has obligations should fulfill them," Blinken said.

He was answering questions from Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who has insisted the United States should arrest Putin if he ever steps foot on American soil.

The US is not a member of the court at The Hague, and the previous Republican administration of Donald Trump imposed sanctions on the then-ICC prosecutor for investigating US military actions in Afghanistan.

Blinken denied the possibility of Putin traveling to the United States. Russia is part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, which holds its summit in November in San Francisco, but Putin is unlikely to be invited.

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