Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Nadeem Badshah (now) Harry Taylor, Adam Fulton (earlier)

Russia-Ukraine war: more than 100 soldiers returned to Kyiv in prisoner exchange

Freed Ukrainian prisoners following their exchange in an unknown location in Ukraine.
Freed Ukrainian prisoners following their exchange in an unknown location in Ukraine. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Chief of/AFP/Getty Images

A summary of today's developments

  • Ukraine has introduced emergency energy shutdowns in Odesa after a “technological accident” at a high-voltage electricity substation, which has previously been damaged by Russian attacks. Half a million people are without power and officials have warned repairs could take weeks. The government said it would appeal to Turkey for help and ordered the energy ministry’s stocks of high-power generators to be sent to the city.

  • Germany has collected evidence of war crimes in Ukraine, the country’s prosecutor general said in a newspaper interview published on Saturday, adding that he saw a need for a judicial process at international level. He said the amount of evidence was in the “three-digit” range.

  • Pete Reed, a US humanitarian medic, was killed during fighting in the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut when his evacuation vehicle was hit by a missile, according to Global Outreach Doctors, with whom he was working.

  • More than 18.1 million border crossings have taken place out of Ukraine since Russia’s invasion began in February 2022, according to data from the United Nations.

  • The United States attorney general, Merrick Garland, has authorised the country to begin using seized Russian money to aid Ukraine, according to US media. The money would come from assets confiscated from Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev after his April indictment for alleged sanctions evasions, he added.

  • A prisoner exchange has seen the bodies of killed British volunteers Christopher Parry and Andrew Bagshaw returned by Russian troops. They were both killed in Ukraine last month. A total of 116 Ukrainian troops have come home after being captured, with 63 being sent back to Russia.

  • Portugal has become the latest country to say it will send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, prime minister António Costa said on Saturday. An inventory has been done of its stocks, with Lisbon asking Germany for parts to help repair them so they can be deployed to Ukraine.

  • The number of Russian soldiers around the southern city of Mariupol has increased by about 10,000 to 15,000, according to an adviser to the city’s mayor. Petro Andriushchenko wrote on Telegram that it means the total amount of troops is now about 30,000. They are stationed in villages in the district.

  • A World Health Organization report on the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine has said that 17.7 million people have been left in need of assistance and 7.5 million Ukrainian refugees have been displaced across Europe. It has triggered a dispute between the US and Russia, with the Kremlin saying it is politically motivated and Washington has said it needs to be updated, Reuters reports.

  • Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has spoken to UK prime minister Rishi Sunak on Saturday. Zelenskiy said he had thanked Sunak for the training of Ukrainian troops so they will be able to use British Challenger tanks.

Officials have warned repairs could take weeks after the fire at an overloaded electrical substation in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa on Saturday, leaving nearly 500,000 people without power.

The government said it would appeal to Turkey for help and ordered the energy ministry’s stocks of high-power generators to be sent to the city.

The CEO of the state grid operator, Volodymyr Kudrytskyi, said critical equipment that had already been damaged several times by Russian missile strikes burst into flames when it could no longer “withstand the load”.

“(The equipment) has been struck so many times that its state leaves much to be desired,” Kudrytskyi told a briefing.

He added any further Russian missile or drone attacks could make the situation even worse.

“We will do everything we can for the improvement of the power supply situation to take days rather than weeks,” he said.

Ukraine’s ministry of defence has released footage on Twitter of the remains of the Mariupol Drama Theatre.

More than 18.1 million border crossings have taken place out of Ukraine since Russia’s invasion began in February 2022, according to data from the United Nations.

The figure reflects cross-border movements out of the country and not individuals.

Just under 10 million people have crossed back into Ukrainian territory since 24 February last year.

Half a million people are without power following a “significant” accident at an electricity substation in Odessa, southern Ukraine.

Maksym Marchenko, a Ukrainian colonel, wrote on Telegram: “A serious accident occurred at one of the energy facilities of NPC Ukrenergo, which caused a fire.

“Because of this, the Odessa region and the city of Odessa were almost completely de-energized. As of now, almost 500,000 subscribers have no electricity.”

A woman clears gravestones in a shop damaged following a Russian strike in Kherson, Ukraine
A woman clears gravestones in a shop damaged following a Russian strike in Kherson, Ukraine. Photograph: Genya Savilov/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

Mourners carry the coffin of Eduard Lobov, who was killed in the Donetsk region, after a memorial service at the Cathedral of St Alexander, in Kyiv, Ukraine. Lobov, originally from Belarus, had been reportedly fighting with Ukrainian forces since 2015
Mourners carry the coffin of Eduard Lobov, who was killed in the Donetsk region, after a memorial service at the Cathedral of St Alexander, in Kyiv, Ukraine. Lobov, originally from Belarus, had been reportedly fighting with Ukrainian forces since 2015. Photograph: Roman Pilipey/Getty Images

Updated

Summary

As it approaches 6pm in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, here’s a round-up of today’s news from the conflict.

  • Ukraine has introduced emergency energy shutdowns in Odesa after a “technological accident” at a high-voltage electricity substation, which has previously been damaged by Russian attacks. The prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said on his Telegram page: “The situation is complex, the scale of the accident is significant, it is impossible to quickly restore power supply, in particular to critical infrastructure.”

  • Germany has collected evidence of war crimes in Ukraine, the country’s prosecutor general said in a newspaper interview published on Saturday, adding that he saw a need for a judicial process at international level. He said the amount of evidence was in the “three-digit” range.

  • Pete Reed, a US humanitarian medic, was killed during fighting in the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut when his evacuation vehicle was hit by a missile, according to Global Outreach Doctors, with whom he was working.

  • The United States attorney general, Merrick Garland, has authorised the country to begin using seized Russian money to aid Ukraine, according to US media. The money would come from assets confiscated from Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev after his April indictment for alleged sanctions evasions, he added.

  • A prisoner exchange has seen the bodies of killed British volunteers Christopher Parry and Andrew Bagshaw returned by Russian troops. They were both killed in Ukraine last month. A total of 116 Ukrainian troops have come home after being captured, with 63 being sent back to Russia.

  • Portugal has become the latest country to say it will send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, prime minister António Costa said on Saturday. An inventory has been done of its stocks, with Lisbon asking Germany for parts to help repair them so they can be deployed to Ukraine.

  • The number of Russian soldiers around the southern city of Mariupol has increased by about 10,000 to 15,000, according to an adviser to the city’s mayor. Petro Andriushchenko wrote on Telegram that it means the total amount of troops is now about 30,000. They are stationed in villages in the district.

  • A World Health Organization report on the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine has said that 17.7 million people have been left in need of assistance and 7.5 million Ukrainian refugees have been displaced across Europe. It has triggered a dispute between the US and Russia, with the Kremlin saying it is politically motivated and Washington has said it needs to be updated, Reuters reports.

  • Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has spoken to UK prime minister Rishi Sunak on Saturday. Zelenskiy said he had thanked Sunak for the training of Ukrainian troops so they will be able to use British Challenger tanks.

I’m handing over to my colleague Nadeem Badshah, who will be keeping you up to date over the next few hours.

Updated

A World Health Organization report on the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine has said that 17.7 million people have been left in need of assistance and 7.5 million Ukrainian refugees have been displaced across Europe.

It has triggered a dispute between the US and Russia, with the Kremlin saying it is politically motivated and Washington has said it needs to be updated, Reuters reports.

WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus’s report was presented to the organisation’s executive board, on which both Russia and the United States sit.

It covered events in the first nine months of 2022 and classed the situation in Ukraine as one of eight acute global health emergencies.

The report documented more than 14,000 civilian casualties. Of 471 attacks with heavy weapons on healthcare facilities globally, 448 occurred in Ukraine, the WHO report said.

Russia’s representative to the WHO board called it politicised and one-sided and described its references to Ukraine as unfounded accusations.

Moscow has denied targeting civilians in Ukraine since it began its invasion.

Sheba Crocker, the US representative to the UN, called for an updated report to document incidents in Ukraine since September.

“Russia’s attacks … have caused unspeakable harm to civilians and critical infrastructure in Ukraine,” she told the board meeting, according to a statement from her office.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has spoken to UK prime minister Rishi Sunak on Saturday.

Zelenskiy said he had thanked Sunak for the training of Ukrainian troops so they will be able to use British Challenger tanks.

In a statement the No 10 spokesperson said: “The prime minister said he was focused on ensuring the UK’s defensive military equipment reached the frontline as quickly as possible.”

The Ukrainian president also continued to lobby for support that Russia should be banned by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for the Games in Paris next summer.

It has been claimed that at least 230 Ukrainian athletes and coaches have been killed in the war. Latvia has said it would be reluctant to take part in the Games if Russia was there. Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, also raised the issue on Twitter on Saturday.

Updated

If the worst happens, Taras, 23, Vladyslav, 21, and their commander, Olexiy, 39, are well aware that the Ukrainian government will deny any knowledge of them. In western capitals, there is a collective shudder at the very thought of them.

They are members of the Bratstvo battalion, a volunteer group of Ukrainian special forces taking the fight against Vladimir Putin beyond the frontlines of the war in Ukraine, past the occupied areas of their country – and deep into Russia.

Their work ranges from the kidnapping of senior Kremlin officials, to the destruction of key military infrastructure and the downing of enemy aircraft on Russian territory.

It might seem odd for a battalion such as theirs to allow their stories to be told in public. But that is to misunderstand their purpose. In everything they do, there is a single message they want to send. “It is very easy for us to cross the Russian border,” says Vladyslav, the youngest of the three, with a smile.

You can read more of this report here:

Updated

A resident looking out of his building in Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region.
A resident looking out of his building in Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region. Photograph: Marko Đurica/Reuters
Petro Kozlovskyi leaving his building during an evacuation in Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region.
Petro Kozlovskyi leaving his building during an evacuation in Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region. Photograph: Marko Đurica/Reuters

Updated

'Significant accident' at Odesa power substation causes emergency electricity shutdown

Ukraine has introduced emergency energy shutdowns in Odesa after a “technological accident” at a high-voltage electricity substation, which has previously been damaged by Russian attacks.

The prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said on his Telegram page: “The situation is complex, the scale of the accident is significant, it is impossible to quickly restore power supply, in particular to critical infrastructure.”

Outages had been reported earlier on Saturday.

Shmyhal said they were working to revive “critical infrastructure”, especially as Ukraine is in the middle of a cold snap that means heating is crucial. A special council has ordered generators to be brought to the area, and a gas turbine given by the US will be taken to the southern city.

Earlier on Saturday, the Nexta news agency published footage that purports to show the Usatovo substation on fire.

Updated

The bodies of two British volunteers who were killed in Ukraine have been returned by Russia as part of the prisoner swap on Saturday.

The exchange has returned 116 Ukrainian PoWs and sent back 63 Russians.

The bodies of Christopher Parry, 28, and Andrew Bagshaw, 48, have been given back by Vladimir Putin’s forces, the Sun reports.

They had disappeared on 6 January near Soledar, eastern Bakhmut, while trying to evacuate civilians.

Updated

The number of Russian soldiers around the southern city of Mariupol has increased by about 10,000 to 15,000, according to an adviser to the city’s mayor.

Petro Andriushchenko wrote on Telegram that it means the total amount of troops is now about 30,000. They are stationed in villages in the district.

He added that some bomb-damaged areas were being cleared to build new homes.

Updated

Ukrainian author Andrey Kurkov, who wrote Death and the Penguin, has written an opinion piece for the Guardian about hope for Ukrainians amid the blackouts during the war against Russia.

Ukraine has entered 2023 as if going into a dark room where it is impossible to turn on the light. It seems that there are windows, but there is darkness behind them too. We must wait for the dawn or the restoration of the power supply. While there is neither one nor the other, darkness provokes a feeling of deep fatigue.

The Lviv University teacher and well-known Ukrainian poet Galina Kruk has noticed an unsettling pattern in her life – during a blackout, the power banks and batteries that feed her torches and lamps stop working about half an hour before the electricity comes back on. Then there is pitch darkness, which seems even thicker than when the lights first went out – that “early” darkness with which it was still possible to somehow cope.

These half-hour periods of impenetrable darkness, during which a person feels completely helpless, are the most difficult, both psychologically and physically. The time stretches to infinity – space shrinks and becomes terribly cramped. You feel acute hunger and a desire for sleep. Your muscles lose strength and physical movements require energy that is no longer there. For Galina, this state repeats itself every day and already she dreads these half hours without light.

In complete darkness, without additional sources of energy, a person indeed becomes defenceless. You might have a candle, but it gives just enough light to see your fear in the mirror, your inner condition written on your face, welling up in your eyes. After all, electricity allows communication with relatives and friends and the surrounding world in general. It is impossible to communicate with the help of a candle, except to send a signal from the window – “I am alive!”

Updated

Portugal to send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine

Portugal has become the latest country to say it will send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, Prime Minister António Costa said on Saturday.

Costa said Portugal was in talks with Germany to obtain parts needed for the repair of unusable Leopard tanks in Portugal’s armed forces. He did not say how many would be sent.

“We are currently working to be able to dispense some of our tanks,” Costa told Lusa news agency during a trip to the Central African Republic. “I know how many tanks will be [sent to Ukraine] but that will be announced at the appropriate time.”

Costa’s office did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Admiral António Silva Ribeiro, the head of the Portuguese armed forces, said last month Portugal had 37 Leopard 2 tanks but it has been widely reported by local media that most are inoperable.

Updated

116 soldiers returned to Ukraine in prisoner exchange, says Kyiv

The head of Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s office, Andriy Yermak, has said that Ukraine has got 116 soldiers back as part of a prisoner of war swap.

Earlier on Saturday, Russia said it had got 63 PoWs back in an exchange.

Yermak posted a video of soldiers on a bus, along with them posing with flags in the snow outside. He said they were “defenders of Mariupol, Kherson partisans [and] snipers from Bakhmut vicinities”.

Updated

Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev has said that the sending of more arms to Ukraine will only encourage more attacks from Russia.

“All of Ukraine that remains under Kyiv’s rule will burn,” journalist Nadana Fridrikhson quoted him as saying in a written interview with her, Reuters reports.

Fridrikhson asked Medvedev, who as deputy chairman of the security council has become one of Russia’s most hawkish pro-war figures since its invasion of Ukraine, whether the use of longer-range weapons may force Russia to negotiate with Kyiv.

“The result will be just the opposite,” Medvedev replied, in comments that Fridrikhson posted on her Telegram channel.

“Only moral freaks, of which there are enough both in the White House and in the Capitol, can argue like that.”

The Pentagon said on Friday that a new rocket that would double Ukraine’s strike range was included in a $2.175bn US military aid package.

With the first anniversary of the invasion approaching on 24 February, Russian forces have been on the back foot for the last eight months, and do not fully control any of the four Ukrainian provinces that Moscow has unilaterally declared part of Russia.

Asked what would happen if the weapons that Washington has promised Ukraine were to strike Crimea – which Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014 – or deep into Russia, Medvedev said Putin had addressed the matter clearly.

“We don’t set ourselves any limits and, depending on the nature of the threats, we’re ready to use all types of weapons. In accordance with our doctrinal documents, including the fundamentals of nuclear deterrence,” he said. “I can assure you that the answer will be quick, tough and convincing.”

Russia’s nuclear doctrine allows for a nuclear strike after “aggression against the Russian Federation with conventional weapons when the very existence of the state is threatened”.

Updated

Putin more wary of some US presidents than others, says Mike Pompeo

Former US secretary of state Mike Pompeo has said that Vladimir Putin would not have invaded Ukraine if Donald Trump was still president.

In an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Saturday morning, the former senior figure under Trump compared the current buildup of tensions between the US and China to that of the US and Russia before the invasion of Ukraine.

“We know how to deter our adversaries. Frankly, the Trump administration did it. Vladimir Putin did not invade Europe or Ukraine on our watch.

“This is an unprovoked attack on Europe by Vladimir Putin. He is solely responsible for that. But these things don’t happen in a vacuum. Adversaries make decisions about when, Vladimir Putin has always wanted greater Russia. He will go to his grave wanting greater Russia,” he said.

The former head of the CIA is mulling over running to become US president at the next election. He was on Today promoting his new book, Never Give An Inch: Fighting for the America I Love.

He added: “Here’s some facts, Vladimir Putin took a fifth of Ukraine under President Obama in 2014. For four years he didn’t take an inch of Ukraine, he fought along the Donbas, but he didn’t invade. Then when we left he went after it again. That’s indisputable, those are factual statements. You can argue coincidence or luck, but Vladimir Putin didn’t change. His intentions didn’t change. What changed was his perception of risk, and it is different with different leaders.”

Updated

More than 130,000 Russian soldiers have been killed in battle since their invasion, according to Ukrainian statistics.

They say another 720 were killed on Friday, bringing the total to 130,590. Ukrainian forces took out another six armoured personnel vehicles, three tanks and three anti-aircraft systems.

The figures, published by the general staff of the armed forces of Ukraine, have not been independently verified, and Russian statistics differ.

Updated

Another group of Russian prisoners of war have been released, according to news agencies.

A total of 63 were released after negotiations with Ukraine were mediated by the United Arab Emirates, Reuters reports. They include “sensitive category” people, it added.

Updated

US allows seized Russian assets to go to Ukraine – reports

The United States attorney general, Merrick Garland, has authorised the country to begin using seized Russian money to aid Ukraine, according to US media.

Garland’s announcement came during a meeting with the Ukrainian prosecutor general, Andriy Kostin, in Washington, Agence France-Presse reported.

“Today, I am announcing that I have authorised the first-ever transfer of forfeited Russian assets for use in Ukraine,” Garland said, according to CNN.

The money would come from assets confiscated from Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev after his April indictment for alleged sanctions evasions, he added.

The money would go to the state department “to support the people of Ukraine”, CNN reported Garland as saying.

Merrick Garland, second left, with Andriy Kostin in Washington on Friday.
Merrick Garland, second left, with Andriy Kostin in Washington on Friday. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

Kostin welcomed the move, which he said would see $5.4m (£4.5m) of confiscated assets go towards “rebuilding Ukraine”.

“Delighted to see the new legislation aimed at seizing the Russian oligarchs’ illicit assets in action,” Kostin tweeted, along with a picture of himself and Garland during the meeting.

All Ukrainians have, in one way or another, suffered from this war. It’s our obligation to ensure the Ukrainian people receive compensation for all the tremendous damage done.

Russian millionaire Malofeyev is considered one of the main sources of funding for pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.

In April, the US Treasury blacklisted a network of about 40 individuals and entities led by Malofeyev which it alleged were used to facilitate sanctions evasion.

Updated

There has been no let-up in fighting in Bakhmut, the front line of a continuing battle between Ukrainian and Russian forces.

Throughout Friday morning Agence France-Presse journalists heard a steady exchange of small-arms fire and the pounding of mortar shells to and from Russian positions, the agency reported.

Pete Reed, a US humanitarian medic, was killed in the eastern Ukraine city when his evacuation vehicle was hit by a missile, according to Global Outreach Doctors, with whom he was working.

Reed was a former US Marine Corps rifleman who also worked as a paramedic, according to the organisation’s founder, Andrew Lustig.

Several other people were reportedly hurt in the strike.

A local man, Oleksandr Tkachenko, 65, said it was “clear” that the car, which was destroyed, was not a military target.

Residents trying to rescue the occupants had also come under attack, he added.

American medic Pete Reed, who was killed in Bakhmut
American medic Pete Reed, who was killed in Bakhmut. Photograph: Global Outreach Doctors

The international criminal court has launched its own investigation into alleged crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Ukraine days after Russia’s invasion in February, but it does not have jurisdiction to prosecute aggression in Ukraine.

The European Commission chief, Ursula von der Leyen, who is visiting Kyiv, said on Thursday that an international centre for the prosecution of the crime of aggression in Ukraine would be set up in The Hague, Reuters reported.

Moscow rejects the war crimes allegations.

Germany has war crimes evidence in 'three-digit range', says prosecutor

Germany has collected evidence of war crimes in Ukraine, the country’s prosecutor general said in a newspaper interview published on Saturday, adding that he saw a need for a judicial process at international level.

“Currently, for example, we are focusing on the mass killings in Bucha or attacks against Ukrainian civilian infrastructure,” Peter Frank told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

So far, prosecutors had pieces of evidence in the “three-digit range”, he added, without elaborating.

Reuters also reported that Ukraine and its western allies have accused Russian forces of committing atrocities in Bucha, a satellite town of Kyiv, soon after launching their invasion last February. Moscow has denied the charge. Russia has also targeted key infrastructure in Ukraine but denies deliberately targeting civilians.

Germany began collecting evidence in March 2022 to prosecute possible war crimes, including by interviewing Ukrainian refugees and evaluating publicly available information, Frank said, adding that German prosecutors were not yet investigating specific individuals.

We are preparing ourselves for a possible later court case – be it with us in Germany, be it with our foreign partners, be it before an international court.

Peter Frank
Peter Frank: war crimes evidence in ‘three-digit range’. Photograph: Clemens Bilan/AFP/Getty Images

Asked who should be tried, Frank said Russian state leaders and those implementing decisions at the highest military level should be held accountable.

Ukraine is pushing for the creation of a special tribunal to prosecute Russian military and political leaders it holds responsible for starting the war.

Updated

Opening summary

Hello and welcome back to the Guardian’s ongoing live coverage of Russia’s war in Ukraine – this is Adam Fulton.

Germany has collected evidence of war crimes in Ukraine, the German prosecutor general says, and the pieces of evidence are in the “three-digit range”.

Peter Frank told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper that he saw a need for a judicial process at an international level.

“Currently, for example, we are focusing on the mass killings in Bucha or attacks against Ukrainian civilian infrastructure,” he said in an interview published on Saturday.

More on that story soon.

The United States, meanwhile, has announced a new $2.2bn (£1.8bn) military aid package for Ukraine that Washington says includes precision-guided rockets and Hawk air defence firing units. It also includes, for the first time, a rocket-powered ground launched small diameter bomb that is said to double Ukraine’s strike range and enable its military to strike deep behind the frontlines of the war.

In other developments as it turns 9am in Kyiv:

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said Ukraine will continue to fight for Bakhmut as long as it can, vowing that “nobody will give away” the eastern “fortress” city. Speaking at a press conference following a summit in Kyiv with European Union leaders Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel, Ukraine’s president said the country would be able to begin to liberate occupied Donbas if weapons supplies were “quickened, specifically long-range weapons”.

  • EU leaders offered strong support for Ukraine but set “no rigid timelines” for its accession to the bloc. Zelenskiy had hoped the EU would put Ukraine on a rapid track to membership, but western EU member states are concerned that Kyiv’s expectations on speedy membership talks are unrealistic.

  • Air raid sirens twice sounded across Ukraine on Friday as Zelenskiy hosted the EU leaders in Kyiv. The first air alert in Kyiv was on Friday morning. The second, hours later, followed a joint news conference involving Zelenskiy, von der Leyen and Charles Michel. There were no immediate reports of any Russian airstrikes on Kyiv throughout the day.

  • EU member countries have agreed on a European Commission proposal to set price caps on Russian oil products, the Swedish presidency of the EU said. Ambassadors of the 27 EU states agreed at a meeting on Friday to impose a $100-a-barrel cap on premium products such as diesel and a $45 cap on low-end products, according to diplomats. The price cap comes into effect on Sunday, as does the EU’s ban on Russian oil product imports.

  • The EU has promised that a tenth package of sanctions against Russia will be in place by 24 February, the first anniversary of the war. The EC president, Ursula von der Leyen, said the package would cover trade worth €10bn (£8.9bn/$10.8bn) and “hit the trade and technology that supports [Russia’s] war against Ukraine”.

  • An American medic has been killed while working on the frontlines in Ukraine, just weeks after arriving in the country. Pete Reed, 34, was killed on Thursday while he was helping evacuate civilians when his vehicle was reportedly hit by a missile in Bakhmut.

A woman walks on a destroyed bridge in Bakhmut
A woman walks on a destroyed bridge in Bakhmut. Photograph: Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images
  • France and Italy have finalised technical talks for the joint delivery of the Samp/T air defence system to Ukraine this spring, the French defence ministry has announced. It comes after Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, said on Thursday that the system would be operational in Ukraine “within seven to eight weeks”. The system can track dozens of targets and intercept 10 at once. It is the only European-made system that can intercept ballistic missiles.

  • The EU will launch a humanitarian de-mining programme in Ukraine worth €25m, the bloc’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, has confirmed, saying de-mining was “crucial to save the lives of civilian population”.

  • New tanks supplied by Nato allies will serve as an “iron fist” in a counteroffensive by Kyiv to break through Russian defensive lines, Ukraine’s defence minister, Oleksii Reznikov, has said. Western supplies of 155-mm artillery would be vital for Ukraine to deter Russian attacks in the south and in the east, Reznikov said at a joint news conference with his Polish counterpart, Mariusz Błaszczak.

  • Germany has approved the export of older Leopard 1 battle tanks, which would add to the raft of fighting vehicles Berlin promised last week. A spokesperson said Olaf Scholz’s government had granted an export licence for the German-made tanks first produced in the 1960s and replaced within Germany’s own military by Leopard 2 tanks in 2003.

Updated

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.