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Zelensky sends strict WARNING to civilians this weekend ahead of Putin’s planned Victory Day

PRESIDENT Zelensky has sent a strict warning to all civilians this weekend ahead of Russia’s planned Victory Day celebrations.

Ukrainian officials have warned that Russian forces may escalate missile and air strikes over the weekend.

In his late-night address, President Volodymyr Zelensky called on citizens to “strictly follow the public order and curfew regulations” in their communities.

Zelensky said: “I ask all our citizens – especially these days – not to ignore the air raid sirens,” he said. “Please, this is your life, the life of your children.”

He added that residents are banned from visiting forests in formerly occupied territory because “a great threat of mines and tripwire mines left after the Russian military remains there”.

“Be sure to comply with the ban,” Zelensky reminded Ukrainians.

The news comes as, Vladimir Putin’s Russian forces have been accused of violating a ceasefire at the Azovstal steel works – killing one Ukrainian fighter and wounding six others.

Mariupol authorities have also accused Russian troops of firing at a car involved in the evacuation efforts.

Mariupol city council said in an online post: “During the ceasefire on the territory of the Azovstal plant a car was hit by Russians using an anti-tank guided weapon. This car was moving towards civilians in order to evacuate them from the plant”.

Follow our Russia-Ukraine live blog below for up-to-the-minute updates…

  • Afternoon, Milica Cosic logging on. I’ll be bringing you the latest news and updates until 10pm tonight.

  • Artworks go back up in Lviv

    Artworks from Lviv’s National Gallery are going back up on display in key buildings around the western Ukraine city.

    Many of the artworks were removed for safekeeping at the outbreak of the Russian invasion.

    Gallery director Taras Voznyak told the New York Times putting up the work was an act of resistance.

    “Putin now has the goal of turning Ukrainians into nobody, into nothing,” he says.

    “In order to show that we are alive, we have opened several branches,” he adds.

  • ‘Violation of rights in Ukraine’

    The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights, Dunja Mijatovic, has described the extent and gravity of “violations of rights and international humanitarian law” by Russian forces in Ukraine as “staggering”.

    Dunja was speaking at the end of a four-day trip to Kyiv and its surrounding region.

    She highlighted mounting evidence of arbitrary killings, torture, enforced disappearances, and sexual violence by Russian soldiers.

  • Harrowing moment grieving dad shows his son’s blood to captured Russian soldier

    THIS is the harrowing moment an utterly broken dad shows the blood of his slaughtered son to one of Putin’s evil butchers.

    Vitalii Seleveni thrust his bloodstained hands in the face of a captured Russian soldier to show him all that is left of 15-year-old Dennis who was killed by a Russian shell in Kharkiv, Ukraine.

    Zelensky sends strict WARNING to civilians this weekend ahead of Putin's planned Victory Day
  • Putin’s fighter jets form sickening ‘Z’ symbol as troops prepare for huge parade

    VLADIMIR Putin’s fighter jets were captured forming a sickening Z symbol as his army prepared for a huge parade despite a massive death toll.

    The dress rehearsal of the Victory Parade began in Moscow today with the event set to be attended by 11,000 troops.

    Servicemen, cadets and representatives of military units will walk along the cobblestones of Red Square with nukes also paraded.

    And eight jets were pictured in a “Z” formation with the letter becoming synonymous with the invasion of Ukraine.

    The military parade has become an annual event on May 9, marking victory over Nazi Germany in 1945.

    Under Putin, Victory Day is not only to remember the sacrifices of World War Two but has become a show of strength of troops and military hardware

    Zelensky sends strict WARNING to civilians this weekend ahead of Putin's planned Victory Day
  • Ukrainian forces fight back around Kharkiv

    According to reports, Ukraine is continuing a counter-offensive near the city of Kharkiv, and says it has recaptured five villages.

    The US-based Institute for the Study of War says the Ukrainians could soon free Kharkiv from the threat of Russian artillery.

    On Friday, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, said any peace deal with Russia would depend on Russian forces pulling back to their pre-invasion positions.

  • Video shows Sasha, 4, blowing out candles on his birthday – seven days later he was dead

    THIS is the heart-breaking video showing a four-year-old Ukrainian Sasha celebrating his birthday – just a week before his tragic death.

    Sasha Zdanovych disappeared on a boat from Ukraine that capsized as it desperately tried to escape Russia’s slaughter.

    His heartbroken Mum Anna Yakhno spent 26 days not knowing if her son was alive.

    The last photo taken of little Sasha showed him blowing out the candles on his cake for his fourth birthday.

    The 25-year-old told The Sun “the world must never forget Sasha’s name or the man responsible”.

    Sasha was staying with his grandmother Zoya, 59, when Putin began his bloodbath invasion on February 24.

    Five days after his special day, Sasha called his mum for the final time.

    Zelensky sends strict WARNING to civilians this weekend ahead of Putin's planned Victory Day
  • Italy order the seizure of yacht linked to Putin

    Italy has ordered the seizure of a super yacht linked to Russia’s Putin.

    The Scheherazade has been undergoing repairs at a port in Tuscany since September last year.

    Italy’s finance ministry said that the boat’s owner had ties to “prominent elements of the Russian government”.

    It is being seized under EU sanctions.

  • Putin’s £500m superyacht SEIZED

    VLADIMIR Putin’s £500 million megayacht was finally seized by Italian police last night after The Sun revealed the sickening luxury onboard the dictator’s floating mansion.

    The Scheherazade is currently being held by authorities in Marina di Carrara in Italy after an investigation found it to be linked with “prominent elements of the Russian government”.

    The 459ft vessel left its dry dock earlier this week after repairs were completed – sparking concerns it could flee the harbour to avoid EU sanctions.

    Its official cost, when finished two years ago, was £500million but insiders say it could be closer to £750million.

    Zelensky sends strict WARNING to civilians this weekend ahead of Putin's planned Victory Day
  • Victory Day rehearsals

    Ahead of Monday’s parade, Russian military have begun preparing for Victory Day.

    It marks the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War Two.

    Russia is now an invader and aggressor itself, waging war on the same territory Soviet forces liberated from Nazi invaders just over 75 years ago.

    But President Vladimir Putin and his allies are expected to try to portray the Russian invasion of Ukraine as a new fight against fascism.

    They have also accused the Ukrainian government of neo-Nazi links, an allegation which Kyiv and its Western allies firmly deny.

  • Fighting heard on edge of Donbas

    According to reports Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine are reporting small-arms fighting in the suburbs of Severodonetsk.

    Separatist forces were advancing but coming up against snipers and drones, a representative of the unrecognised separatist-run Luhansk People’s Republic told Russian news agency Ria-Novosti.

  • One of Russia’s most advanced tanks destroyed – UK Ministry of Defence

    The UK Ministry of Defence has said that one of Russia’s most advanced tanks has been destroyed in their daily intelligence update.

    The said: “At least one T-90M, Russia’s most advanced tank, has been destroyed in fighting. The T-90M was introduced in 2016 and includes improved armour, an upgraded gun and enhanced satellite navigation systems.

    “Approximately 100 T-90M tanks are currently in service amongst Russia’s best equipped units, including those fighting in Ukraine. The system’s upgraded armour, designed to counter anti-tank weaponry, remains vulnerable if unsupported by other force elements.

    “The conflict in Ukraine is taking a heavy toll on some of Russia’s most capable units and most advanced capabilities. It will take considerable time and expense for Russia to reconstitute its armed forces following this conflict.

    “It will be particularly challenging to replace modernised and advanced equipment due to sanctions restricting Russia’s access to critical microelectronic components.”

  • Only 12 civilians make it out of Azovstal as Russia breaks ceasefire

    Only 12 civilians made it out of the Azovstal “Alamo” yesterday as Ukraine accused Russia of breaking a ceasefire.

    Hundreds are holed up along with thousands of defenders at the besieged Mariupol steel plant.

    Russia’s failure to seize it has scotched hopes of a win before Monday’s Victory Day parade in Moscow to mark the end of World War Two.

    Andriy Biletsky, leading the defence with the elite Azov Battalion, said: “The fighting is continuing, the shelling does not stop.

    “Every minute of procrastination is the life of civilians, soldiers and the wounded.”

    At least one soldier died and six others were wounded when Russian forces hit a car with a guided anti-tank weapon.

    The Azov unit released footage of a bloodied soldier whose arm appears to be broken and burnt.

    Russia denied reports it was trying to storm the plant and said airstrikes, tank and naval shellings were to stop fighters moving to new positions.

  • Ceasefire violation accusations

    Vladimir Putin’s Russian forces have been accused of violating a ceasefire at the Azovstal steel works – killing one Ukrainian fighter and wounding six others.

    Mariupol authorities have also accused Russian troops of firing at a car involved in the evacuation efforts.

    Mariupol city council said in an online post: “During the ceasefire on the territory of the Azovstal plant a car was hit by Russians using an anti-tank guided weapon. This car was moving towards civilians in order to evacuate them from the plant”.

    “As a result of the shelling, 1 fighter was killed and 6 were wounded. The enemy continues to violate all agreements and fails to adhere to security guarantees for the evacuation of civilians.”

    Russia did not immediately comment on the council’s statement. It denies targeting civilians.

    Hundreds of civilians are still thought to be trapped in the southern city’s steel plant, and United Nations chief Antonio Guterres said it was vital that humanitarian workers “do all we can to get people out of these hellscapes”.

  • Security Council, including Russia, expresses concern about Ukraine

    The U.N. Security Council, including Russia, yesterday expressed “deep concern regarding the maintenance of peace and security of Ukraine” and backed efforts by the U.N. chief to find a peaceful solution in the body’s first statement since Moscow’s invasion.

    Security Council statements are agreed by consensus. The brief text adopted on Friday was drafted by Norway and Mexico.

    “The Security Council expresses deep concern regarding the maintenance of peace and security of Ukraine,” it reads.

    “The Security Council recalls that all Member States have undertaken, under the Charter of the United Nations, the obligation to settle their international disputes by peaceful means.”

    “The Security Council expresses strong support for the efforts of the Secretary-General in the search for a peaceful solution,” reads the statement, which also requests U.N. chief Antonio Guterres brief the council again “in due course.”

    Guterres welcomed the council support on Friday, saying he would “spare no effort to save lives, reduce suffering and find the path of peace.”

  • Todd Boehly & two billionaires sign agreement to buy Chelsea for £4.25billion

    AMERICAN billionaire Todd Boehly and his consortium have signed an agreement to buy Chelsea from Roman Abramovich in a deal reportedly worth around £4.25bn.

    Boehly, who part-owns the LA Dodgers, is poised to run the London side despite a last-gasp £4billion offer from Sir Jim Ratcliffe.

    Boehly and his team, which includes billionaires Mark Walter, Hansjorg Wyss and investment firm Clearlake Capital, still face two more hurdles before they officially take charge.

    He was pictured at Stamford Bridge on Friday and will now be put forward for Government and Premier League approval.

    It is expected the league will approve the takeover, but only after the completion of an owners’ and directors’ test.

  • WFP: Reopen Ukraine ports or risk world hunger

    The UN World Food Programme yesterday said that people around the world will starve if Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea aren’t reopened soon.

    “We have to open up these ports so that food can move in and out of Ukraine. The world demands it because hundreds of millions of people globally depend on these supplies,” WFP Executive Director David Beasley said.

    “Right now Ukraine’s grain silos are full.”

    The WFP is concerned that if the silos aren’t emptied soon there will be nowhere to store this summer’s harvest, causing massive waste and further driving up global food prices.

  • Zelensky: Mariupol ‘destroyed completely’

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has yesterday said that the southeastern port city of Mariupol has been destroyed completely and there is nothing left to fall to Russians – except for its besieged steelworks.

    Zelensky, speaking on a video call to the Chatham House think-tank in London, was asked how the fall of the strategic city could affect the course of the conflict.

    “You should understand that Mariupol will never fall. There is nothing there to fall apart. It is already devastated… there is no structure. This is all destroyed completely,” Zelensky said in comments translated into English from Ukrainian.

    What is left is “this little turf, this little structure, the Azovstal steel mill, or what remains of it”, he added.

  • Russian forces accused of opening fire on car on way to collect civilians

    Mariupol City Council yesterday accused Russian forces of opening fire on a car as it was on its way to the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol to collect trapped civilians.

    “During the ceasefire on the territory of the Azovstal plant a car was hit by Russians using an anti-tank guided weapon,” the council said in an online post.

    “This car was moving towards civilians in order to evacuate them from the plant.”

    It added: “As a result of the shelling, one fighter was killed and six were wounded.

    “The enemy continues to violate all agreements and fails to adhere to security guarantees for the evacuation of civilians.”

  • Shell in talks to sell Russian retail business

    Shell has said today that it is in talks to sell its network of petrol stations and lubricant plant in Russia.

    Ahead of the possible sale, Shell has suspended operations at its filling stations and the Torzhok lubricant plant, Sergey Starodubtsev, the company’s head in Russia said in a statement.

    He also confirmed that negotiations were underway.

    It was unclear who the potential buyer was but sources told Reuters it would most likely be a local company.

    Chief Executive Ben van Beurden said on Thursday that Shell was in talks to sell its Russian retail business.

    Shell wrote down $3.9 billion post-tax as a result of its decision to exit operations in Russia, which include a stake in a large liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant.

  • Zelensky: More than half a million Ukrainians ‘forced’ to go to Russia

    Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said yesterday during an address to Iceland’s parliament that more than “500,000 Ukrainians have been deported to Russia” since the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    Zelensky said: “They were forced to go there. Their documents and means of communication are confiscated.

    “They are sent to faraway regions of that foreign land in order to assimilate there.”

  • Ukrainian beer to be brewed in Belgium

    A popular Ukrainian beer is being brewed in Belgium at the moment due to not being able to be produced in the country.

    Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev) halted production of Chernigivske lager and other beers at its three breweries in Ukraine because of the Russian invasion.

    Ukraine’s ambassador to Belgium, Oleg Shamshur, saw the first cans rolling off the production line as he visited AB InBev’s site in Leuven on Friday.

    AB InBev said all profits would go to humanitarian relief in Ukraine.

  • G7 leaders to hold video conference with Zelensky on Sunday

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will take part in a G7 virtual discussion with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Sunday, a German government spokesperson said.

    They will discuss matter about the situation in Ukraine.

    “It will cover current issues, particularly the situation in Ukraine. President Zelensky will take part and report on the current situation in his country,” said Christiane Hoffmann, German government spokesperson.

  • Refugees arriving under Ukraine visa schemes up 10,000

    Figures show that the number of refugees arriving in the UK under Ukraine visa schemes has risen by more than 10,000 in just over a week.

    Around 37,400 people had arrived in the UK under Ukraine visa schemes as of Tuesday, according to government figures published on Friday.

    This is up from 27,100 by April 25.

    The latest arrivals include 19,500 under the Homes for Ukraine sponsorship scheme – a rise of three-quarters from 11,100 last week.

    And 17,900 people have arrived under the family scheme, up from 16,000.

  • Zelenskyy urges German leader to visit Kyiv on Russia’s ‘Victory Day’

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called on German Chancellor Olaf Scholz  to take a “powerful step” and visit Kyiv on Monday.

    This is the date when Russia commemorates the Soviet Union’s victory in the Second World War.

    Speaking via a translator to London’s Chatham House think tank, the Ukrainian President said: “He’s invited, the invitation is open, it has been for some time now.

    “He’s invited to come to Ukraine, he can make this very powerful political step to come here on the 9th of May, to Kyiv. I am not explaining the significance, I think you’re cultured enough to understand why.”

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