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Russia-Ukraine War Live Updates: UNGA approves resolution blaming Russia for humanitarian crisis in Ukraine

Russia-Ukraine War Live News, Russia Ukraine Conflict Crisis News Today, 24 Mar: The US and its allies on Thursday imposed fresh sanctions on Russia, targeting dozens of Russian defense companies, hundreds of members of its parliament and the chief executive of the country's largest bank.

By: Express Web Desk |
Updated: March 24, 2022 9:35:27 pm
A tank destroyed in fighting during Ukraine-Russia conflict is seen in front of a residential building, in the besieged southern port of Mariupol, Ukraine. (Reuters)

Russia-Ukraine War Crisis Live: UN General Assembly Thursday approved a resolution blaming Russia for humanitarian crisis in Ukraine and urged immediate ceasefire. India once again abstained from voting on the resolution by Ukraine and its allies. The 193-member General Assembly resumed its 11th Emergency Special Session on Ukraine and voted Thursday on a draft resolution ‘Humanitarian consequences of the aggression against Ukraine’ by Ukraine and its western allies. The resolution was adopted with 140 votes in favour, 38 abstentions and five against. Earlier in the day, India, along with 12 other UN Security Council members, had abstained on a resolution by Russia on the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine. It failed to get adopted in the Council on Wednesday as it did not get the required nine yes votes to pass.

The United States and its allies on Thursday imposed fresh sanctions on Russia, targeting dozens of Russian defense companies, hundreds of members of its parliament and the chief executive of the country’s largest bank as Washington ramps up pressure on Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine. The US Treasury Department also issued guidance on its website warning that gold-related transactions involving Russia may be sanctionable by US authorities, a move aimed at stopping Russia from evading existing sanctions. The United States and its allies have imposed several rounds of sanctions, including targeting the country’s largest lenders and President Vladimir Putin, since Russian forces invaded Ukraine a month ago in the biggest assault on a European state since World War Two.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called for “military assistance without limitations” as he addressed an emergency NATO summit on Thursday, the first of three urgent meetings US President Joe Biden and world leaders are holding in response to the Russian invasion. Zelenskyy pleaded for anti-air and anti-ship weapons, asking “is it possible to survive in such a war without this?” “It feels like we’re in a gray area, between the West and Russia, defending our common values,” Zelenskyy said in his video address to the summit.

Live Blog

Russia-Ukraine crisis: UNGA approves resolution blaming Russia for humanitarian crisis in Ukraine; US, allies announce new Russia sanctions; Zelenskyy seeks 'military aid without limitations'; Zelenskyy makes plea for full membership of EU; Follow this space for the latest updates:

20:23 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Swedish-Danish mail service stops all letters to and from Russia

Swedish-Danish mail and parcel service Postnord will stop all letters to and from Russia and Belarus in order to comply with EU sanctions imposed following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, Postnord said in a statement on Thursday. "The stop will be in force until a screening system is in place that makes it possible to resume mail flows to and from these countries at the same time as the sanctions are complied with, or until the sanctions expire," the firm said in a statement.

Postnord has already stopped all parcel deliveries to and from the two countries. Postnord is joint-owned by the Swedish and Danish states. (Reuters)

20:22 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Will provide over $1 bn in new funding as humanitarian aid to those affected by Russia's war in Ukraine: US

The United States Thursday announced that it is prepared to provide more than $1 billion in new funding towards humanitarian assistance for those affected by Russia’s war in Ukraine and its severe impacts around the world.

20:07 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Marlboro maker Philip Morris working on options to exit Russia market

Marlboro maker Philip Morris International Inc (PM.N) is working on options to exit the Russian market, citing a complex and rapidly changing regulatory and operating environment in the country following its invasion of Ukraine.

The company, which garnered around 6% its net revenue from Russia in 2021, said on Thursday it has discontinued sale of several cigarette products and canceled all product launches for the year in Russia.

It has also canceled plans to make over 20 billion TEREA sticks, heated tobacco units intended for use with its IQOS ILUMA devices, as well as related investment of $150 million. (Reuters)

20:05 (IST)24 Mar 2022
G-7 nations restrict Russian Central Bank's use of gold in transactions; US announces new sanctions against elites

Group of Seven leaders have announced they are restricting the Russian Central Bank's use of gold in transactions, while the US announced a new round of sanctions targeting more than 400 elites and members of the Russian State Duma.

Previously, sanctions against Russian elites, the country's Central Bank and President Vladimir Putin did not impact Russia's gold stockpile, which Putin has been accumulating for several years. Russia holds roughly $130 billion in gold reserves, and the Bank of Russia announced Feb 28 that it would resume the purchase of gold on the domestic precious metals market.

White House officials said Thursday the move will further blunt Russia's ability to use its international reserves to prop up Russia's economy and fund its war against Ukraine. (AP)

19:20 (IST)24 Mar 2022
NATO leaders condemn Russian invasion of Ukraine, Putin’s 'escalatory rhetoric'

NATO leaders, who met on Thursday to address Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in the strongest possible terms and called upon President Vladimir Putin to immediately stop the war and withdraw military forces from Ukraine.

In a statement, they urged Russia to comply with the 16 March ruling by the UN International Court of Justice and immediately suspend military operations. 'Russia’s attack on Ukraine threatens global security. Its assault on international norms makes the world less safe. President Putin’s escalatory rhetoric is irresponsible and destabilizing,' it said.

The NATO heads also agreed to give further support to Ukraine and continue to impose costs on Russia. 

19:11 (IST)24 Mar 2022
NATO extends Stoltenberg term for a year due to Russia's war

NATO leaders are extending the mandate of Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg for an extra year to help steer the 30-nation military organisation through the security crisis sparked by Russia's war on Ukraine.

Stoltenberg tweeted Thursday that he is “honoured” by the decision of NATO leaders “to extend my term as Secretary General until 30 September 2023. “As we face the biggest security crisis in a generation, we stand united to keep our alliance strong and our people safe,” he said.

The former Norwegian prime minister was named to NATO's top civilian post in October 2014. It's the second time that his term of office has been extended. His mandate was due to expire in September. (AP)

17:15 (IST)24 Mar 2022
A month into war, communicator-in-chief Zelenskiy strives to keep eyes on Ukraine

The props were simple, the message was clear. In a video address to the nation this week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy held up his smartphone to the camera and started a timer app while an air raid siren blared.

“It lasted 20 seconds,” Zelenskiy said, after the wailing subsided. “And we hear it for hours, days, weeks. Our people… instantly take their children, help the elderly, and go to the shelters… to survive, from Russian missiles, bombs.” Sitting at his desk, unshaven and in his now trademark green shirt, Zelenskiy had in a few short sentences reminded 44 million Ukrainians that he was going through what they were, while renewing pressure on NATO to impose a no-fly zone. Read More

16:10 (IST)24 Mar 2022
UK says Putin crossed line 'into barbarism'

NATO leaders are refusing to rule out retaliation against Russia should it launch a chemical weapons attack on Ukraine — but British Prime Minister Boris Johnson thinks Moscow has already gone too far.

“The reality is that (President) Vladimir Putin has already crossed the red line into barbarism,” Johnson told reporters Thursday as he arrived for summit of NATO leaders. Johnson says that “it's now up to NATO to consider together the appalling crisis in Ukraine, the appalling suffering of the people of Ukraine, and to see what more we can do to help the people of Ukraine to protect themselves.” 

As an organization, NATO is not providing weapons to Ukraine. The 30-nation alliance refuses to send troops to Ukraine, either for combat or peacekeeping, and has said it will not deploy aircraft to protect civilians or police any no-fly zone.
But member countries are providing weapons and other assistance, individually or in groups. (AP)

15:55 (IST)24 Mar 2022
We stand for peace, no question of linking Ukraine situation to issues of trade: S Jaishankar

India’s foreign policy decisions are made in “national interest” and guided by the belief that the international order “must respect territorial integrity and sovereignty of states”, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Thursday. He also said that India calls “for immediate cessation of violence” and “stands for peace”.

“We are very clear on our principles. Our policy is very much guided by our belief that the international order must respect territorial integrity and sovereignty of states…” Jaishankar told the Rajya Sabha while responding to a question on the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

He said India’s position is not that the situation involving Russia and Ukraine “is not our problem. Our position is that we are for peace”. In a written statement laid on the table of the Upper House, Jaishankar said the government has been able to safely bring home 22,500 Indian citizens and 147 foreign nationals belonging to 18 countries from Ukraine since February 2022. Read More

14:48 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Renault suspends Russia operations after backlash

French carmaker Renault has announced it will suspend operations at its Moscow factory over Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The company was one of the few international businesses to have restarted operations at its Russia factory this week.

That drew the ire of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who called on Renault and other French companies operating in the country to "stop being sponsors of Russia's war machine" during his address to French lawmakers on Wednesday. (Deutsche Welle)

14:24 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Ukrainian agriculture minister has submitted resignation, says aide

Ukrainian Agriculture Minister Roman Leshchenko has submitted his resignation, an aide told Reuters Thursday, without stating a reason.

The aide, who declined to be named, said Ukrainian parliament would vote on whether to accept the resignation, possibly as soon as Thursday. (Reuters)

14:22 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Russian gas flows to Europe rise slightly

Russian gas deliveries to Europe through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline across the Baltic Sea rose slightly Thursday, while the Yamal-Europe pipeline continued to flow eastwards from Germany into Poland.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that Russia will seek payment in roubles for gas sold to "unfriendly" countries, raising concerns the move would exacerbate the region's energy crunch.

Flows to Germany through Nord Stream 1 stood at 67,690,040 kilowatt hours per hour (kWh/h) by 0733 GMT, up slightly 65,258,213 kWh/h at midnight, the Nord Stream website showed. (Reuters)

13:11 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Kremlin veteran Anatoly Chubais quits over Ukraine war and leaves Russia

A veteran envoy of President Vladimir Putin has resigned over the Ukraine war and left Russia with no intention to return, two sources said on Wednesday, the first senior official to break with the Kremlin since Putin launched his invasion a month ago.

Anatoly Chubais. (File/Reuters)

The Kremlin confirmed that Anatoly Chubais had resigned of his own accord. Chubais was one of the principal architects of Boris Yeltsin’s economic reforms of the 1990s and was Putin’s boss in the future president’s first Kremlin job.

12:55 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Watch: Many Ukrainians Are Leaving Because They See No Future In The Country

It is not just the fear of death. Many are leaving because they don’t want to continue without education for their children, jobs for them.

12:26 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Turkcell says 10% of mobile infrastructure in Ukraine disabled

Turkish telecoms operator Turkcell, one of three main operators in Ukraine, said around 10% of its infrastructure in the country had been disabled by Russia's invasion, but added there was no damage to its central network.

Turkcell, which operates under the name "lifecell" in Ukraine, said in a stock exchange statement on Wednesday that around 10% of its 9,000 base stations in Ukraine were disabled, adding there had been no casualties among its employees.

The company said it had provided the necessary equipment to maintain operations and established backup data centres in Lviv in western Ukraine and some neighbouring nations, adding 45% of its retail stores in the country remained open. (Reuters)

12:23 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Turkcell says 10% of mobile infrastructure in Ukraine disabled

Turkish telecoms operator Turkcell, one of three main operators in Ukraine, said around 10% of its infrastructure in the country had been disabled by Russia's invasion, but added there was no damage to its central network.

Turkcell, which operates under the name "lifecell" in Ukraine, said in a stock exchange statement on Wednesday that around 10% of its 9,000 base stations in Ukraine were disabled, adding there had been no casualties among its employees.

The company said it had provided the necessary equipment to maintain operations and established backup data centres in Lviv in western Ukraine and some neighbouring nations, adding 45% of its retail stores in the country remained open. (Reuters)

11:54 (IST)24 Mar 2022
How Ukraine’s outgunned Air Force is fighting back against Russian jets

Each night, Ukrainian pilots such as Andriy loiter in an undisclosed aircraft hangar, waiting, waiting, until the tension is broken with a shouted, one-word command: “Air!”

Andriy hustles into his Su-27 supersonic jet and hastily taxis toward the runway, getting airborne as quickly as possible.

A satellite image of destroyed Russian helicopters on the tarmac at an airfield in Kherson, Ukraine, last week. (Credit:Maxar Technologies, via AP)

He takes off so fast that he doesn’t yet know his mission for the night, although the big picture is always the same — to bring the fight to a Russian air force that is vastly superior in numbers but has failed to win control of the skies above Ukraine. 

11:27 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Russian stock market, crushed by war, will partially reopen

Russia is reopening its stock market for limited trading nearly one month after shares plunged and the exchange was shut down following the invasion of Ukraine. 

There will be heavy restrictions on trading Thursday as the exchange opens to prevent the kind of massive selloff that took place on February 24 in anticipation of crushing financial and economic sanctions from Western nations.

The reopening of the Moscow exchange has only minimal significance for investors outside Russia and scant economic impact compared with barrage of US-led sanctions and withdrawals by foreign corporations.  (AP)

10:54 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Ukraine war update, March 24: Zelenskyy calls for global protests against Russia’s invasion

Today, March 24, is Day 30 of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Here’s what you need to know today:

It is one month since the war in Ukraine began with the Russian invasion on February 24. From 2 am on February 24 until midnight of March 22, there had been 977 confirmed and verified civilian deaths in the war, as per data from the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights; 1594 people are injured. The UN agency warns that this number could be much higher because of delays in transmission of casualty numbers from the areas that are being bombarded and intense fighting continues. 

10:18 (IST)24 Mar 2022
Russian journalist killed by shelling in Kyiv

A Russian journalist has been killed by shelling in Kyiv on a reporting assignment.

The independent Russian news outlet The Insider said that Oksana Baulina was killed Wednesday when she was documenting the damage of a Russian shelling of the Podil district of the capital and came under a new strike. It said a civilian was also killed and two people who were accompanying Baulina were wounded and hospitalised.

The Insider said that Baulina had previously worked for the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation until she was forced to leave Russia after the organisation was designated "extremist" by the authorities. It said it will continue to cover the war in Ukraine, "including such Russian war crimes as indiscriminate shelling of residential areas killing civilians and journalists." (AP) 

One month into Russia's invasion of Ukraine, fire rained down on a shopping mall and high-rise buildings in Kyiv, as the outnumbered Ukrainian military waged intense battles to defend the capital and other key cities from falling under Russian control. Russian forces have wreaked destruction on cities throughout Ukraine over the past four weeks, but they appear to have stalled in many places in the face of fiercer-than-expected Ukrainian resistance.

A Ukrainian firefighter sprays water inside a house destroyed by shelling, in Kyiv, Ukraine (AP photo)

Nato estimated Wednesday that 7,000 to 15,000 Russian soldiers have been killed since the war started on February 24. On Wednesday, the US made a formal determination that Russia has committed war crimes in Ukraine, as some of the millions who have fled recount tales of horror.

As one woman told The Associated Press: "People are being killed day and night." And Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called for people around the world to show support for Ukraine on Thursday, which will mark the start of the war's second month.

 

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