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Russia-Ukraine War Live Updates: Ukraine says 7 killed, over two dozen injured in Russian attack on civilian evacuees in east

Russia-Ukraine War News Live Updates, April 15: Russia suffered a major setback, with its warship Moskva sinking in the Black Sea following a fire.

By: Express Web Desk |
Updated: April 15, 2022 4:28:59 pm
People gather outside a shopping centre destroyed during Ukraine-Russia conflict in the southern port city of Mariupol, Ukraine April 14, 2022. (Reuters)

Russia-Ukraine War News Live Updates: Ukraine on Friday said seven people were killed and over two dozen injured in a Russian attack on civilian evacuees in east, news agency AFP reported.

Earlier in the day, the Russian Defence Ministry Friday claimed to have hit a military target in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv with cruise missiles overnight. The target was identified as the Vizar plant, according to Reuters, which makes and repairs anti-ship missiles. Russia has vowed to intensify its attack on the city after it alleged that Ukrainian forces have destroyed residential buildings in its Bryansk region. On Friday morning, explosions were heard in Kyiv and other cities such as Kharkiv and Kherson.

The Ministry also claimed that the Ilyich steel and iron plant in  Mariupol, Ukraine’s second-largest steel-maker, has been “liberated” from Ukrainian forces, Reuters quoted the state media as saying. Russia has been concentrating its war effort in the East, looking to take over the key port city of Mariupol.

Live Blog

Russia-Ukraine War News Live Updates: Russia vows to intensify attack on Kyiv; Russian warship Moskva sinks at Black Sea; Vladimir Putin warns against phasing out Russian gas; Follow this space for latest updates

16:23 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Ukraine says 7 killed in Russian attack on civilian evacuees in east

Ukraine on Friday said 7 people were killed and over two dozen injured in a Russian attack on civilian evacuees in east, AFP reported.

15:35 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Russia warns of unspecified 'consequences' if Finland, Sweden join NATO

Russia's foreign ministry on Friday warned of unspecified 'consequences' if Finland and Sweden join NATO, news agency AFP reported. 

14:21 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Rouble firms towards 80 vs dollar

The Russian rouble firmed slightly towards 80 against the dollar on Friday and stock indexes declined, while shares in gold producer Petropavlovsk underperformed the broader market in Moscow trade and at one point fell more than 20% on the day.

Russian shares in Petropavlovsk, which is also listed in London, extended sharp losses suffered on Thursday after the company said it was considering putting itself up for sale, following sanctions on Russia and the risk of countermeasures.

Petropavlovsk shares were down 17% at 8.45 roubles ($0.11) apiece as of 0749 GMT.

Shares in Russia's largest lenders Sberbank and VTB, both sanctioned by the west, slid around 0.7% the day after a central bank official said it was quite possible that the Russian banking sector would lose half of its capital. (Reuters)

14:08 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Watch | 'A wish for peace': Ukrainians celebrate birthday amid shelling

Amidst heavy shelling in Lysychansk, a resident of Ukraine celebrated her 55th birthday, wishing for "peace for everyone". 

13:55 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Polish mercenaries destroyed, says Russian forces

The Russian Defence Ministry Friday said that it has destroyed a group of up to 30 Polish mercenaries from a private military unit.

It has also vowed to step up its attack on Kyiv in view of the Ukrainian forces committing "sabotage" on Russian territory.

13:32 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Russia claims to have shot down Ukrainian helicopter allegedly used to attack its village

The Russian Defence Ministry has claimed that its S-400 defense systems have shot down a Ukrainian MI-8 helicopter, which was allegedly used to attack the Klimovo village in the Bryansk region of Russia on Thursday, Reuters quoted state media as saying.

13:14 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Russia says it has taken over Mariupol steel plant, pledges more missile strikes on Kyiv

The Russian Defence Ministry has claimed that the Ilyich steel and iron plant in  Mariupol, Ukraine’s second-largest steel-maker, has been “liberated” from Ukrainian forces, Reuters quoted the state media as saying.

Russia has been concentrating its war effort in the East, looking to take over the key port city of Mariupol.

Meanwhile, the Ministry also claimed that it has struck a military target on the edge of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv with cruise missiles overnight. It stated they will be carrying out more strikes in the city. 

12:27 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Russia may be in default, Moody's says

Russia may be in default after it tried to service its dollar bonds in roubles due to Western sanctions over the war in Ukraine, Moody's said, Moscow's first major default on foreign bonds since the years following the 1917 Bolshevik revolution. 

Russia made a payment due on April 4 on two sovereign bonds - maturing in 2022 and 2042 - in roubles rather than the dollars it was mandated to pay under the terms of the securities. 

Russia "therefore may be considered a default under Moody's definition if not cured by 4 May, which is the end of the grace period," Moody's said in a statement on Thursday. 

"The bond contracts have no provision for repayment in any other currency other than dollars." 

Moody's said that while some Russian eurobonds issued after 2018 allow payments in roubles under some conditions, those issued before 2018 - such as those maturing in 2022 and 2042 - do not.

"Moody's view is that investors did not obtain the foreign-currency contractual promise on the payment due date," Moody's said. (Reuters)

12:15 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Ukraine Deputy PM: 9 humanitarian corridors agreed for Friday

The Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister has said that nine humanitarian corridors were agreed upon Friday to allow the safe evacuation of citizens. 

Meanwhile, the Governor in Ukraine's Luhansk region has said that evacuation from six towns would be opened by bus and train.

11:58 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Everything you need to know about Russian warship Moskva

Russian warship Moskva of the Black Sea fleet sank Thursday following a fire. While Ukrainian officials said their forces hit the vessel with missiles, Russia has acknowledged the fire but not the attack.

Everything you need to know about Russian warship Moskva (Source: AFP)
11:43 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Mariupol civilians in need of aid, over 10,000 dead says Mayor

Dwindling numbers of Ukrainian defenders in Mariupol are holding out against a siege that has trapped well over 100,000 civilians in desperate need of food, water and heating. David Beasley, executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, told AP in an interview Thursday that people are being “starved to death” in the besieged city. 

Mariupol's mayor said this week that more than 10,000 civilians had died and the death toll could surpass 20,000, after weeks of attacks and privation carpeted the streets with corpses. 

Mariupol's capture is critical for Russia because it would allow its forces in the south, which came up through the annexed Crimean Peninsula, to fully link up with troops in the Donbas region, Ukraine's eastern industrial heartland and the target of the coming offensive. (AP)

11:39 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Russia-Ukraine war: Top 10 developments

🔴 In view of the military setbacks faced by Russia, CIA Director William Burns Thursday said that Putin may resort to using tactical or low-yield nuclear weapons in Ukraine. 

🔴 Russian authorities have accused Ukraine of launching airstrikes in Bryansk, a city in Russia.

🔴 Major explosions were heard in the cities of Kyiv, Kherson and Kharkiv and the town of Ivano-Frankivs on early Friday morning.

🔴 Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned that he will redirect his energy supplies eastwards as European countries try to find alternatives.

🔴 The loss of the Moskva ship has been a major hit to Russian capabilities, as it could carry 16 long-range cruise missiles. Read more

11:07 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Canada lends a hand to Ukrainian refugees

Canada is sending soldiers to Poland to help with the care, co-ordination and resettlement of Ukrainian refugees in Poland, including some who will come to Canada. 

Defense Minister Anita Anand announced the deployment of up to 150 troops Thursday. 

More than 2.6 million Ukrainians have fled into Poland since the first Russian troops crossed into Ukraine on Feb. 24 and over 2 million more have fled into other surrounding countries. 

Anand said the majority of the deployed troops will head to reception centers across Poland to help care for and register Ukrainian refugees. Another group is being sent to help co-ordinate international aid efforts. 

Canada has deployed hundreds of additional troops to eastern Europe since Russia's invasion as the NATO military alliance seeks to both support Ukraine and prevent the conflict from expanding into a broader war. (AP)

10:47 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Class and air-raid sirens: School in wartime for Ukraine’s children

Across Ukraine, kindergartens have been bombed, elementary schools have been converted into shelters and in some cities like Mariupol, their grounds have even become makeshift graveyards. 

As the war tears at the social institutions of the country, education has been one of the major casualties. Parents, teachers and school administrators are scrambling to provide classes for the 5.5 million school-age children who remain in the country, as well as for thousands of others who have fled to other countries.

In many places, students are connecting with their normal classrooms online, if their hometown schools are still operating and they have access to the internet. But with such vast displacement of teachers and students, the paths to learning are circuitous: In some cases, teachers who relocated within Ukraine are instructing students who have already fled the country, through a school system that they both left behind. Read more

Children play games and study in a bunker south of Kyiv, Ukraine. (Ivor Prickett/The New York Times)
09:35 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Ukraine war pushes Germans to change. They are wavering.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz surprised the world, and his own country, when he responded to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with a 100 billion euro ($108 billion) plan to arm Germany, send weapons to Ukraine and end his nation’s deep dependence on Russian energy. 

It was Germany’s biggest foreign policy shift since the Cold War, what Scholz called a “Zeitenwende” — an epochal change — that won applause for his leadership at home and abroad.

But six weeks later, the applause has largely ceased. Even as images of atrocities emerge from Ukraine since the invasion by President Vladimir Putin of Russia, Scholz has ruled out an immediate oil and gas embargo, saying it would be too costly. He is dragging his feet on sending 100 armored vehicles to Ukraine, saying that Germany must not “rush ahead.” There are new debates in the ruling coalition about just how to go forward with the massive task Scholz has laid out, let alone how fast. Read more

09:17 (IST)15 Apr 2022
In Opinion | Putin may lose, but Putinism will survive

Making a distinction between Putin and Putinism, which fuses “anti-Westernism and anti-liberalism”, Pratap Bhanu Mehta writes in an Opinion column: “Putin may lose, but Putinism is ascendant as an ideology — now aligning itself with white supremacism, French chauvinism, Israeli right-wing assertion, Ottoman dreams, Chinese aggression or Hindutva aggression. They want to take down the West but what they really want to take down is liberalism.” Read here

09:14 (IST)15 Apr 2022
US, Russia clash over cause of food price rises

The US ambassador to the United Nations Thursday blamed Russia for causing a food crisis all over the globe, news agency AP reported. 

In a UN Security Council meeting on Yemen, Linda Thomas-Greenfield stated that the World Food Program identified it as one of the countries most affected by wheat price increases and lack of imports from Ukraine.

However, the Russian ambassador refuted her allegations, saying, "The main factor for instability and the source of the problem today is not the Russian special military operation in Ukraine, but sanctions measures imposed on our country seeking to cut off any supplies from Russia and the supply chain, apart from those supplies that those countries in the West need, in other words energy."

09:07 (IST)15 Apr 2022
Ukraine survived 50 days when Russia 'gave us a maximum of five'

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told Ukrainians on Thursday they should be proud of having survived 50 days under Russian attack when the Russians "gave us a maximum of five."

In his late-night video address, Zelenskyy called it "an achievement of millions of Ukrainians, of everyone who on Feb. 24 made the most important decision of their life "to fight."

Zelenskyy gave an extensive and almost poetic listing of the many ways in which Ukrainians have helped to fend off the Russian troops, including "those who showed that Russian warships can sail away, even if it's to the bottom" of the sea.

It was his only reference to the Russian missile cruiser Moskva, which sank while being towed to port. (AP)

08:16 (IST)15 Apr 2022
IMF’s Georgieva says Ukraine war hits growth, threatens to fragment global economy

The war in Ukraine is prompting the International Monetary Fund to cut global growth estimates for both 2022 and 2023 as higher food and energy prices pressure fragile economies, the IMF’s managing director, Kristalina Georgieva, said on Thursday. 

Georgieva said in a “curtain raiser” speech for next week’s IMF and World Bank spring meetings that the fund would downgrade its growth outlooks for 143 economies representing 86% of global economic output, but said most countries will maintain positive growth. 

Georgieva, who previously warned that the war would drag on growth this year, said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was “sending shockwaves throughout the globe” and dealing a massive setback to countries struggling to recover from the still-raging Covid-19 pandemic. Read more

A view shows a residential building destroyed in the course of Ukraine-Russia conflict in the southern port city of Mariupol, Ukraine April 14, 2022. (Reuters)

On Thursday, Russia suffered a major setback, with its warship Moskva sinking in the Black Sea following a fire. While Ukrainian officials said their forces hit the vessel with missiles, Russia has acknowledged the fire but not the attack. The Moskva had the capacity to carry 16 long-range cruise missiles, reducing Russia's firepower.

In an address to the nation, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said they should be proud of having survived 50 days under the Russian attack, even though Moscow "gave them five".

Vladimir Putin warns against phasing out Russian gas

Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned that Western countries’ attempts to phase out Russian gas imports will have a negative impact on their economies.

Speaking Thursday, Putin said European attempts to find alternatives to Russian gas shipments will be “quite painful for the initiators of such policies.”

He argued that “there is simply no reasonable replacement for it in Europe now.”

Putin noted that “supplies from other countries that could be sent to Europe, primarily from the United States, would cost consumers many times more.”

He added it would “affect people’s standard of living and the competitiveness of the European economy.” -- AP

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