Russia Ukraine War News Live Updates: Ukraine’s President Zelensky accuses Russia of violating deals

Ukraine War Today News, Ukraine Russia Updates, World War 3 News Live Updates: The United States promised more military support for Ukraine, including drones, and is doing preliminary work on whether to send fighter aircraft.

By: Express Web Desk |
Updated: July 24, 2022 10:24:43 am
File photo of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (AP)

Russia Ukraine War Live Updates: Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenksyy on Saturday accused Russia of routinely violationg agreements after the Odesa attack. “This proves only one thing, no matter what Russia says and promises it will find ways to implement it,” Zelenskyy said during a meeting with US lawmakers. ANI

Less than 24 hours after Russia signed a deal to unblock grain exports from Black Sea ports, explosions rocked port city of Odesa on Saturday, the Ukrainian military said. “The enemy attacked the Odesa sea trade port with Kalibr cruise missiles,” Ukraine’s Operational Command South wrote on the Telegram messaging app. Two missiles hit infrastructure at the port, while another two were shot down by air defense forces, it said.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said there could be no ceasefire unless lost territory was retaken. He said this after hailing the grain export agreement that Russia and Ukraine had signed on Friday.  In other news, the Health Ministry said in Lok Sabha that there are no provisions in the law to accommodate Ukraine-returned medical students for practical training. “Therefore, no permission has been given by the NMC to transfer or accommodate any foreign medical students in any Indian medical institute or university,” union minister of state for health and family welfare Dr Bharti Pravin Pawar said.

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10:24 (IST)24 Jul 2022
Ukraine's President Zelenskyy accuses Russia of violating deals
16:13 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Putin 'spits in the face' of UN, Turkey with Odessa attack: Ukraine Foreign Ministry spokesman

After Russian missiles hit Odesa on Saturday, Ukraine Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleg Nikolenko said that Russian President Vladimir Putin has "spit in the face of" UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who made enormous efforts to reach the agreement. 

16:05 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Explosions heard as Russian missiles hit Odesa

Russian missiles hit infrastructure in Odesa in southern Ukraine on Saturday, the Ukrainian military said, dealing a blow to a deal signed on Friday to unblock grain exports from Black Sea ports. "The enemy attacked the Odesa sea trade port with Kalibr cruise missiles," Ukraine's Operational Command South wrote on the Telegram messaging app. Two missiles hit infrastructure at the port, while another two were shot down by air defence forces, it said.

15:40 (IST)23 Jul 2022
🌾Grain deal: What’s in it for Russia?

Russia is also a major exporter of grains and fertilizer, and the agreement should make it easier to sell those goods on the world market. The Kremlin has repeatedly claimed that its stocks cannot be exported because of sanctions imposed by the United States and the European Union.

The measures do not in fact affect those goods, but private shipping companies, insurers, banks and other businesses have been reluctant to help Russia export grains and fertilizers, fearing that they might run afoul of sanctions or that doing business with Russia might harm their reputations.

Offering reassurance, the EU on Thursday issued a legal clarification to its sanctions saying that various banks and other companies involved in the grain trade were not in fact banned.

The United Nations said that, armed with similar assurances by the United States, it held talks with the private sector, and that trade from Russia — especially the Russian port of Novorossiysk — should pick up pace.

15:39 (IST)23 Jul 2022
🌾Grain deal: Will this immediately solve world hunger and bring down food prices?

No. Global hunger is a constant problem caused by poor distribution of food and price manipulation, hitting some parts of the world year after year. It is often compounded by conflict and has also been affected by climate change. The war in Ukraine, which produces a large share of the world’s wheat, added an enormous burden on grain distribution networks, driving up prices and fanning hunger.

Officials say the agreement has the potential to increase the flow of wheat to Somalia within weeks, averting a full-blown famine, and should lead to a gradual decline in global grain prices. But considering the agreement’s fragility, grain markets are unlikely to return to normal immediately.

15:38 (IST)23 Jul 2022
🌾Grain deal: Here’s what to know about the grain problem and how it might now be addressed

➡️Why was Ukrainian grain stuck inside the country?

After Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, it deployed warships along Ukraine’s Black Sea coast. Ukraine mined those waters to deter a Russian naval attack. That meant that the ports used to export Ukrainian grain were blocked for commercial shipping. Russia also pilfered grain stocks, mined grain fields so that they couldn’t be harvested and destroyed grain storage facilities.

➡️How will the operation work?

Ukrainian captains will steer vessels packed with grain out of the ports of Odesa, Yuzhne and Chornomorsk. A joint command center with officials from Ukraine, Russia, Turkey and the United Nations will be set up immediately in Istanbul to monitor every movement of the flotillas.

➡️What are the risks?

No broad cease-fire has been negotiated, so the ships will be traveling through a war zone. Attacks near the ships or at the ports they use could unravel the agreement. Another risk would be a breach of trust or disagreement between inspectors and joint command officials.

14:36 (IST)23 Jul 2022
POWs, civilians 'tortured' in occupied south

Russia's armed forces are torturing prisoners of war and civilians in southern Ukraine, Human Rights Watch (HRW) alleged Saturday.

The rights group said it carried out interviews with dozens of people in the occupied regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, revealing 42 cases where Russian forces had either made civilians disappear or otherwise arbitrarily detained them.

Some had not had any contact with the outside world and many had been tortured. HRW also documented the torture of three members of Ukraine's Territorial Defense Forces who were POWs. Two of them died. (DW)

13:54 (IST)23 Jul 2022
3 killed as Russian missiles hit central Ukraine region, says governor

Three people were killed as 13 Russian missiles hit a military airfield and railway infrastructure in Ukraine's central Kirovohrad region on Saturday, the local governor said.

The red marker shows the location of Kirovohrad 

Speaking on television, Governor Andriy Raikovych said two security guards at an electricity substation had been killed. He also said that one Ukrainian soldier had been killed and nine more wounded.

Raikovych said the strikes had disrupted the electricity grid and that one district of the regional capital Kropyvnytskyi had been left without power as a result. (Reuters)

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13:21 (IST)23 Jul 2022
What is happening on the economic front?

➡️ Ukraine has around $10 billion worth of grain available for sale in the wake of the deal signed with Russia to unblock supplies, and will also have a chance to sell the current harvest, Zelenskyy said.

➡️ A number of insurance underwriters are interested in providing cover for grain shipments from Ukraine after the agreement to reopen Black Sea ports although details need to be worked out, a senior London marine insurance market official said.

➡️ Russia's state-owned Rosneft and Gazprom will be able to ship oil to third countries under an adjustment of EU sanctions aimed at limiting the risks to global energy security.

➡️ Credit rating firms Fitch and Scope downgraded Ukraine to a notch above default after Kyiv requested a debt-payment freeze, while adviser JPMorgan said it cannot rule out Ukraine needing more debt relief. (Reuters)

12:40 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Thirteen Russian missiles hit central Ukraine region, says local governor

Thirteen Russian missiles hit a military airfield and railway infrastructure in Ukraine's central Kirohovrad region on Saturday, killing and wounding a number of people, the local governor said.

Governor Andriy Raikovych wrote on Telegram that rescue teams were working at the impact sites, and that one small district of the regional capital, Kropyvnytskyi, had been left without electricity by the strikes. (Reuters)

12:00 (IST)23 Jul 2022
UK says Ukraine continues offensive against Russia in Kherson

Heavy fighting has been taking place in the last 48 hours as Ukrainian forces continued their offensive against Russia in Kherson province, west of the Dnipro River, British military intelligence said on Saturday.

Russian forces are using artillery fire along the Ingulets River, a tributary of the Dnipro, the UK's Ministry of Defence said. "Supply lines of the Russian forces west of the river are increasingly at risk," the ministry said in an intelligence update.

It added that additional Ukrainian strikes have caused further damage to the key Antonivsky Bridge, though Russia has conducted temporary repairs. (Reuters)

11:23 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Zelenskyy says no ceasefire without recovering conquered lands

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said there could be no ceasefire unless lost territory was retaken. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attends a meeting with military officials during his visit the war-hit Dnipropetrovsk region. (File photo, Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP)

"Freezing the conflict with the Russian Federation means a pause that gives the Russian Federation a break for rest," Zelenskyy told the Wall Street Journal. "Society believes that all the territories must be liberated first, and then we can negotiate about what to do and how we could live in the centuries ahead." (Reuters)

10:59 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Could HIMARS turn the tide of war in Ukraine?

In late June, Ukraine announced it had destroyed a Russian military base in Izyum, in the eastern Donbas region, killing at least 40 soldiers. Another strike that night reportedly killed a commander of Russia's elite VDV paratrooper regiment.

A launch truck fires the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) produced by Lockheed Martin during combat training in the high desert of the Yakima Training Center, Washington. (AP, File)

They were the first Russian victims of HIMARS (the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System), a mid to long-range missile system that has allowed Ukraine to strike deep beyond the front lines for the first time since Russia invaded in February.

The US began to send HIMARS to Ukraine in June, as Russia continued to advance through Donbas and Luhansk in an artillery-heavy offensive. Since then, HIMARS have become a valuable tool for Ukraine's military, which says it has conducted dozens of strikes on Russian targets, including air defense systems and ammunition stores. (DW)

10:30 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Where is the fighting today?

➡️ Washington is exploring whether it can send US-made fighter jets to Ukraine, although this would not be done immediately, a White House spokesman said.

➡️ Zelenskyy told the Wall Street Journal a ceasefire with Russia without reclaiming lost territory would only prolong the war.

➡️ Russia's defence ministry said its forces had destroyed four US-supplied high mobility artillery rocket systems (HIMARS) between July 5 and Wednesday. (Reuters)

10:13 (IST)23 Jul 2022
US discussing America-made fighter jets for Ukraine

The United States is exploring whether it can send US-made fighter jets to Ukraine, a White House spokesman told reporters, as the conflict with Russia is about to enter its sixth month and fighting rages in eastern Ukraine.

While the Biden administration was making preliminary explorations into the feasibility of potentially providing the jets to Ukraine, the move is not something that would be done immediately, White House spokesman John Kirby told reporters in a briefing.

"It's not something that would be executed in the near-term," Kirby said. (Reuters)

09:53 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Lithuania lifts ban on rail transport of goods into Kaliningrad, says report

The Baltic state of Lithuania has lifted a ban on the rail transport of sanctioned goods into and out of the Russian territory of Kaliningrad, Russia's RIA news agency said on Friday.

The European Union last week said the transit ban only affected road, not rail, transit, and Lithuania should therefore allow Russia to ship concrete, wood and alcohol across EU territory to the exclave

Lithuania had stopped Russia from sending sanctioned goods via rail to Kaliningrad in June, triggering an outcry from Moscow and a promise of swift retaliation. (Reuters)

09:21 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Ukraine has around $10 billion worth of grain available for sale, says Zelenskyy

Ukraine has around $10 billion worth of grain available for sale in the wake of a deal signed with Russia to unblock supplies and will also have a chance to sell the current harvest, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.

"This is another demonstration that Ukraine can withstand the war," he said in a late-night address. "Approximately 20 million tons of last year's grain harvest will be exported. There will also be a chance to sell this year's harvest ... at the moment we have about $10 billion worth of grains available," said Zelenskyy. (Reuters)

08:58 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Watch: India’s Ukraine Dilemma

As diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the crisis in Ukraine continue, the time has come for Delhi to devote greater attention to Central Europe, which is at the heart of the contestation between Russia and the West. Delhi can’t forever view this critical region through the prism of Russia’s conflict with the West. It must come to terms with its growing strategic significance, writes C. Raja Mohan.

08:51 (IST)23 Jul 2022
No provision for transfer of students studying in Ukraine to Indian varsities: Govt

Two months after the West Bengal government allocated seats for practical training to 412 medical students who had returned from Ukraine to the state, the Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Dr Bharti Pravin Pawar told the Lok Sabha that there were no provisions in the Acts governing medical education to allow such transfers. “Therefore, no permission has been given by the NMC to transfer or accommodate any foreign medical students in any Indian medical institute or university,” the minister’s reply read.

Indian students back on a flight to India from Ukraine. (File) 

“As informed by National Medical Commission (NMC), the regulatory body of medical education in the country, no such information is available with them,” when asked about whether 400 students were accommodated by the West Bengal government in state universities. All admissions to MBBS seats – even the 85% seats under the state quota – happen according to the ranks of the students in the National Eligibility Entrance Test (NEET). (Read more)

08:48 (IST)23 Jul 2022
Ukraine remains cautious amidst grain deal

In Kyiv, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba sounded a sombre note on the deal to export Ukrainian grain.

“I’m not opening a bottle of champagne because of this deal,” Kuleba told The Associated Press. “I will keep my fingers crossed that this will work, that ships will carry grain to world markets and prices will go down and people will have food to eat. But I’m very cautious because I have no trust in Russia.”

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Володимир Зеленський (@zelenskiy_official)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy echoed Kuleba's concerns in his nightly video address, saying, “It is clear to everyone that there may be some provocations on the part of Russia, some attempts to discredit Ukrainian and international efforts. But we trust the UN.”

Explained: What’s the significance of UN-backed grain export deal signed by Ukraine, Russia?

Russia and Ukraine signed separate agreements Friday with Turkey and the UN, clearing the way for exporting millions of tons of desperately needed Ukrainian grain — as well as Russian grain and fertilizer — ending a wartime standoff that had threatened food security around the globe. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov signed separate deals with UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar.

Ukraine Russia grain deal Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, and UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, sit as two representatives of Ukraine and Russia delegations check hands during a signing ceremony at Dolmabahce Palace in Istanbul, Turkey, July 22, 2022. (AP)

The ceremony was witnessed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. “Today, there is a beacon on the Black Sea,” Guterres said. “A beacon of hope, a beacon of possibility, a beacon of relief in a world that needs it more than ever.” “You have overcome obstacles and put aside differences to pave the way for an initiative that will serve the common interests of all,” he said, addressing the Russian and Ukrainian representatives.

 

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