Tag: Ukrainian soldiers

  • Russian rockets kill Ukrainian soldiers during military awards ceremony

    Russian rockets kill Ukrainian soldiers during military awards ceremony

    Over 20 Ukrainian soldiers were killed when Russian missiles hit a military awards ceremony in a city on the frontlines in eastern Ukraine.

    Twenty-eight soldiers from the 128th Mountain Assault Brigade were killed when missiles hit an awards ceremony in the Zaporizhzhia region. More than 50 soldiers and civilians were injured in the incident.

    Ukrainian MP Aleksey Kucherenko posted on Facebook that 28 people lost their lives and over 53 got injured. However, the exact number of casualties has not been officially confirmed yet.

    According to sources, the soldiers from the assault brigade came together in the village near the battlefront to celebrate Missile Forces Day.

    Ruslan Kaganets, leader of the Solnyshko volunteer group, said: ‘The Russians attacked while our team was in line, and many officers and soldiers got hurt or killed. ‘

    President Zelensky said that they will investigate the deaths of the soldiers.

    He said: ‘This is a sad event that didn’t have to happen. ‘ What is most important is to find out exactly what happened and make sure it doesn’t happen again in the future.

    Viktor Mykyta, who is in charge of Zakarpattia state administration, has requested that people in the region avoid participating in any fun activities, concerts, or other events as they mourn.
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    The attack might have used missiles that are able to carry nuclear weapons, and these missiles are already in Belarus, which is a country next to us.

    They can carry weapons, can travel more than 300 miles, and can go really fast at 5,320 mph.

    The Iskander missiles are heavy at four tonnes and are quite long, measuring 23 feet. They are launched from a vehicle that requires a three-person crew.

  • Ukraine launches a counter offensive as thousands of soldiers rushed to front lines

    Ukraine launches a counter offensive as thousands of soldiers rushed to front lines

    Thousands of Ukrainian soldiers and armoured vehicles have gotten closer to the front lines in anticipation of the long-awaited counteroffensive against Russia.

    Volodymyr Zelensky, president of Ukraine, made a commitment in June to start a counteroffensive against the illegal Russian invasion; it appears to have started this week.

    Soldiers were sent to the front lines of Zaporizhzhia yesterday, the Telegraph reports, and Mr. Zelensky lauded their “very good results.”

    This operation, which might last up to three weeks, will see the Ukrainian force move south and cut off a land route to Crimea.

    Along the front line, artillery skirmishes broke out, and it was believed that the Ukrainians had over 100 armoured vehicles, including Bradley Fighting Vehicles and Leopards produced in Germany and the United States.

    The forces of Mr. Zelensky are already launching counterattacks in Bakhmut and Donetsk.

    The disagreement between the local Russian leadership, according to US security forces, is the reason Ukrainian officials are concentrating on Zaporizhzhia.

    Major General Ivan Popov, the regional Russian commander, allegedly said he was fired after bringing up battlefield concerns with his superiors, according to a US official.

    The official remarked, “The Russians are overworked.” They continue to have issues with supplies, personnel, logistics, and weapons. They can sense the pressure.

    Russian minefields, shelling, and air attacks have prevented Ukrainian troops from making much progress in driving the Russians back along the southern front.

    The offensive in the country’s east and southeast that are under Russian control is moving more slowly than Mr. Zelensky would prefer, he previously acknowledged.

    However, Mr. Zelensky stated in a video address on Wednesday night that “our boys had very good results at the front today.” Well done to them. Details will be provided.

  • Ukrainians prepare for counterattack despite strikes

    Ukrainians prepare for counterattack despite strikes

    The Soviet-era armoured BTR vehicle approaches over a grassy plain on the outskirts of Chernihiv, northern Ukraine, its loud engine warning of its approach long before it is actually seen. It stops abruptly, the door opens, and Ukrainian soldiers charge the trench below.

    A Ukrainian soldier with the call sign Jenia states, “Today our job is training and cleaning the trenches.” He is a part of the Kyiv Offensive Guard, which is a new assault brigade project from the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs.

    “The enemy has lost positions, we quickly arrive, take positions, and restore it,” he continues.

    This operation is just a drill, but the scenario has been engineered to be as realistic as possible. The trenches are muddy – despite weeks without rain – and the soldiers are forced to face the unexpected, such as tending to and evacuating the wounded, or adapting after suffering casualties.

    “Some people say training is not hard, that there is no danger – but running through the trenches and constantly training, knowing that you will go to battle, it is not easy,” Jenia says. “Everything comes with practice, It is clear that during the hostilities there will also be the psychological impact of war – but practice is very important.”

    Even as Ukrainian cities experience barrage after barrage of Russian missile and drone strikes, Jenia and the other members of the Offensive Guard have remained unfazed, simulating scenarios they expect to find once Kyiv finally launches its much anticipated counteroffensive.

    That day is fast approaching, if one of the top advisers to Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky is to be believed.

    “There is already some sort of work underway to increase the intensity of the shelling of Russia’s logistics support in order to reduce their combat capabilities in the near future, to loosen up their defenses,” presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak told CNN in an interview.

    The strikes Podolyak mentions are often referred to as shaping operations – so-called because they aim to ‘shape’ the battlefield – in this case, in Ukraine’s favor. CNN has previously reported that these began on May 12, citing a senior US military official and senior Western official.

    “Everything that is happening now is a precursor to a counterattack, a necessary pre-condition,” Podolyak explained. “When the intensity of fire increases, especially on the logistics supplies, when the number of operations increases.”

    Ukraine has increased the number of strikes on Russian ammunition depots, logistical nodes and rear echelon bases, such as the ones seen in Mariupol and Berdyansk in the past few days. The military’s top general, Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhnyi, released a slickly produced video over the weekend with the caption: “The time has come to take back what belongs to us.”

    In his nightly address Monday, President Zelensky said the timing of the counteroffensive had been set, but did not provide further details. And despite the clear signs that a counteroffensive is coming, Podolyak also refuses to commit to specific dates.

    “You can’t say about a counterattack that it will start any one day, one time when some events will start,” he says. “Already now there are intensive relatively offensive actions on the flanks of the town of Bakhmut. There is essentially no city left, but offensives are underway.”

    These smaller operations are but a sample of the larger offensive, whose ambitious goals Ukraine is very open about and has openly advertized. But for it to succeed, Kyiv needs continued Western support.

    “If there are timely deliveries of large quantities of the necessary consumable components, I am talking about shells, drones and missiles, then of course the war can mathematically be over this year,” Polodyak says. “But it will end undoubtedly on the borders of Ukraine as they were in 1991, with the de-occupation of Crimea, and undoubtedly with the beginning of a massive process of transformation of Russia’s political system.”

    “There will be a counteroffensive in any case, and it will be successful. It will not be quick, it will take some time, it will be complicated, but it will be successful nevertheless,” he added.

    These bold goals are why Kyiv has delayed an attack that was initially expected in early in spring but has yet to materialize with summer around the corner, taking time to perfect the strategy.

    “It is impossible to be perfectly prepared for such a large volume of combat. There will always have to be fine-tuning,” Podolyak explains. “These or other initiative events along the front lines go on, we will continue to accumulate resources, we will continue to conduct combat cohesion, we will continue to train and practice our troops, including the partners conducting training.”

    Back on the training grounds, the Offensive Guard’s commander, call sign Kyiv, shares a similar combat philosophy.

    “We improve our fighting skills in special combat training every day to liberate our lands,” he says. “Our servicemen now know how to deal with the enemy – because we practice everything until it becomes automatic.”

    He’s been helping train tens of thousands of troops and believes Ukraine has what it takes to succeed.

    “We have motivation,” he says. “We defend our lands, this is our country, this is our home.”

    “Of course victory will be ours,” he adds.

  • Arman Soldin, a AFP journalist killed in rocket fire in eastern Ukraine

    Arman Soldin, a AFP journalist killed in rocket fire in eastern Ukraine

    On Tuesday, rocket fire from the encircled city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine killed a French reporter for the international news agency Agence France-Presse (AFP).

    According to coworkers who saw the strike, AFP reported on Twitter that Arman Soldin, 32, who served as the organization’s video coordinator in Ukraine, was murdered by a rocket attack on the outskirts of the village of Chasiv Yar, close to Bakhmut.

    The killing of AFP video journalist Arman Soldin in eastern Ukraine today has left us in shock, according to AFP. All of our condolences are extended to his family and friends.

    Soldin was with four colleagues at the time of the attack, but the other journalists were not injured, the news agency said.

    Their reporting team was with Ukrainian soldiers when they came under fire around 4:30pm local time on Tuesday, according to AFP.

    Soldin, a French citizen with Bosnian origins, was an experienced reporter who had regularly traveled to the front lines, the news agency said. He had been AFP’s video coordinator there since September 2022 and coveredthe conflict from the early days of Russia’s invasion.

    “Our journalists travel regularly to this area to report on clashes in the region, the epicenter of fighting in Ukraine for several months,” AFP said in its statement.

    Soldin is one of the several known journalists killed since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion, including Fox News photojournalist Pierre Zakrzewski and consultant Oleksandra “Sasha” Kuvshynova, journalist and documentarian Brent Renaud, and photojournalist Maks Levin.

    Born in Sarajevo, Arman was evacuated to France in 1992 as the Bosnian war broke out, and he told AFP in an interview last year that “stories about refugees affect me,” according to the agency’s obituary.

    He joined AFP in 2015 in Rome and his first staff posting was in London later that year, according to the news agency.

    Following news of his death, there was an outpouring of grief and condolences from his friends and colleagues.

    “The whole agency is devastated by the loss of Arman,” said Fabrice Fries, CEO of AFP, according to the news agency. “His death is a terrible reminder of the risks and dangers faced by journalists on a daily basis when covering the conflict in Ukraine.”

    Earlier this month Soldin kept his video camera rolling as he and his team of journalists came under rocket fire near the front line.

    “Being caught under a rain of Grad yesterday with a bunch of trench-diggers is probably one of the worst things that I’ve experienced since being in Ukraine, with rockets exploding less than 50 meters away,” he wrote. “Pure terror.”

    Colleagues who had worked with Soldin in Ukraine described him as a “brave and tenacious journalist” and “full of enthusiasm for life” in comments posted on Twitter.

    One video posted in tribute showed him laughing and singing the 80s pop song“Forever Young” while driving with colleagues in April 2022.

    In one of Soldin’s last Twitter threads, he posted a series of videos about rescuing a baby hedgehog that the team had found at the bottom of a crater from Russian shelling in Chasiv Yar. Soldin took the hedgehog back to base and hand-fed it back to health.

    “Arman was the kind of guy who saved hurt hedgehogs in war zones. He was an incredible and vibrant personality and a great journalist. We miss him. We are mourning him. Rest in peace,” said Jonathan Brown, AFP’s deputy news editor for Moscow and Kyiv, on Twitter.

    French President Emmanuel Macron mourned Soldin’s death, saying on Twitter: “We share the pain of his family and all his colleagues.”

    “With courage, from the first hours of the conflict he was at the front to establish the facts. To inform us. We share the pain of his loved ones and all his colleagues.”

    Ukraine’s ambassador to the UN Sergiy Kyslytsya called Soldin a “remarkable journalist” who “paid with his life for his courage.”

    “My condolences to his loved ones. Respect for all those who take enormous risks to speak the truth about the horrors of war in Ukraine,” he said.

    In their obituary, AFP wrote that Soldin celebrated his 32nd birthday on March 21 from Kramatorsk in eastern Ukraine.

    “A decent bottle had been opened for the occasion and a colleague had got his guitar out,” AFP quoted his colleague Antoine Lambroschini as saying.

  • A former POW from Ukraine sobs eating an apple for the first time since being freed

    A former POW from Ukraine sobs eating an apple for the first time since being freed

    A Ukrainian prisoner of war broke down in tears after eating fresh fruit for the first time in a year.

    Heartbreaking footage was captured of the scene just after Ukrainian soldiers were released from a Russian POW camp.

    Andriy Yermak, head of the Ukrainian presidential office, posted yesterday on Telegram that 44 prisoners had been released from Russian custody.

    Out of those, he claimed, 42 were military personnel and two were civilians, and some of those freed had torture-related wounds.

    The short clip shows a small group of released Ukrainian prisoners, who have all had their heads shaved, sitting on the ground.

    It first shows a relieved soldier with a beaming smile on his face as he tucks into an apple.

    A TikTok user who posted a translated version of the video titled ‘heroes are returning home from Russian captivity’ explained that the man says: ‘I’ve dreamt about an apple for a year.’

    It then pans to a second man in the group who is clearly very emotional as he’s seen cradling an apple in his hands and eating it.

    He continually weeps as he’s speaking to another man nearby in a gut-wrenching moment.

    A third soldier in the shot claims he’s lost more than 3st in weight while he was imprisoned, saying: ‘I’ve lost 20 kilograms.’

    Visegrád 24, an English account for central and eastern European news, tweeted: ‘First apple or fresh fruit for these Ukrainian soldiers in nearly a year.

    ‘They were part of a group of 44 Ukrainian POWs exchanged yesterday.’

    The group of prisoners posed for pictures to celebrate being set free and were photographed proudly holding up Ukrainian flags together before boarding coaches to leave.

    Since Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian invasion of Ukraine more than a year ago, there have been regular prisoner exchanges.

    Conflict has continued in recent weeks with Ukrainian forces crossing the Dnipro River for the first time as part of a long-awaited counter offensive.

    Ukraine’s ‘unique’ special forces are also reportedly destroying targets deep behind Russian lines, while Putin has rolled out Russia’s newest tanks onto the battlefield.

  • Zelensky’s voice trembles with anguish over ‘Russian beasts’ who beheaded the Ukraine soldier

    Zelensky’s voice trembles with anguish over ‘Russian beasts’ who beheaded the Ukraine soldier

    Volodymyr Zelensky, visibly upset, has threatened to punish Russian “murderers” after footage purportedly depicting Kremlin soldiers beheading Ukrainian soldiers surfaced.

    The shocking videos, according to the president of Ukraine, demonstrate “how easily these beasts kill.”

    In one beheading video, a killer is urged to break the spine of his scared victim, who is wearing a yellow tactical armband to identify him.

    ‘Get working, brothers. Break his spine, f–k, have you never cut off a head?’, the voice says.

    Volodymyr Zelensky
    Volodymyr Zelensky looked visibly shaken over the video

    A photo thought to be from the same video shows what appears to be a severed head mounted on a spike.

    Another piece of footage is said to show the beheaded corpses of two Ukrainian soldiers lying on the ground next to a destroyed military vehicle.

    Seemingly referring to the bodies on the ground, a laughing voice says: ‘They killed them. Someone came up to them. They came up to them and cut their heads off.’

    It’s thought the first clip may have been filmed in summer last year given the amount of foliage seen on the ground, while the other is apparently more recent.

    Western analysts have blamed mercenary fighters from the Wagner Group for the alleged atrocities.

    After the videos were posted to pro-Russian social media channels last week, it was claimed both incidents took place in or near Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine – where Wagner forces are spearheading some of the war’s heaviest fighting.

    Metro is unable to independently confirm the details behind the videos, but Ukrainian authorities have made it clear they believe them to be real and blame Russia.

    FILE - Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery at Russian positions near Bakhmut, in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, on Nov. 20, 2022. Europe???s biggest armed conflict since World War II is poised to enter a key new phase in the coming weeks. With no suggestion of a negotiated end to the 13 months of fighting between Russia and Ukraine, a counteroffensive by Kyiv???s troops is in the cards. (AP Photo/LIBKOS, File)
    Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery at Russian positions near Bakhmut, in the Donetsk region of Ukraine (Picture: AP)

    Vladimir Putin’s spokesman today admitted the footage is ‘terrible’, but said the authenticity must be checked and suggested Ukraine may have filmed it themselves.

    Mr Zelensky appeared visibly shaken by the footage as he mourned the ‘sons, brothers and husbands’ killed.

    He promised Russia would never be forgiven for alleged war crimes and called on world leaders to take action ‘now’.

    ‘This is something that no-one in the world can ignore – how easily these beasts kill’, the politician said.

    ‘This video – the execution of a Ukrainian captive – the world must see it. This is a video of Russia as it is – what kind of creatures they are.

    ‘There are no people for them. A son, a brother, a husband – someone’s child.’

    The beheadings were ‘not an accident or an episode’ and instead showed the ‘new norm’ that Putin’s Russia wanted to impose, he said.

    ‘There was the case in Bucha. Thousands of times – everyone must react – every leader’, he continued.

    ‘Don’t expect it to be forgotten, that time will pass. We are not going to forget anything.

    ‘Neither are we going to forgive the murderers. There will be legal responsibility for everything.

    ‘The defeat of terror is necessary. No-one will understand if the leaders don’t react. Action is required now!’

    The head of the Security Service of Ukraine has also vowed to ‘find these subhumans’.

    ‘If necessary, we will get them wherever they are, from underground or from beyond the grave’, Vasyl Malyuk warned.

    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has named Russia ‘worse than ISIS’ while blasting the enemy country’s current chairmanship of the UN security council.

    Militants from Islamic State in Iraq and Syria were notorious for releasing videos of beheadings of captives when they controlled swathes of those countries from 2014-2017.

    Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov has insisted ‘we need to check the authenticity of this footage in this fake world we live in’.

    He said: ‘First it is necessary to check whether it is credible, and then, of course, there may be an opportunity to verify whether this is true, where it happened and by which side.’

  • Ukrainian soldiers escape death as Russian rocket fails to detonate

    Ukrainian soldiers escape death as Russian rocket fails to detonate

    There is video purporting to show the moment Ukrainian soldiers narrowly escape death after a Russian rocket doesn’t explode.

    Within the first two seconds of the footage, we witness the weapon fall from the sky.

    The cameraman appears to flee further within the structure they are recording from as the object lands somewhere out of site.

    Several soldiers can be seen scrambling for cover in the video, but when the rocket does not go off as expected, the whole scene deflates somewhat.

    The video was posted by US-based Twitter account @UKikaski, which claims to be military intelligence source and US Air Force veteran

    The footage was captioned: ‘Some very lucky soldiers, possibly from the 81st Air Mobile Brigade, avoid almost certain death or injury after a Russian rocket did not detonate.’

    Someone else took the opportunity to tease Moscow and commented: ‘Don’t worry Russian rockets never explode.’

    FILE - Belarusian army Su-25 jet fighters fly during a parade marking Independence Day in Minsk, Belarus, Wednesday, July 3, 2019. Russian President Vladimir Putin has announced that he intends to deploy tactical nuclear weapons on the territory of Belarus. The move appears to be another attempt by Putin to raise the stakes in the conflict in Ukraine. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits, File)
    Belarus’ jets have been upgraded to carry nuclear weapons in response to Finland’s accession to NATO (Picture: AP)

    Yesterday, Russian defense minister Sergei Shoigu announced that some Belarusian jets are now capable of carrying nuclear warheads.

    He also confirmed that a number of Iskander rocket systems had been transferred to Belarus, which could be used to carry conventional or nuclear missiles.

    The move is believed to be a response to Finland officially becoming the 31st member of Nato at a ceremony in Brussels on the same day.

    Finland and Sweden submitted a joint application to Nato in a direct answer to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    Although Sweden are still awaiting approval, Finland’s membership represents a major change in Europe’s security landscape.

    The country adopted neutrality after its defeat by the Soviets in the Second World War, but its leaders signalled they wanted to join the alliance just months after Russian president Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine sent fear through Moscow’s neighbours.

    The move is a strategic and political blow to Mr Putin, who has long complained about Nato’s expansion toward Russia and partly used that as a justification for the invasion. The alliance says it poses no threat to Moscow.

    Finland shares an 832 mile land border with Russia- the largest in Europe.

  • US to dispatch tanks and Patriot missile systems to Ukraine earlier than anticipated

    US to dispatch tanks and Patriot missile systems to Ukraine earlier than anticipated

    As per American defense sources, the deployment of US Patriot missile defense systems and Abram tanks to Ukraine is expected to proceed more quickly than anticipated.

    According to the defense officials, 65 Ukrainian soldiers will soon finish their system training at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.

    According to the authorities who spoke to reporters at Fort Sill, the troops will next proceed to Europe for more training on the two Patriot systems—one American and one made by the Germans and Dutch—that will be deployed to Ukraine in the coming weeks.

    The announcement of the acceleration of Patriot deployments came shortly after it was reported that the US will accelerate the time it takes to ship Abrams tanks to Ukraine by sending older M1-A1 models of America’s main battle tank instead of the more modern version of the tank, according to two US officials.

    The decision to speed up the delivery of tanks and Patriots comes as Ukraine is preparing to launch a spring offensive against Russian forces, built largely around the more powerful and more advanced systems Western countries have agreed to send, including tanks and other armored vehicles.

    US trainers at Fort Sill, where the 65 Ukrainians have been training since January 15, were able to significantly speed up the timeline of the course because of the Ukrainians’ baseline knowledge of air defense systems, the officials said.

    “Our assessment is that the Ukrainian soldiers are impressive, and absolutely a quick study,” said Brig. Gen. Shane Morgan, the Fort Sill commander. “Due to their extensive air defense knowledge and experience in a combat zone, it was easier – though never easy – for them to grasp the Patriot System Operations and Maintenance concepts.”

    It typically takes around a year for US soldiers to complete training on the Patriot, though Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder said in January that the accelerated training timeline for Ukrainian troops would take “several months.”

    The Ukrainian troops training are men and women ranging in age from 19-67. They arrived in mid-January and are set to compete the training in the coming days. The schedule was “aggressive,” a Fort Sill official said, with the Ukrainians training daily from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.

    The announcement at the end of 2022 that the US would be providing a Patriot battery was a welcome one for Ukraine, who had repeatedly asked for the air defense capability. But experts warned that the system would not be a game changer overnight because of the significant training and logistical requirements that go along with it, as well as its limitations in scope.

    “These systems don’t pick up and move around the battlefield,” retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling, former commander of US Army Europe, told CNN in December. “You put them in place somewhere that defends your most strategic target, like a city, like Kyiv. If anyone thinks this is going to be a system that is spread across a 500-mile border between Ukraine and Russia, they just don’t know how the system operates.”

    The Ukrainians’ day-to-day training in Oklahoma was overseen by the Army’s 3rd Battalion, 6th Field Artillery Regiment, Morgan said, adding that the Ukrainian troops were “hand-picked by their country” and the “best of the best in what they do.”

    “I’m certain their actions these past months will save lives and alleviate suffering,” Col. Marty O’Donnell, the spokesman for US Army Europe and Africa, said of the Ukrainian troops on Tuesday. “What they did matters — it matters to Ukraine, and to the world.”

    On Tuesday morning, John Kirby, the National Security Council’s strategic communications coordinator, said the US was working to speed up the delivery of tanks to Ukraine.

    “We’re working on that. There’s some changes that you can make to the process, to sort of speed that up,” Kirby said on MSNBC. “The Pentagon is working as fast as they can, and they’ll have more to say on adjustments they’re making.”

    The US had previously announced it would send the more modern M1-A2 version of the Abrams battle tank, but that would have required either building new tanks or modernizing existing older tanks, then training Ukrainian crews on the more advanced system. The M1-A2 has a newer digital targeting system that makes it a more capable tank, but it also required more training for Ukrainian troops to operate the more complex tank and to maintain the system.

    The US still intends to send 31 M1-A1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, the same number as previously announced and the size of a complete Ukrainian tank battalion.

  • ‘Our support is unwavering’ – New Zealand’s defence minister visits Kyiv

    New Zealand has vowed to continue its “unwavering” support for Ukraine after its defence minister visited Kyiv.

    Peeni Henare took a trip to the Ukrainian capital to reaffirm the Pacific nation’s support for the country’s battle against Russia and to meet his counterpart, Oleksii Reznikov.

    “We discussed New Zealand’s recent extension of the infantry training support mission in the UK for Ukrainian troops out to July 2023,” Mr Henare said in a statement.

    “Visiting Kyiv sends a strong message that … our support for the Ukrainian defensive effort against Russia’s illegal invasion is unwavering.”

    Mr Henare also visited Kyiv’s Wall of Remembrance of the Fallen
    for Ukraine to pay respects to victims of the war.

    Last week, New Zealand said it would send a further 66 defence personnel to Britain to help train Ukrainian soldiers.

    Since Russia’s attack on Ukraine, New Zealand has sanctioned more than 1,200 Russian individuals and entities and provided the country with millions of pounds worth of assistance.

     

    Source: Sky News