Ukraine and Russia: What you need to know right now
Reuters
April 4, 2022 15:46 MYT
April 4, 2022 15:46 MYT
UKRAINIAN authorities were investigating possible war crimes by Russia after finding hundreds of bodies, some bound and shot at close range, strewn around towns near Kyiv after Kremlin forces withdrew to refocus attacks elsewhere in Ukraine.
WAR CRIMES PROBE
* Ukraine said 50 of some 300 bodies, found after Russian forces withdrew from Bucha northwest of the capital, Kyiv, were victims of extra-judicial killings by Russian troops. Reuters could not verify the report.
* Satellite images showed a 45-foot (14-m)-long trench dug into the grounds of a church where a mass grave was found.
* Russia said alleged "crimes" by its troops in Bucha were a "provocation" and no resident suffered.
* A leading rights group said it had documented "apparent war crimes" by Russian forces.
* Ukraine said it found 410 bodies in towns near Kyiv in an investigation into possible war crimes, and called for an International Criminal Court probe. France and Britain said they would support an investigation.
FIGHTING
* Ukraine's General Staff said Russia expected to mobilise about 60,000 reservists. Reuters could not independently confirm the claim.
* Explosions were heard in the early hours of Monday in the cities of Kherson and Odesa, in the south, while air raid sirens sounded across the east.
* Governor of the eastern Donetsk region said on Sunday shelling continued by night and day. Russian shelling killed seven people in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, the regional prosecutor's office said.
* Heavy fighting has continued in Mariupol as Russian forces attempt to take the southeastern port city, British military intelligence said.
ECONOMY
* Ukraine demanded crippling new sanctions on Russia from major Western powers over what it called a "massacre" in Bucha.
* Germany said the West would agree to impose more sanctions on Russia in the coming days, with its defence minister saying the European Union should discuss ending imports of Russian gas.
PEACE TALKS
* Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy appeared in a video aired at the Grammy Awards and appealed to viewers to support Ukrainians "in any way you can".
* Russia said it had requested a U.N. Security Council meeting because of what Moscow called Kyiv's attempts to disrupt peace talks and escalate violence with a "provocation" in Bucha.
QUOTES
* "What is more opposite to music? The silence of ruined cities and killed people," Zelenskiy said in his Grammy video appearance.
* "I recognised him by his sneakers, his trousers. He looked mutilated, his body was cold," said Tetyana Volodymyrivna, a resident of Bucha, describing her husband.