Friday, June 2, 2023

Russian troops enter Ukraine’s Kharkiv

The Russian Army has launched major attacks on Ukraine’s second-largest city of Kharkiv. A gas pipeline was blown up in Kharkiv and two large explosions were heard in the south of Kyiv early Sunday.
Russian Defence Ministry Spokesperson Major General Igor Konashenkov had Saturday said that Russian armed forces struck Ukrainian military facilities with sea- and land-based cruise missiles.
“During the night, the Russian armed forces struck facilities of the Ukrainian military infrastructure with long-range precision weapons using air- and sea-based cruise missiles,” Konashenkov told reporters. He also said that a total of 821 objects of the ukrainian military infrastructure have been destroyed so far by the Russian armed forces.
“Among them are 14 military airfields, 19 command posts and communication centres, 24 S-300 and Osa anti-aircraft missile systems, 48 radar stations. 7 combat aircraft, 7 helicopters, 9 unmanned aerial vehicles were shot down. 87 tanks and other combat armoured vehicles, 28 multiple rocket launchers, 118 units of special military vehicles were destroyed,” Konashenkov said.
Another eight military boats were also destroyed by the Russian Navy, informed the spokesperson.
Meanwhile, Indian nationals, mostly students, who were evacuated from war-hit Ukraine, heaved a sigh of relief as an Air India flight carrying them landed at the airport here on Sunday. The returnees belonged to different states like Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Arunachal Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala.

Ukrainians return from abroad to fight Russian invasion

While hundreds of thousands of refugees are leaving Ukraine amid Russia’s attack on the country, some Ukrainian men and women are returning home from across Europe to help defend their homeland.
Poland’s Border Guard said Sunday that some 22,000 people have crossed into Ukraine since on Thursday, when Russia invaded the country.
At the checkpoint in Medyka, in southeastern Poland, many were standing in a line early Sunday to cross into Ukraine.
“We have to defend our homeland. Who else if not us,” said a moustachioed man in front of a group of some 20 Ukrainian truck drivers walking to the checkpoint to enter Ukraine.
They came from across Europe to return to Ukraine. They spoke to The Associated Press in Ukrainian and in Russian.
Another man in the group said: “The Russians should be afraid. We are not afraid.” Members of the group declined to give their names, or only gave their first names, citing their security and that of their families.
A man in his 20s, who said his first name was Denis, said he had been working in Poland but was returning to Ukraine where his “everything” is. “I’m on my own here in Poland. Why should I be here? So I go, for the homeland,” Denis said.
Lesa, a woman in her 30s, Lesa, spoke to the AP just before entering the checkpoint building.
”I am afraid, but I am a mother and want to be with my children. What can you do? It’s scary but I have to.”
Another young woman said she, too, was returning to take care of her children, so that Ukrainian men can defend the country. “We have to, we Ukrainians have to take our children away … to allow our boys to fight,” she said.
On Ukraine’s side of the border, a man was directing those arriving to a place where cars and buses were waiting to take them onward.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was staying in the capital, Kyiv, boosting the morale of Ukrainian fighters as Russian troops were closing in on the city and huge explosions lit up the sky early Sunday.
Zelenskyy has banned men of military age, 18 to 60, from leaving the country. Ukrainian authorities have also called on foreign volunteers to come and fight in Ukraine’s defense.
At least 200,000 people have fled Ukraine into Poland and other neighboring countries in the wake of the Russian invasion, the U.N. refugee agency, the UNHCR, said Sunday.

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