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  • Russia has renewed its attack on Ukraine, with paratroopers landing on second city Kharkiv in the early hours 
  • City also hit by missiles, with one destroying part of a university having apparently missed a police building
  • Russian troops also rolled into the centre of Kherson, in the south, thought Ukraine remains in overall control 
  • Zhytomyr, to the west of Kyiv, was also struck by a rocket overnight that partially destroyed a hospital

Fierce fighting is underway in Ukraine’s second city of Kharkiv this morning after Russian paratroopers dropped in and attacked a military hospital before airstrikes targeting police, state agencies and the security service. 

Part of Karazin National University was on fire early Wednesday with the building partially collapsed after a missile – seemingly intended for the neighbouring police headquarters or interior ministry building – struck the college’s department of sociology instead.

At least 21 people have been killed and 112 wounded in shelling on Kharkiv in the last 24 hours, governor Oleg Synegubov said, as an interior ministry official added: ‘There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit.’

It came as the Russian army renewed its assault on Ukraine after punishing losses in the early days. Putin’s forces captured Kherson, in the south, overnight though the mayor remained defiant – posting on Facebook: ‘We are still Ukraine. Still firm.’ Mariupol, also in the south, came under renewed shelling.

In Zhytomyr, a city to the west of Kyiv, airstrikes hit the headquarters of the 95th Ukrainian armed forces brigade while also damaging a hospital, leaving two people dead. The city of Bila Tserkva, some 50 miles south of Kyiv, was also hit overnight. 

Ukraine’s armed forces said Wednesday morning that Russia is ‘trying to advance in all directions’ but are ‘being resisted everywhere and suffering losses’. It estimates that 5,840 Russian troops have been killed so far – though that figure cannot be verified.

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Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday accused Russia, which has launched an invasion of his country, of seeking to ‘erase’ Ukrainians, their country and their history.

In a video address, the Ukrainian leader said a missile strike on a target at the site of a Holocaust massacre shows that ‘for many people in Russia our Kyiv is completely foreign.

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‘They know nothing about our capital. About our history. But they have an order to erase our history. Erase our country. Erase us all,’ he said.

Zelensky, unshaven and wearing a khaki T-shirt, said the West’s response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine’s bid to join the European Union.

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‘This is no time to be neutral,’ he said, while denouncing a Russian airstrike last night that damaged Babyn Yar Holocaust memorial site during an attack on Kyiv’s main television tower.

‘We all died again by Babyn Yar. Although the world has promised again and again that it will never happen again,’ said Zelenskiy.

‘Don’t you see what is happening? That’s why it is very important now that you, millions of Jews around the world, do not stay silent. Because Nazism is born in silence. Scream about murdering of civilians, scream about murdering of Ukrainians.’

Despite the near-universal condemnation of the war internationally, a new state poll in Russia taken over the weekend showed support for Putin has risen from around 60 per cent to 70 per cent since the week before.

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Russia also launched a recruitment drive for more mercenary soldiers in state media, with newspaper Novaya Gazeta running adverts offering soldiers-for-hire £1,760 a month in a drive for the ‘recruitment of people for protection in the near abroad’. 

Since Russian troops rolled into Ukraine last week to achieve Putin’s mission of overthrowing Zelensky’s pro-Western government, hundreds of civilians have been reported killed.

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Russian forces have carried out a massive bombing campaign and encircled urban centres, but Ukraine insists no major city has yet been overtaken.

‘Russian airborne troops landed in Kharkiv… and attacked a local hospital,’ the Ukrainian army said in a statement on messaging app Telegram. ‘There is an ongoing fight between the invaders and the Ukrainians.’

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Russia hit a residential building in the city on Tuesday killing eight people, drawing comparisons to the massacres of civilians in Sarajevo in the 1990s and condemnation for what Zelensky called a ‘war crime’.

A fire broke out on Wednesday in the barracks of a flight school in Kharkiv following an airstrike, according to Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Ukrainian Interior Minister.

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‘Practically there are no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit,’ he was quoted as saying in a statement on Telegram. 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10567943/Putins-paratroopers-land-Kharkiv.html#v-1528527606976168786

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Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building
Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building
Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit
Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit
The remains of a destroyed Russian military convoy are seen on a street in Bucha, to the south of Kyiv, on Wednesday morning
The remains of a destroyed Russian military convoy are seen on a street in Bucha, to the south of Kyiv, on Wednesday morning

Kharkiv, a largely Russian-speaking city near the Russian border, has a population of around 1.4 million.

Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden branded Vladimir Putin a ‘dictator’, warning the sanction campaign to cripple Russia’s economy would escalate and its oligarchs were being targeted.

In Biden’s first State of the Union address, he hailed the resolve of the Western alliance and voiced solidarity with Ukraine as lawmakers in the US Congress gave a standing ovation to the Ukrainian people.

‘A Russian dictator, invading a foreign country, has costs around the world,’ Biden told lawmakers in his annual State of the Union address, promising ‘robust action to make sure the pain of our sanctions is targeted at Russia’s economy.’  

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Biden, who had earlier spoken with Zelensky on the phone, announced new measures against Russia and its wealthy elite with a new task force to go after the ‘crimes’ of Russian oligarchs.

‘We are coming for your ill-begotten gains,’ he said, prompting the rare sight of members of both parties standing to applaud.

‘And tonight I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American air space to all Russian flights – further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy.’

The US leader said Putin’s aggression was ‘premeditated and totally unprovoked’ – but hailed the resolve of the Western alliance in responding with brutal sanctions.

‘(Putin) thought he could divide us here at home,’ Biden said. ‘But Putin was wrong. We are ready.’

He repeated his commitment that no American troops would be sent to Ukraine to confront the invading forces.

A lack of will to send foreign troops into battle has given Russia space to press on with its assault on Ukrainian cities.

A strike on the main TV tower in Kyiv killed five people Tuesday and knocked out some state broadcasting, Ukrainian officials said, but left the structure intact.

Fresh explosions were heard late Tuesday in Kyiv and Bila Tserkva, 50 miles (80 kilometers) to the south, according to local media.

News outlets also reported Russian missiles damaging residential buildings and a hospital in Zhytomyr, citing the major transport hub’s mayor Sergei Sukhomline. 

People help a wounded woman in the aftermath of a Russian shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday morning after Ukrainian President Zelensky declared Russia a 'terrorist state' over the attack
People help a wounded woman in the aftermath of a Russian shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday morning after Ukrainian President Zelensky declared Russia a ‘terrorist state’ over the attack

The International Criminal Court has opened a war crimes investigation against Russia. Ukraine says more than 350 civilians, including 14 children, have been killed in the conflict. 

The Ukrainian Ministry of Defence also said overnight that it feared an attack from Belarus over its northern border.

‘Belarusian troops have been put on high alert and are concentrated in areas closest to the border with Ukraine,’ the ministry said Tuesday in a statement on Facebook.

Ukrainian intelligence noted ‘significant activity’ of aircraft in the border area, it said.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said Tuesday he had ordered more troops to the south of the country, the Belta news agency reported.

But forces of Belarus, a close ally of Russia, would not be taking part in the attack on Ukraine, he added.

In southern Ukraine, the city of Mariupol on the Azov Sea was left without electricity after Russian bombardment, while Kherson on the Black Sea reported Russian checkpoints encircling the city.

In a key victory for Moscow, Russia’s defence ministry said its troops had linked up with pro-Moscow rebel forces from eastern Ukraine along the Azov Sea coast. 

Russia has defied international bans, boycotts and sanctions to press ahead with an offensive it says is aimed at defending Ukraine’s Russian speakers and toppling the leadership.

In response, more Western companies have withdrawn from projects in Russia, deepening the economic toll on Moscow that saw the ruble collapse this week.

Apple, ExxonMobil and Boeing announced Tuesday in rapid succession steps to withdraw or freeze business in Russia.

The moves followed earlier announcements by Disney, Ford and Mastercard among others.

The invasion has sent global markets into a spiral, with crude surging past $110 a barrel Wednesday and equities sinking.

On top of sanctions, Germany has promised arms for Ukraine, while the EU said, in a first, that it will buy and supply arms to the country.

Zelensky has reiterated an urgent appeal for Ukraine to be admitted to the European Union. 

More than 660,000 people have fled abroad, the UN refugee agency said, and as battles rage for control of major cities many more are expected to follow.

Residents of capital Kyiv are crammed into makeshift bomb shelters awaiting their own fight, with a massive Russian military convoy stationed just north of the city.

Teacher Irina Butyak, 38, has spent two days in the basement of her apartment block sheltering with some 20 people.

‘We have train tickets for western Ukraine for tomorrow,’ she told AFP as air raid sirens blared directly overhead.

‘I don’t think we will make the train.’

The faces of Putin’s victims: A 19-year-old biathlete, an anesthesiologist and two girls aged six and 10 are among the 352 civilians – including at least 13 children – killed during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine 

As Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine, the stories and photos of those killed have started to show the human toll taken by war.

Ukraine’s interior minister reported 352 civilians dead and over 1,600 injured this past Sunday, a mere four days after the invasion began.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Liz Throssell said they’ve only been able to ‘cross-check’ 136 dead, including 13 children, but acknowledged the toll ‘is likely to be much higher.’

Throssell added that another 400 people – including 26 children – have been wounded from the fighting.

Daily Mail

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