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Ukraine's capital was reeling Friday from Russian missile strikes that hit a residential high-rise in the city and killed at least one person, according to local officials.
The attack, which came just after the head of the United Nations met with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv on Thursday, delivered a deadly jolt of war after weeks of peace since Moscow's forces withdrew from the area to refocus on the country's east.
In the eastern Donbas region, Russia's assault made some limited progress in an offensive that has drawn the West deeper into the conflict as it tries to aid Ukraine's defense with more weapons and leave Russian President Vladimir Putin mired in a damaging war.
To help Ukrainians fend off Russian forces, the United States will begin training the country's armed forces to use radar systems and armored vehicles that were included in a recent military assistance package, the Pentagon said. The training will occur at U.S. bases in Germany.
Russia still having coordination problems in attack on Ukraine, U.K. says
Despite attempts to try and learn from past failures, Russia’s military attacking Ukraine continue to suffer from poor coordination and low morale, the United Kingdom’s defense ministry said.
“Shortcomings in Russian tactical co-ordination remain. A lack of unit-level skills and inconsistent air support have left Russia unable to fully leverage its combat mass, despite localised improvements,” the U.K. said in a daily update Saturday.
Russian forces have been concentrating on an attack in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region, after suffering setbacks in the invasion Moscow launched against Ukraine on Feb. 24, officials have said.
A senior U.S. Defense Department official said Friday that “Ukrainians continue to resist effectively in the Donbas,” and that Russian forces are behind schedule in part because of that.
Zelenskyy accuses Russia of trying to destroy Donbas
KYIV, Ukraine — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of trying to destroy the Donbas and all who live there.
“The constant brutal bombardments, the constant Russian strikes on infrastructure and residential areas show that Russia wants to empty this territory of all people. Therefore, the defense of our land, the defense of our people, is literally a fight for life,” he said late Friday in his nightly video address to the nation.
He said the cities and towns of the Donbas will survive only if Ukraine remains standing. “If the Russian invaders are able to realize their plans even partially, then they have enough artillery and aircraft to turn the entire Donbas into stones. As they did with Mariupol.”
Zelenskyy said Mariupol, once one of the most developed cities in the region, was now a “Russian concentration camp among the ruins.”
Russian foreign minister claims West will fight until 'the last Ukrainian'
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov claimed Friday that the West intends to fight until “the last Ukrainian” and that NATO countries are trying to prevent a political deal to end the conflict in Ukraine.
In an interview with the Chinese state media agency Xinhua, Lavrov also said the West is jeopardizing the world’s food and energy security for the sake of its own geopolitical ambitions.
Lavrov said the country’s war on Ukraine — which he called a “special military operation” — “contributes to the process of freeing the world from the neo-colonial oppression of the West.”
In a separate interview with Al Arabiya, a television news station based in Dubai, Lavrov said Russia does not consider itself to be at war with NATO, but NATO considers itself to be at war with Russia. He also said that weapons shipments to Ukraine were “fair game” for Russian forces.
When Lavrov was asked in the Al-Arabiya interview about U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ proposals for humanitarian assistance and evacuation of civilians, Lavrov cut the interviewer off.
“There is no need for anybody to provide help to open humanitarian corridors. There is only one problem … humanitarian corridors are being ignored by Ukrainian ultra-nationals,” he said.
“We appreciate the interest of the secretary-general to be helpful,” he added. “(We have) explained … what is the mechanism for them to monitor how the humanitarian corridors are announced.”
20 percent of Kharkiv's residential buildings damaged beyond restoration, mayor says
Nearly a quarter of the residential buildings in Kharkiv, a major city to the north, have been damaged beyond repair, the city's mayor said.
Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov said about 20 percent of the city’s residential buildings have been so badly damaged that it will be impossible to restore them.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday that the situation in Kharkiv was “brutal” but Ukrainian troops and intelligence agents “have had important tactical successes,” he said without elaborating.
Ukraine cracks down on ‘traitors’ helping Russian troops
KHARKIV, Ukraine — Nearly 400 people in the Kharkiv region alone have been detained under anti-collaboration laws enacted by Ukraine’s parliament and signed by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion.
Offenders face up to 15 years in prison for collaborating with Russian forces, making public denials about Russian aggression or supporting Moscow. Anyone whose actions result in deaths could face life in prison.
“Accountability for collaboration is inevitable, and whether it will happen tomorrow or the day after tomorrow is another question,” Zelenskyy said. “The most important thing is that justice will be served inevitably.”
Although the Zelenskyy government has broad support, even among many Russian speakers, not all Ukrainians oppose the invasion. Support for Moscow is more common among some Russian-speaking residents of the Donbas, an industrial region in the east. An eight-year conflict there between Moscow-backed separatists and Ukrainian government forces had killed over 14,000 people even before this year’s invasion.
U.S. to train Ukrainians in Germany on weapons
WASHINGTON — Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby announced Friday that the U.S. would begin training with Ukrainians in Germany on artillery, radar, and armored vehicles.
Kirby became emotional when he was asked if Putin was a rational actor, saying it was difficult to look at images of the war and imagine a “well-thinking, serious, mature leader would do that.”
“I can’t talk to his psychology, but I think we can all speak to his depravity,” Kirby said.
U.N. works to broker civilian evacuation from Mariupol
KYIV, Ukraine — The United Nations doggedly sought to broker an evacuation of civilians from the increasingly hellish ruins of Mariupol on Friday, while Ukraine accused Russia of showing its contempt for the world organization by bombing Kyiv while the U.N. leader was visiting the capital.
The mayor of Mariupol said the situation inside the steel plant that has become the southern port city’s last stronghold is dire, and citizens are “begging to get saved.” Mayor Vadym Boichenko added: “There, it’s not a matter of days. It’s a matter of hours.”
Ukraine’s forces, meanwhile, fought to hold off Russian attempts to advance in the south and east, where the Kremlin is seeking to capture the country’s industrial Donbas region. Artillery fire, sirens and explosions could be heard in some cities.
In Ukraine, a how-to on throwing Molotov cocktails
ZAPORIZHZHIA, Ukraine — Builder Ivan Kiriluck, 32, said he couldn’t just carry on building homes as normal when war broke out with Russia.
Instead, he set up a range in his garden where people can learn to throw Molotov cocktails.

“When they are training at our technical place, they get out of here with big smile and big hope that they will win,” he said.
“It’s more a psychological thing. It’s more than weapons … They can do this at home, in the kitchen, you can make this and protect your family.”

Ukrainian forces retake village near Kharkiv
Hundreds of people have been evacuated to Kharkiv from the nearby village of Ruska Lozava that had been under Russian occupation for more than a month.
Almost half the village has escaped on buses, in shrapnel-ridden cars or on foot after fierce battles saw Russian troops pushed back and Ukrainian forces take full control of the village, according to the Kharkiv regional governor.
A video posted by the Azov battalion shows troops raising the blue and yellow Ukrainian flag over the government building in the center of the village although fighting continues on the outskirts.
Upon arrival to Kharkiv less than 12 miles (20 kilometers) away, those who fled have described to Associated Press reporters the dire conditions they faced while living in basements with little water and food and no electricity.
“We were hiding in the basement, it was horror. The basement was shaking from the explosions, we were screaming, we were crying and we were praying to god,” said Ludmila Bocharnikova.
Ukraine aid, Covid relief jammed up in Congress over immigration dispute
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden‘s immediate priorities to secure $33 billion in aid to Ukraine and $10 billion for Covid relief aren’t passing Congress in a hurry.
Both are jammed up over an unrelated dispute about immigration, with Senate Republicans filibustering the bipartisan Covid relief bill unless the Democratic-controlled chamber votes on an amendment to reimpose the Trump-era Title 42 rule. The rule allow U.S. officials to turn away asylum-seekers at the border due to the pandemic.
One option sought by Democrats is to link the Covid bill to Ukraine aid, which has broad and deep support in both parties as Russia’s war rages on.
Western weapons flow in to Ukraine
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has prompted NATO members and allies to pledge billions of dollars in military support to Kyiv, supplying weapons systems that range from surface-to-air missiles to heavy artillery and surveillance equipment.
Some of the technology has been around for decades, while some is cutting-edge. Some of the weapons can be carried like a backpack, and others need to be towed by large trucks.
Analysts say the hardware provided so far has already played a pivotal role in repelling Russian advances. Ukraine has repeatedly called for more weapons, saying they could make the difference as Russia redoubles its efforts in the eastern parts of the country.
Read about some of the weapons being fast-tracked to Ukraine.
Afghans under stricter rules than Ukrainian refugees, advocates say
Afghans trying to enter the U.S. to escape Taliban rule are subject to stricter requirements than Ukrainians trying to flee the Russian invasion of their country, and thousands of Afghans — even some threatened by the Taliban — have been rejected, refugee advocates say.
“There are clearly two refugee systems — one for Ukrainians and one for Afghans,” said Matt Zeller, co-founder of No One Left Behind, a nonprofit that helps Afghans and Iraqis who worked as interpreters or other jobs for the U.S. government.
“Afghans are our longest wartime ally ever — you’d think we’d want to do right by them,” Zeller said.
The Biden administration rejects the criticism, arguing that the U.S. has brought in tens of thousands of Afghans since the U.S. military withdrew from Afghanistan last year and that it continues to work to help Afghans come to America.
Russia behind schedule in Donbas offensive, U.S. official says
A senior U.S. Defense Department official said Friday that Russia is "likely a few days behind" schedule in its attack on the Donbas region of Ukraine.
"The Russians are making slow and uneven progress," the official said.
More than a dozen flights with equipment and weapons are expected in Ukraine from the U.S. in the next 24 hours, including Phoenix ghost drones, artillery rounds and radars, the official said.
In the last 24 hours, nearly 20 flights have gone in to the region, carrying equipment including mines, small-caliber rounds and rockets, 122 mm rockets, helmets and body armor, according to the official.
Scenes from the Kyiv apartment building hit by Russian airstrike
KYIV, Ukraine — The morning after the deadly airstrike in Ukraine's capital, crews were busy cleaning out debris from the heavily damaged residential building.
There was a massive hole on the lower three floors of the high-rise, facing the presumed military factory across the street that Russia said was its target. The front wall was sheared off and floors collapsed, windows blown out, with dust and glass everywhere.
Someone had placed a bouquet of red roses in the shattered window of one of three cars parked in front of the building, an apparent tribute to the resident killed by the Russian attack. Yet as NBC News drove down the quiet residential street, just a block away was an untouched park where children played soccer and people were out walking — a testament to the dual life that this city now leads.
New gas pipeline boosts Europe's bid to ease Russian supply
ATHENS, Greece — Mountainous and remote, the Greek-Bulgaria border once formed the southern corner of the Iron Curtain. Today, it’s where the European Union is redrawing the region’s energy map to ease its heavy reliance on Russian natural gas.
A new pipeline — built during the Covid-19 pandemic, tested and due to start commercial operation in June — would ensure that large volumes of gas flow between the two countries in both directions to generate electricity, fuel industry and heat homes.
The energy link takes on greater importance following Moscow’s decision this week to cut off natural gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria over a demand for payments in rubles stemming from Western sanctions over the war of Ukraine.
Americans should not go to Ukraine to fight, Pentagon says
Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby is warning Americans against going to Ukraine to fight the Russian invasion, following the death of a former U.S. Marine, Willy Joseph Cancel.
Speaking on CNN on Friday, Kirby said: “We continue to urge Americans not to go to Ukraine. ... This is an active war zone, this is not the place to be traveling to.”
Kirby expressed condolences for Cancel's family and said he understood his "altruistic motives" for traveling to Ukraine. However, he emphasized that there are ways to support the effort against Russia's invasion in "a safe, effective way."
Russia using Transnistria to smuggle weapons, Ukrainian defense ministry says
Russia has been using ammunition depots in Transnistria to smuggle weapons for 30 years, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense said Friday on the Ukrainian TV news channel Nastoyaschee Vremya.
Task forces of Russian troops stationed in the area perform yearly mobilization exercises near the village of Kovbasniy, during which “defensive and counteroffensive operations are carried out with the use of ammunition from warehouses. … Part of the ammunition is used for combat training, according to military intelligence, for smuggling,” he said.
The spokesperson added that Russia’s current action in Transnistria pointed to Russia’s willingness to use the region as a springboard for further violence against both Ukraine and the neighboring republic of Moldova.
Ukraine to receive 495 million euros from the World Bank
Ukraine will receive an additional 495 million ($474 million) euros from the World Bank Trust Fund, according to the Ukrainian Ministry of Finance.
This is in addition to the 88.5 million euros ($93.2 million) that has already been transferred to the Ukrainian state budget. Ukrainian Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko and the World Bank Regional Director for Eastern Europe Arup Banerjee signed the addition to the grant agreement on Friday.
The additional funds will come from the United States, Norway and Austria.
In a statement, the Ukrainian Ministry of Finance said that the funds would prioritize social and health care expenditures, and support for "internally displaced persons."
Norway shuts borders to Russian goods, exempting fishing vessels
Norway will close its borders and ports to Russian trucks and ships, joining sanctions imposed by the European Union over the war in Ukraine, the Norwegian foreign ministry said on Friday.
Russian fishing vessels, which often land their catch at ports in northern Norway, will receive exemptions from sanctions.
Norway’s Arctic Svalbard archipelago, which operates under a 1920s treaty allowing expanded foreign access, will also be exempted, the ministry said.
Starlink internet becomes a lifeline for Ukrainians

Parts of war-torn Ukraine that have little or no internet service have found an alternative: emergency Starlink receivers.
The SpaceX-run satellite internet service that CEO Elon Musk touted at the start of the war has emerged as a lifeline for many areas of the country, with over 10,000 dish antennas in service and more on the way.
Ukraine war curbs euro zone growth, inflation hits new high
Euro zone economic growth was slower than expected in the first three months of the year, preliminary data showed on Friday, as the war in Ukraine started on Feb 24 hit economic activity and helped drive inflation to a new high.
The European Union’s statistics office Eurostat said gross domestic product in the 19 countries sharing the euro rose 0.2 percent quarter-on-quarter for a 5.0 percent year-on-year gain. Economists polled by Reuters had expected 0.3 percent quarterly growth.
Euro zone inflation rose to 7.5 percent in April from 7.4 percent in March, in line with expectations, driven by a persistent surge in energy and food prices that have been exacerbated by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
American killed fighting alongside Ukrainian forces, his family says
An American fighting with Ukrainian forces has been killed in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, according to his family.
Willy Joseph Cancel, 22, died Monday in Ukraine, his family members confirmed to CNN.
Mariupol mayor: Steel plant siege goes on, more than 600 injured trapped inside
Mariupol continued to be bombarded with heavy shelling and aerial attacks, leaving thousands dead and more than 600 wounded, Mariupol's mayor Vadym Boichenko said on Friday.
More than 20,000 people have been killed since the beginning of the invasion, he said, adding: “It’s not only a war crime, but also a genocide of Russian-speaking people in Mariupol.”
Boichenko said the Mariupol forces restrained the Russian onslaught, buying time for other cities. He hoped for an evacuation out of the “fortress” of Azovstal steel plant where hundreds of women, children and elderly remain surrounded by Russian forces.

















