Russia-Ukraine war live: Kyiv officials decry ‘unprecedented’ recent missile strikes; one killed in Odesa attack | Ukraine

Attacks ‘unprecedented’, says Kyiv City Regional City Administration

This morning’s strikes on Kyiv are the ninth in a series of recent raids by Russia that are “unprecedented in their power, intensity and variety,” the Kyiv City Regional City Administration (KMBA) wrote a short while ago on Telegram.

Air raid alerts are still in place for Kyiv.

“This time the attack was carried out by strategic bombers Tu-95MS, Tu-160 from the Caspian region, probably by cruise missiles of the X-101/555 type. After launching the rockets, the enemy deployed its reconnaissance UAVs over the capital,” the KMBA wrote.

Ukraine’s army reported several explosions in Kyiv and other parts of the country early Thursday morning, urging people to stay in bomb shelters.

A fire broke out at a business in the city’s Darnytskyi district as a result of falling debris, and an explosion was recorded in the Desnyansky district, according to Kyiv’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko.

“The attack on the capital continues. Do not leave the shelters during the air alert!” he implored on Telegram.

Kyiv thwarts Russian missile strike but debris sparks fire – video

Key events

The former British prime minister Boris Johnson described Emmanuel Macron as “nauseating” for travelling to Moscow to meet with Vladimir Putin, a former UK government aide has said.

Johnson also described Macron as “Putin’s lickspittle”, Guto Harri told the latest edition of Unprecedented, his podcast about his time at No 10.

Harri was working as Johnson’s communication chief at the time. He said:

There were tensions early on when people like Emmanuel Macron of France went to Moscow to talk to Putin. I think Boris described it privately as ‘nauseating’. And meanwhile, I think Macron was feeling the tension from Boris seemingly doing the running with helping Ukraine militarily.

So, when the British press was giving the British government a hard time over our response to the refugee crisis, Macron turbocharged it by criticising Boris pretty directly and his words were all over the front page of the Guardian on a Friday, I think.

And much as Boris is not prone to getting really cross, nor using particularly strong language, this was one where he really flipped and at our morning meeting, I think with a small gang of us he just launched into a violent attack on Emmanuel Macron.

Basically, saying ‘He’s a four-letter word that begins with C, he’s a weirdo, he’s Putin’s lickspittle. We need to go studs up on this one’ – a rugby term that basically means, gloves off – ‘We need an orgy of frog bashing. I’m going to have to punch his lights out.’ Pretty strong stuff.

And I’m pleased to say weeks later, of course, they had patched it up. They got on really well. They actually went for a whisky together at the G7 summit.

Summary of the day so far …

  • Russia launched missiles overnight at Kyiv again, with falling debris causing a fire at a business building, authorities reported. It was the ninth time this month that Russian air raids have targeted the capital, a clear escalation after weeks of lull and ahead of a much-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive. The attack was carried out by strategic bombers from the Caspian region, probably using cruise missiles, and Russia later deployed reconnaissance craft over the capital. According to preliminary information, all enemy targets were destroyed, Serhiy Popko, head of the Kyiv Military Administration said in a Telegram post.

  • A person has been killed in Russian missile strikes on Odesa, the military administration spokesman Serhiy Bratchuk has said on Telegram. Two people were injured. “Most of the enemy’s missiles were shot down over the sea by the air defence forces. Unfortunately, an industrial object was hit: one person died, two were injured,” he wrote.

  • Suspilne, Ukraine’s state broadcaster, reports that on the night of 18 May, the Russian army shelled Kostyantynivka in Donetsk region, and one person was killed.

  • Rail traffic has been suspended between Simferopol, capital of the Crimean peninsula, and the city of Sevastopol, after a freight train carrying grain derailed, the region’s Russian-installed leader said on Thursday. The derailment was caused by “interference by outsiders”, Crimean railways confirmed in a statement. Russian-imposed governor Sergei Aksyonov said that wagons loaded with grain had derailed and no one was injured.

  • The Black Sea grain deal has been extended for two more months, in what the UN secretary general, António Guterres, hailed as “good news for the world”. It comes a day before Russia had said it would quit the pact over what it claims are obstacles to its own grain and fertiliser exports.

  • The Kremlin said on Thursday that a delegation from African countries hoping to present their initiative to end the conflict in Ukraine would visit Moscow. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Moscow would be ready to listen to “any proposals” that help resolve the conflict.

  • Court documents show that Jack Teixeira, the US air national guard member charged with being behind the so-called Pentagon leaks of highly classified military documents, was warned repeatedly over his mishandling of classified material. The leaked documents appear to detail US and Nato aid to Ukraine and show real-time details from February and March of Ukraine’s and Russia’s battlefield positions and precise numbers of battlefield gear flowing into Ukraine from its allies.

  • Moldova is no longer using Russian natural gas or electricity after cutting its dependence since war started in Ukraine, prime minister Dorin Recean said on Thursday.

Reuters reports the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, said on Thursday that the country had increased its food exports last year, and that Russia needed to help farmers in the regions it claims to have annexed from Ukraine last year.

Yesterday Russia agreed to extend the Black Sea grain initiative, after weeks threatening to pull out of the deal, complaining that western sanctions were impeding its ability to export agricultural products.

The Kremlin said on Thursday that a delegation from African countries hoping to present their initiative to end the conflict in Ukraine would visit Moscow.

Reuters reports Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Moscow would be ready to listen to “any proposals” that help resolve the conflict.

Reuters reports the leaders of the G7 countries will discuss the idea of an international peace summit over Ukraine when they meet in Japan this week, an EU official said on Thursday. G7 leaders will meet on 19-21 May in Hiroshima.

Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of the national security and defence council of Ukraine, has described Kyiv as “Putin’s maniacal and unattainable goal” following the latest attacks. He writes:

Symbolic places of Kyiv are the target of Russian missile attacks. The Kremlin needs those senseless and super-expensive attacks for Russia on the capital to raise the degree of patriotic hysteria inside the country. In Russia, a process of despair and disappointment with the authorities is developing against the background of the unsuccessful offensive and failures at the front.

Kyiv remains putin’s maniacal and unattainable goal. Symbolic places of Kyiv are the target of russian missile attacks. The kremlin needs those senseless and super-expensive attacks for russia on the capital to raise the degree of patriotic hysteria inside the country. In russia,…

— Oleksiy Danilov (@OleksiyDanilov) May 18, 2023

Emine Dzheppar, deputy foreign minister of Ukraine, has posted a picture of the foreign ministry with a lowered Crimean Tatar flag in memory of the Soviet-era displacement which is commemorated on 18 May. She also restated Ukraine’s aim to restore its borders to a pre-2014 state, including retaking Crimea. She wrote:

Today, at Ukraine’s foreign ministry we lowered the Crimean Tatar flag to commemorate victims of the forced deportation of indigenous people of Crimea 79 years ago. On 18 May 1944, the Soviet regime started a genocide of Crimean Tatar people to eliminate them and rewrite history of the peninsula.

History repeated itself in 2014. Modern Russia applies the worst repressive practices in Crimea. But it failed before and it will fail now again. Liberation of the Crimean peninsula will put an end perverted imperialistic ambitions and respect for human rights be restored worldwide.

History repeated itself in 2014.Modern🇷🇺applies the worst repressive practices in #Crimea. But it failed before&it will fail now again. Liberation of the Crimean Peninsula will put an end 🇷🇺 perverted imperialistic ambitions and respect for human rights be restored worldwide. 2/2 pic.twitter.com/QcaTu0CIW0

— Emine Dzheppar (@EmineDzheppar) May 18, 2023

Moldova is no longer using Russian natural gas or electricity after cutting its dependence since war started in Ukraine, the prime minister, Dorin Recean, said on Thursday.

“If at the start of the war 100% of energy consumed in Moldova originated in Russia, today Moldova can exist with absolutely no natural gas or electricity from Russia,” Reuters reports he told a security conference in Bucharest.

“Moldova no longer consumes Russian gas, it is integrated in the European energy network both technically and commercially.”

Here are some of the latest images to be sent to us from Ukraine over the news wires.

An aerial drone view shows a local resident’s plants next to a destroyed Russian tank, the remains of which lie in his garden in the village of Velyka Dymerka near Kyiv. Photograph: Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Graves of people who died in the Kyiv region as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine remain mostly unmarked near the city of Brovary.
Graves of people who died in the Kyiv region as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine remain mostly unmarked near the city of Brovary. Photograph: Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
A police officer inspects debris in Kyiv.
A police officer inspects debris in Kyiv. Photograph: Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters
A views shows an industrial building damaged by a Russian missile strike in Odesa.
A views shows an industrial building damaged by a Russian missile strike in Odesa. Photograph: Ukrainian Armed Forces/Reuters

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has posted to his social media channels to commemorate 18 May as a day of remembrance for Crimean Tatar people forcibly moved by Soviet authorities, as well as Vyshyvanka Day, when Ukraine celebrates the history of its traditional embroidered clothes. He said:

This year, the two meanings are united by one date, 18 May. 79 years ago on this day, the Soviet authorities began deporting the Crimean Tatar people. A people they wanted to erase. Deprive of their homes, deprive of the right to life. But the people survived. And they will live freely.

Today, I am wearing a special vyshyvanka with ornaments that symbolise the unity of the Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar peoples. Symbols of our strength and our desire to live in our home.

Let this year’s Vyshyvanka Day in Ukraine be a reminder of what our people have been through and how strong our culture is. Eternal memory to all our people whose lives were taken by totalitarian regimes.

This year, the two meanings are united by one date, May 18.

79 years ago on this day, the Soviet regime began deporting the Crimean Tatar people. A people they wanted to erase. Deprive of their homes, deprive of the right to life.

But the people survived. And they will live… pic.twitter.com/PDgX56ST7s

— Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) May 18, 2023

Suspilne, Ukraine’s state broadcaster, has posted to its Telegram channel for Donbas to state that:

On the night of 18 May, the Russian army shelled Kostyantynivka in Donetsk region, one person was killed, the ministry of foreign affairs reported. According to preliminary findings, the shelling was conducted from the S-300 complex, several private and apartment buildings, a shop, and administrative buildings were destroyed and damaged.

The claims have not been independently verified.

If you missed it earlier, overnight it has emerged in court documents that Jack Teixeira, the US air national guard member charged with being behind the so-called Pentagon leaks of highly classified military documents, was warned repeatedly over his mishandling of classified material.

Teixeira is accused of sharing highly classified documents about top national security issues in a chatroom on Discord, a social media platform that started as a hangout for gamers. He has not yet entered a plea.

The leaked documents appear to detail US and Nato aid to Ukraine and US intelligence assessments regarding allies that could strain ties with those nations. Some show real-time details from February and March of Ukraine’s and Russia’s battlefield positions and precise numbers of battlefield gear flowing into Ukraine from its allies.

Read more here: Pentagon leaks suspect was warned off viewing classified material – prosecutors

Train derailment in Crimea caused by ‘interference by outsiders’

Rail traffic has been suspended between Simferopol, capital of the Crimean peninsula, and the city of Sevastopol, after a freight train carrying grain derailed, the region’s Russian-installed leader said on Thursday.

The derailment was caused by “interference by outsiders”, Crimean railways confirmed in a statement.

Governor Sergei Aksyonov said that wagons loaded with grain had derailed and no one was injured. Images that purport to be from the scene show cargo wagons derailed.

Earlier, Reuters reports, the Baza Telegram channel, which has links to Russian security services, had reported an explosion on a railway line.

Crimea was unilaterally annexed by Russia in 2014.

Crimea’s Russian-installed governor Sergei Aksyonov has posted to Telegram to state that “wagons with grain derailed” in the Simeferopol region. He did not give a cause. It has led to train services being halted.

Tass reports that the train service between Simferopol and Sevastopol in Crimea has been suspended.

Reuters reports that earlier the Baza Telegram channel, which has links to Russian security services, had reported an explosion on a railway line in the region.

The claims have not been independently verified. The Russian Federation unilaterally annexed Crimea in 2014.

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