Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukraine says it has carried out ‘successful actions’ on Dnipro east bank | Ukraine

Ukraine says it has carried out ‘successful actions’ on Dnipro east bank
The Ukrainian armed forces have said they have carried out “successful actions” on the east bank of the Dnipro river.
The river has been the de facto frontline in southern Ukraine since Russian forces withdrew from the Kherson region last November.
Reports this week suggested Ukraine had established a foothold on the eastern side, and on Wednesday the Russian-installed governor of the Kherson region acknowledged the presence of Ukrainian forces in the village of Krynki.
“The Defense Forces of Ukraine conducted a series of successful operations on the left bank of the Dnipro River, along the Kherson front,” read a statement posted to social media by Ukraine’s Marine Corp on Friday morning.
“In cooperation with other units of the Defense Forces, [they] managed to gain a foothold on several bridgeheads.”
A separate statement by Ukraine’s general staff added that “tough battles are going on”.
“One of the main goals of this work is to push the enemy as far as possible from the right bank in order to secure the civilian population from continuous Russian shelling,” it said.
“The farther Russian artillery stands from Kherson – the better.”
Key events
Two killed in Donetsk
Two people have been killed and three have been wounded in the east Ukrainian region of Donetsk, the acting head of its military administration has said.
In a post on Telegram, Ihor Moroz said two people had been killed in the city of Selydove, while two of the injuries had occurred in the town of Antonivka and another had occurred in Toretsk.
“Russia kills civilians!” Moroz said.

Environmental groups have installed radiation sensors across southern Ukraine to improve the quality of current readings and provide warnings in the event of a nuclear incident.
Greenpeace, which worked with Ukrainian group SaveDnipro to install the detectors, said they had been placed in the city of Zaporizhzhia, home to Europe’s largest nuclear plant, as well as in Yuzhnoukrainsk, Odesa, Tarutyne, Yuzhne, and Uman.
It added that the installations followed conversations with Ukrainian authorities and would be used “to monitor [radiation levels], counter misinformation and provide vital data to help Ukrainian authorities with decision making”.
Russian forces occupied the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant at the start of the war and the region around the site has been the scene of intense fighting.
Global bodies like the International Atomic Energy Agency and the United Nations have repeatedly expressed concern about the potential for an incident at the plant.
In May, a senior Russian official also claimed a radioactive cloud was heading towards Western Europe after the Russian military struck a depot of ammunition containing depleted uranium supplied to Ukraine by the UK.
Pavlo Tkachenko, technical director of SaveDnipro, said Russian misinformation about the situation on the ground and radiation levels in Ukraine meant there was a “need to develop independent online networks and more transparent radiation monitoring through civic projects”.
“These efforts can help reassure the public about the normal radiation levels in Ukraine and, in case of potential threats, provide the government with more data for decision making,” he said.
Cameron visits Moldova after Ukraine trip
The British foreign secretary, David Cameron, followed his trip to Ukraine on Thursday with a visit to neighbouring Moldova to discuss regional security.
Moldovan president, Maia Sandu, posted a photo of her and Cameron together to social media and said the two had met on Thursday night.
“We discussed Black Sea security, bilateral cooperation and our united stance against corruption,” she said.
She added that she had “expressed gratitude for the UK’s support to Ukraine” and that the support was “crucial for Moldova’s security and the stability and prosperity of Europe”.
On February, Sandu accused Moscow of plotting to overthrow her government in order to stop Moldova’s European integration and to enable Russia to use Moldova in the war in Ukraine.
Pleased to meet @David_Cameron in Chișinău last night. Expressed gratitude for the UK’s support to Ukraine: crucial for Moldova’s security and the stability and prosperity of Europe. We discussed Black Sea security, bilateral cooperation and our united stance against corruption. pic.twitter.com/36GxVC2wNv
— Maia Sandu (@sandumaiamd) November 17, 2023
On Saturday, as Republicans in the US Congress unveiled a stopgap spending measure with no funding for Ukraine, Phil Buehler was installing a 60ft-long, 10ft-tall rebuke. Its title: Irpin, Ukraine: Please Don’t Forget Us.
The artist’s latest monumental public artwork is a photograph of Irpin’s civilian car cemetery and is on display in the Little Ukraine neighbourhood of Manhattan, New York, near the Ukrainian Museum and the St George Ukrainian church, for the rest of the month.
The picture is stitched together from 35 images shot in extremely high resolution during Buehler’s week-long trip to Ukraine in October. It shows in vivid detail the pock-marked remains of civilian cars destroyed by Russian forces.
“It’s not like I composed or framed the picture so there’s a central object,” Buehler, 67, says by phone from his studio in Brooklyn, New York. “Instead there’s just this 60 feet of wrecked cars and so you kind of get to choose what your attention belongs to: is it a stuffed animal or is it bullet holes? The cars are almost life size, the toys are almost life size, the bullet holes are almost life size.”
Read David Smith’s full story here:
Vladimir Putin has awarded a prestigious state honour to a prominent milblogger as part of a long-running attempt to co-opt milboggers and lessen criticism of the conduct of the war in Ukraine, according to a US-based thinktank.
A milblog is a blog dedicated to covering a war, typically written by someone who is a member of, or has some link to, the military. In Russia, they are one of the main sources of information about the war in Ukraine aside from state media.
On Thursday, Putin gave Mikhail Zvinchuk the Russian Order of Merit of the Fatherland Second Class for his efforts supporting the war in Ukraine. Zvinchuk runs Rybar, a Telegram channel with over 1.2 million subscribers that at points in the past has been critical of the Russian defence ministry.
The channel is also reported to have previously received funding from former Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who died in a plane crash in August just months after leading an armed mutiny against Russia’s military leadership.
In its latest assessment of the conflict, the Institute for the Study of War said Putin first recruited Zvinchuk to a Kremlin working group on the war in December last year and that it had observed a significant “content and tonal” shift in Rybar’s recent coverage.
It said the shift was “likely the result of Putin’s efforts to co-opt prominent Russian milbloggers to re-establish Kremlin dominance over the Russian language online information space, carry out information operations against western audiences, and prevent other influential Russian officials from buying milbloggers’ loyalties.
“Zvinchuk’s award also likely serves as an effort to incentivize other milbloggers to offer their loyalty to the regime in exchange for accolades and Kremlin recognition.”
Russian casualties reach 316,760, says Ukraine
Russian casualties since the start of the war in Ukraine now stand at 316,760, according to the Ukrainian military.
In its latest set of daily figures, Ukraine’s general staff also said the total numbers of tanks and armoured combat vehicles destroyed had reached 5,415 and 10,132 respectively.
“He who is not everyday conquering some fear has not learned the secret of life.”
Ralph Waldo EmersonThe combat losses of the enemy from February 24, 2022 to November 17, 2023. pic.twitter.com/AhL4M6LUdC
— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) November 17, 2023
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said his country’s air defence capabilities are increasing.
The comments come after Ukraine said earlier this year that it would be unable to defend its main cities from Russian bombardment without a significant increase in support to strength its air defences.
In response, the UK and others announced they would deliver hundreds of new air defence systems.
Speaking in his nightly address, Zelenskiy said Ukraine was “constantly getting stronger” and thanked “everyone in the world who helps”.
“The geography of our cooperation for the sake of a sky shield for Ukraine is very extensive,” he said.
“Our air defence capabilities are increasing. Of course, this is not yet a hundred percent protection. There is a lot of work to be done.
“Cities like Kharkiv, regions like Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia need more systems, more security. This is the task of all our diplomats, of our entire state.
“I thank everyone who is effective in this.”
The Kremlin’s spokesperson has said he has “no doubt” Vladimir Putin will still be Russian president after the election in March.
Asked what the next president should be like in an interview with student journalists at the Moscow State Institute for International Relations, Dmitry Peskov said: “The same.”
He then smiled and added: “Or different but the same.
“Putin has not yet announced his intention to run but I sincerely want to believe that he will do that, and I have no doubt that he will win the elections.
“I have no doubt that he will continue to be president.”
Nine people killed in Kherson shelling
At least nine people have been killed in Russian shelling of the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson.
Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said hundreds of shells were fired at the city and the surrounding area on Thursday, targeting residential areas, shopping districts, and administrative buildings.
“As a result of Russian aggression, six people died, 10 more were injured, including one child,” he said on Telegram on Friday morning.
He later added that another three women were confirmed to have been killed.
Ukraine says it has carried out ‘successful actions’ on Dnipro east bank
The Ukrainian armed forces have said they have carried out “successful actions” on the east bank of the Dnipro river.
The river has been the de facto frontline in southern Ukraine since Russian forces withdrew from the Kherson region last November.
Reports this week suggested Ukraine had established a foothold on the eastern side, and on Wednesday the Russian-installed governor of the Kherson region acknowledged the presence of Ukrainian forces in the village of Krynki.
“The Defense Forces of Ukraine conducted a series of successful operations on the left bank of the Dnipro River, along the Kherson front,” read a statement posted to social media by Ukraine’s Marine Corp on Friday morning.
“In cooperation with other units of the Defense Forces, [they] managed to gain a foothold on several bridgeheads.”
A separate statement by Ukraine’s general staff added that “tough battles are going on”.
“One of the main goals of this work is to push the enemy as far as possible from the right bank in order to secure the civilian population from continuous Russian shelling,” it said.
“The farther Russian artillery stands from Kherson – the better.”
Opening summary
Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the war in Ukraine.
More than 2,400 children from Ukraine aged between six and 17 years old have been taken to 13 facilities across Belarus since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, according to research published by Yale University.
Ukraine’s prosecutor general said in May that he was investigating the alleged role of Belarus in the forced transfer of more than 19,000 identified children from Russian-occupied territories since the conflict broke out, including to Russia.
The total number is estimated by some experts and organisations to be far higher.
The findings by the Humanitarian Research Lab at Yale School of Public Health, which receives US State Department funding, shared with Reuters are the most extensive to date about the alleged role of Belarus in the Russian relocation programme for Ukrainian children.
In May, the head of the Belarus Red Cross admitted the organisation was involved in bringing Ukrainian children to Belarus from Russian-occupied areas.
In other key developments:
-
British foreign secretary David Cameron vowed to maintain military support for Ukraine during a surprise visit to Kyiv on Thursday. The visit by Cameron, a former prime minister, came as Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that the flow of vital artillery ammunition from western allies had dropped off since the start of the Israel-Hamas war last month. “Our deliveries have decreased,” Zelensky told reporters, referring specifically to 155mm shells that are widely used on the eastern and southern frontlines in Ukraine, saying “they really slowed down”.
-
Cameron also visited the southern port city of Odesa on his first trip abroad as foreign minister of the UK, which has been a staunch ally of Ukraine since Russia launched a full-scale invasion in February 2022. “We will continue to give you the moral support, diplomatic support, the economic support, but above all, the military support, that you need not just this year, and next year, but for however long it takes,” Cameron said during a meeting with Zelenskiy.
-
Separately, Zelenskiy told reporters that Russian forces were likely stockpiling missiles for strikes on his country’s energy facilities over the coming winter months. “My estimation is that they are accumulating [missiles], but that they don’t have many more missiles compared to what they previously had,” Zelenskiy said, referring to attacks last year on critical infrastructure.
-
A Russian court sentenced a St Petersburg artist to seven years in prison in a closely watched trial that has highlighted the severe punishments meted out to ordinary Russians for even small acts of civil protest against the invasion of Ukraine. Aleksandra “Sasha” Skochilenko, an artist, musician and activist, was found guilty on Thursday of “knowingly spreading false information about the Russian army” in March 2022. The artist replaced five price tags in a local supermarket with pieces of paper urging shoppers to stop the war and resist propaganda on television.
-
Russian shelling killed two people and injured at least 12 on Thursday in different areas of southern Ukraine’s Kherson region, local officials said.
-
Northrop Grumman is exploring producing 120mm tank ammunition in Poland as the US ally surges defence production capacity, the company’s chief told Reuters. Countries geographically close to Russia such as Poland, Finland and Germany have been exploring deals to build US weapons in Europe, negotiating new deals to buy arms and looking to speed up existing contracts as the war in Ukraine reshaped thinking on the volume of munitions needed in future conflicts.
-
The European Commission has proposed a 12th round of sanctions against Moscow, including restrictions on scores of individuals apparently including the son of the former president Dmitry Medvedev and a relative of Vladimir Putin. Among the 47 individuals the commission wants added to existing sanctions lists are Putin’s cousin Anna Tsivileva, who chairs the “defenders of the fatherland” foundation that supports Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine, and Ilya Medvedev, whose name and date of birth match those of the former president’s only son.
-
The US has imposed sanctions on maritime companies and vessels for shipping Russian oil sold above the G7’s price cap, as Washington seeks to close loopholes in the mechanism designed to punish Moscow for its war in Ukraine. The US Treasury in a statement said it slapped sanctions on three UAE-based companies and three vessels owned by them in the action, accusing the vessels of engaging in the export of Russian crude oil priced above the $60 a barrel cap.
-
Turkey’s parliament opened a long-delayed debate on Sweden’s Nato aspirations that could strengthen Ankara’s ties with western allies despite its fury over Israel’s war with Hamas. Sweden and Finland dropped decades of military non-alignment and sought the nuclear protection afforded by the US-led defence organisation in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year.
-
Polish trucking representatives said they would expand a border protest against Ukraine by blocking another crossing for cargo vehicles over what they call unfair competition from the war-torn country. Kyiv had said earlier Thursday that it failed to reach an agreement in new talks with Polish transport companies that have been blocking cargo at three major border points for almost two weeks.
-
A grandson of French war hero and former president Charles de Gaulle said he wanted Russian citizenship, saying Russia offered “great possibilities”. Pierre de Gaulle is little known in France, but Russian state media have heralded his pro-Kremlin statements as proof that leading western voices support Moscow’s assault in Ukraine. “It would be an honour for me to acquire Russian citizenship,” he told a journalist at the St Petersburg cultural forum, Russian agencies said.
0 Comments