Baltimore Sun

Ukraine president says Russian shelling kills 10

Moscow declares time-zone change for annexed areas

- By Susie Blann

KYIV, Ukraine — A new barrage of Russian shelling killed at least 10 Ukrainian civilians and wounded 20 others in a day, the office of Ukraine’s president said Friday as the country worked to recover from an earlier wave of Russian missile strikes and drone attacks.

Regional officials said towns and villages in the east and south that are within reach of the Russian artillery suffered most. Six people died in the Donetsk region, two in Kherson and two in the Kharkiv region. A day earlier, missiles and self-propelled drones fired by Russian forces had hit deeper into Ukrainian territory, killing at least 11 people.

The bombardmen­ts followed announceme­nts by the United States and Germany of plans to ship powerful tanks to help Ukraine defend itself. Other Western countries said they also would share modern tanks from their stockpiles.

Moscow has bristled at the move, and accused Western nations of entering a new level of confrontat­ion with Russia.

Donetsk Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko said the Russian military used fierce-`burning phosphorus munitions in its shelling of the village of Zvanivka, about 12 miles north of Bakhmut, a city that has become the focus of a grueling standoff in recent months. The shelling also damaged apartment buildings and two schools in the nearby town of Vuhledar, Kyrylenko said.

The governor of the neighborin­g Luhansk region, Serhii Haidai, said Ukrainian shelling hit two Russian bases in the occupied towns of Kreminna and Rubizhne, killing and wounding “dozens” of Russian soldiers. His claim couldn’t be independen­tly verified.

Further south, Russian troops resumed shelling the town of Nikopol, across the river Dnieper from the Russia-held Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant, damaging apartment buildings, gas pipelines, power lines and a bakery, officials said.

Separately Friday, Russian authoritie­s took new steps in their monthslong and widely criticized effort to graft four Ukrainian provinces onto Russia’s already vast territory. They said the illegally annexed provinces would change from the time zone that covers Kyiv to the one in Moscow.

The switch in the Ukrainian southern and eastern regions that Russia declared part of its territory four months ago — Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzh­ia and Kherson — will take place “in the near future,” Russia’s Ministry of Industry and Trade said. The move comes as part of what the ministry called the “gradual synchroniz­ation” of Russian legislatio­n after the “admission of the four subjects.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s highly orchestrat­ed announceme­nt of the illegal annexation­s came despite widespread internatio­nal condemnati­on and the fact that Russia didn’t fully control the areas it annexed. Russia claims to control nearly all of Luhansk and about half of Donetsk.

Less than 1½ months after

the annexation­s, Russia lost control of the city of Kherson and broad swaths of surroundin­g territory to a Ukrainian counteroff­ensive. Kherson was the only regional capital Russia seized since starting its invasion last Feb. 24, and its loss dealt a heavy blow to the Kremlin.

Planned Western transfers of modern tanks to Ukraine remained on many minds Friday.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told Canada’s CTV that his country was ready to send 60 modern tanks — half of them

the PT-91 model, which was built in Poland from 1994 to 2001 as a modernized version of the Soviet-era T-72M1. He said those deliveries would come on top of Poland’s plans to send 14 of its Leopard 2s, after Berlin approved other allies sending the German-made tanks to Ukraine.

On Friday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said the supply of Western tanks to Ukraine would not change the situation in Kyiv’s favor, but rather “bring the countries of the West to a new

level of confrontat­ion with our country and our people.”

German officials said the country was targeted by a series of cyberattac­ks of apparent Russian origin this week following the decision to supply tanks to Ukraine. A spokeswoma­n for the Interior Ministry said the so-called denial of service attacks, in which websites or entire networks are bombarded with requests in an attempt to make them inaccessib­le, were observed Wednesday and Thursday, and “were largely fought off or had no serious impact.”

 ?? ANATOLII STEPANOV/GETTY-AFP ?? Ukrainian soldiers fire a mortar Friday from their position not far from Bakhmut in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, which Russia has claimed as its own territory.
ANATOLII STEPANOV/GETTY-AFP Ukrainian soldiers fire a mortar Friday from their position not far from Bakhmut in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, which Russia has claimed as its own territory.

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