Germany says Kyiv anti-aircraft system to United States to deliver multiple rocket launchers to Ukraine Heavy fighting in Sievjerodonetsk The developments in the Ukraine war in the stern ticker.

Day 98 of the Russian invasion of Ukraine: The Russian troops are apparently on the verge of taking complete control of the eastern Ukrainian region of Luhansk. According to the Ukrainian governor, most of Sievjerodonetsk is now under Russian control. Still, the Ukrainian defenders didn’t give up. 90 percent of the buildings in the city are damaged, of the once 100,000 inhabitants there are said to be 12,000 left. Meanwhile, the US has announced that it will equip Ukraine with heavy rocket launchers after all.

12:33 p.m.: Unicef: 5.2 million Ukrainian children in need of humanitarian aid

On the occasion of International Children’s Day, the UN lamented the devastating effects of the Ukraine war on children. Three million children inside Ukraine and more than 2.2 million minors who fled the war abroad need humanitarian assistance, the UN children’s fund Unicef ​​said. Around two-thirds of Ukrainian girls and boys have been driven from their homes because of the fighting.

At least 262 children have been killed since the Russian invasion began on February 24, according to UNICEF. 415 others were injured. Hundreds of schools across the country were damaged.

12:24 p.m.: Pope worried about blockade of grain exports

Pope Francis has expressed concern about the stopped grain exports from Ukraine as a result of the Russian war of aggression. “The blockade of grain exports from Ukraine, on which the lives of millions of people depend, especially in the poorest countries, causes great concern,” said the head of the Catholic Church during the traditional general audience in front of numerous believers in St. Peter’s Square in Rome. Everything must be done to solve this problem and to guarantee the human right to food. “Please don’t use grain, a staple food, as a weapon of war,” said the 85-year-old Argentine.

12:17 p.m .: Russian gas exports fell significantly from January to May

In the first five months of this year, the Russian energy company Gazprom delivered a good quarter less gas to countries outside the former Soviet Union than in the same period last year. From January to May, 61 billion cubic meters were exported, Gazprom announced via Telegram. That was 27.6 percent or 23.2 billion cubic meters of gas less than a year earlier.

Gazprom added that gas supplies to China through the Power of Siberia pipeline increased over the same period. However, the energy company did not give any figures on this.

11:33 a.m .: Russia reports the shooting down of western weapons technology

According to the Russian military, it used mass air and artillery strikes to destroy, among other things, western weapon systems that had been delivered to Ukraine. “Up to 200 Nationalists and 24 weapon systems were destroyed, including a battery of 155mm M777 howitzers, the 203mm 2S7 Pion gun, a Grad multiple rocket launcher and two ammunition depots,” the spokesman said of the Russian Defense Ministry, Igor Konashenkov. According to media reports, Ukraine has received M777 howitzers from Australia and the USA.

According to Konashenkov, the kills were achieved by the rocket and artillery troops. Most of the other targets were hit in the Donbass region in eastern Ukraine. There, the Russian armed forces have shifted the current focus of their attack efforts. The information from Moscow cannot be verified independently.

11:28 a.m .: Germany wants to deliver multiple rocket launchers to Ukraine

Germany wants to deliver four multiple rocket launchers from Bundeswehr stocks to Ukraine. The German Press Agency learned from government circles that this was done in close coordination with the USA, which would also train Ukrainian soldiers on the systems. The plan is to deliver the heavy weapons, which can hit targets at long range, by the end of the month.

11:13 a.m .: Moscow sees a growing risk of a confrontation with the United States in the Ukraine conflict

Moscow has warned of a direct military confrontation between the US and Russia after the announcement of new US arms deliveries to Ukraine. “Any weapons shipments that continue, that increase, increase the risk of such a development,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told the RIA Novosti news agency.

The United States is determined “to wage war to the last Ukrainian in order to inflict, as they say, a strategic defeat on Russia,” added the deputy foreign minister. “This is unprecedented and dangerous.”

10.14 a.m .: Scholz: Ukraine decides on its own goals

Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) has once again made cautious statements about Germany’s foreign policy goals in the Ukraine war. The goal of the federal government is that Russian President Vladimir Putin “does not win” the war of aggression he started against Ukraine, Scholz said in the budget debate. “Our goal is that Ukraine can defend itself and be successful,” he added.

The leader of the Union faction, Friedrich Merz (CDU), had previously criticized Scholz for formulating that Russia should not win the war instead of simply saying: “Ukraine must win this war.” Addressing the opposition leader, Scholz said: “But I want to say explicitly that it is arrogant and inappropriate and completely out of place when there is a discussion in this country about what Ukraine should rightly decide.”

10.04 a.m .: Scholz agrees to Ukraine’s anti-aircraft system

Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) has promised Ukraine the delivery of a modern air defense system to fight Russian attackers. In addition, the Ukrainian armed forces will be provided with a modern tracking radar that can spot artillery, says Scholz in the Bundestag. He also announced that Germany would support the United States’ announced delivery of multiple rocket launchers to Ukraine “according to our technical capabilities.”

According to Scholz, the air defense system is the Iris-T from the manufacturer Diehl. This will deliver the most modern air defense system that Germany has. “We’re putting Ukraine in a position to protect an entire city from Russian air raids,” says Scholz. Ukraine has long requested the delivery of anti-aircraft systems to protect itself against attacks by Russian fighter jets, helicopters, missiles or drones.

9:00 am London: Russians have captured more than half of Sieverodonetsk

According to estimates by British secret services, after heavy fighting, Russia has now occupied more than half of the city of Sievjerodonetsk in eastern Ukraine. In the past two days, the fighting has intensified and the Russians have advanced further into the city center, according to an update from the British Ministry of Defense. Chechen fighters are also deployed.

7.44 a.m.: Russian troops establish themselves in the center of Sievjerodonetsk

According to Ukrainian information, the Russian military has established itself in the city center when it stormed the administrative center of Sievjerodonetsk. “The aggressor carried out attacks in the northern, southern and eastern urban areas of Sieverodonetsk, had success with individual units and is now nesting in the city centre,” the Ukrainian general staff said in its morning situation report.

West of the city, in the Bakhmut area, the Russians tried to push the Ukrainian defenders out of their positions at Bilohorivka and Vrubivka. There were also attacks at Komyshuvahka, Berestove and Nyrkove. All of these towns are located in the western rear area of ​​Sievjerodonetsk. The Russian attacks are probably aimed at preventing the Ukrainians from an orderly retreat from the former city. This has been the administrative center of the Luhansk region in eastern Ukraine since 2014.

7:08 a.m.: Russian communists expel MPs who are critical of the war

The Russian Communist Party has expelled two MPs from the Far Eastern region of Primorye around the port of Vladivostok for calling for an end to the war against Ukraine. “These deputies have discredited our party with their initiative, so there is no place for them in our ranks,” says the leader of the Communist faction in the regional parliament, Anatoly Dolgachev, according to the daily newspaper Kommersant. The appeal by the two MPs attracted international attention because it showed that there is resistance to the war in Russian politics. It is not yet clear whether the two non-party members of parliament have to fear further disciplinary measures in addition to being excluded from the parliamentary group.

6.48 a.m .: Ukraine warns of toxic fumes after Russian attack on chemical plant

Russian troops have apparently hit a nitric acid tank in the heavily contested industrial city of Sievjerodonetsk in eastern Ukraine. Regional governor Serhiy Gajdaj is calling on the population to “have face masks soaked in soda solution ready” to protect themselves against toxic fumes. “Given the fact that there is a large-scale chemical production facility in Seyerodonetsk, the Russian army’s indiscriminate airstrikes in this city are just insane,” said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a video message.

5.09 a.m .: Selenskyj calls for new sanctions against Moscow

In view of the advance of Russian troops in the east of his country, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked the EU for the planned new sanctions package and at the same time called for new punitive measures. “Ultimately, there should be no significant economic ties between the free world and the terrorist state,” he said in a video speech. “We will work on new restrictions against Russia for this war.”

Thanks to the EU’s planned oil boycott, Russia will lose “tens of billions of euros” that can no longer be used to finance terrorism. At the same time, Zelenskyi reiterated his demands for the delivery of heavy weapons to the West.

5.25 a.m .: Heavy fighting in Sievjerodonetsk

In the eastern Ukrainian region of Luhansk, Russian troops are poised to overthrow the last bastion of Ukrainian forces. If the embattled regional capital Sievjerodonetsk falls, Russia would have achieved one of its war aims: complete control of the Luhansk region. From there, the Russian troops and the Moscow-loyal separatists could advance further west to capture the strategically important cities of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk in the Donetsk region.

During the fighting in Sieverodonetsk, an incident occurred at a nitric acid chemical plant. The Ukrainian authorities spoke on Tuesday of a Russian airstrike on the plant. The pro-Russian separatists, on the other hand, announced that there had been an explosion there. A large plume of smoke could be seen in photos published by the Ukrainian governor of the Luhansk region, Serhiy Hajday, on his Telegram news channel.

3:25 a.m.: Biden: US not trying to overthrow Putin

US President Joe Biden has assured in a guest article for the “New York Times” that NATO is not aiming for a war against Russia. “We don’t want a war between NATO and Russia,” Biden said in the post. Nor did the US attempt to overthrow Russian President Vladimir Putin. However, if Russia does not pay a high price for attacking Ukraine, it could lead to the end of the rules-based international order and catastrophic consequences worldwide.

“As long as the United States or our allies are not attacked, we will not intervene directly in this conflict, either by sending American troops to Ukraine or by attacking Russian forces,” stressed the US President. “We do not encourage or enable Ukraine to strike beyond its borders. We do not want to prolong the war just to inflict pain on Russia.”

2:21 a.m.: United States to deliver multiple rocket launchers to Ukraine

The US wants to equip the Ukrainian armed forces with multiple rocket launchers. A senior government official said that Ukraine should receive the Himar system with ammunition with a range of 80 kilometers. US President Biden ruled out the delivery of multiple rocket launchers to Ukraine on Monday that could reach targets in Russia. On Tuesday evening, however, he announced in an opinion piece for the “New York Times” that he would deliver “more advanced missile systems” to Ukraine. These would “allow for more precise hitting of key targets on the battlefield in Ukraine,” Biden wrote. However, he emphasized: “We do not encourage or enable Ukraine to strike beyond its borders.”

The Himar vehicle-mounted system can fire missiles with a range of several hundred kilometers. However, as the government representative pointed out, the US does not want to supply ammunition with such a long range. “These systems are used by the Ukrainians to repel Russian advances into Ukrainian territory, but they are not used against Russia,” the official said.

2.01 a.m .: Unicef: Five million children from Ukraine need humanitarian aid

According to the children’s charity Unicef, more than five million children from Ukraine are dependent on humanitarian aid because of the war in their home country. According to the UN organization in New York, around three million children in Ukraine need support after the Russian attack. In addition, there are around 2.2 million children who have since fled to other countries. At least 262 children have been killed since the war began on February 24, according to UNICEF. Hundreds of schools were damaged.

1.01 a.m .: Union politician Frei criticizes the government’s choice of words about the Ukraine war

The parliamentary director of the Union faction, Thorsten Frei, has accused parts of the federal government of being too reluctant to make statements about the Ukraine war. “The statements by the Green and Social Democratic ministers that Russia should not win are disappointing and insufficient,” the CDU politician told the “Bild” newspaper. The Union hopes and wants more: “That Ukraine wins this war.”

0.03 a.m .: Poland’s Deputy Foreign Minister: Scholz’s calls to Putin “pointless”

The Polish government has criticized the phone calls between German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian President Vladimir Putin. “We think it’s absolutely pointless,” said Deputy Foreign Minister Szymon Szynkowski vel Sek on the ARD program “Maischberger”. Instead of traveling to Kyiv, Scholz calls the Kremlin boss “quite regularly” – but that doesn’t do Ukraine any good. On the contrary, it helps Russia. The talks would bring nothing more than Putin’s new credibility.

With regard to arms deliveries, Germany must “finally do more” for Ukraine, Szynkowski vel Sek demands in the program, addressing both direct arms deliveries and ring exchange procedures. “We need concrete actions and not just words and declarations.” Nothing promised by the German side was kept.