In the face of an international boycott, Russian authorities sought to stymie outside sources of information, blocking access to Facebook. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a measure into law criminalizing news coverage that accurately portrays the countryâs bloody incursion into Ukraine as an âinvasion,â leading BBC and major U.S. news networks, including CNN, ABC and CBS, to say they would stop reporting from Russia.
Hereâs what to know
New video shows damage feet from nuclear reactor building
Return to menuVideo, verified by The Washington Post, shows evidence of damage to a covered walkway about 250 feet from a building that houses a nuclear reactor at the Zaporizhzhia power plant.
The video first shows a long, thin object twisted on the ground. It appears similar to the vertical components that line the east side of the walkway. Puddles of unknown liquid are visible, as the camera moves further south. An empty tube that appears to be an expended munition casing lies on the ground near a slatted side of the walkway, and on the other side, the window facing the reactor is cracked. Nearby, the sky is visible through at least two holes in the roof. The floor immediately beneath them is discolored and covered in debris.
The footage surfaced less than 24 hours after Russian forces took control of the Enerhodar facility and was filmed approximately 1,800 feet from where a fire blazed and heavy fighting occurred about 2 a.m. Friday, local time.
1,000 FEET
REACTORS
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power
plant
Video location
Location of visible
overnight fighting
Reactor building
labeled “2”
Location of fire
Source: Satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies
via Google Earth
THE WASHINGTON POST
1,000 FEET
REACTORS
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power
plant
Video location
Location of visible
overnight fighting
Reactor building
labeled “2”
Location of fire
Source: Satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies via Google Earth
THE WASHINGTON POST
1,000 FEET
REACTORS
Zaporizhzhia nuclear
power plant
Video location
Reactor building
labeled “2”
Location of visible
overnight fighting
Location of fire
Source: Satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies via Google Earth
THE WASHINGTON POST
Getting weapons to Ukraine: Western allies scramble to deliver
Return to menuAs Russiaâs military buildup pressed against Ukraineâs border in late January and early February, Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov celebrated the arrival of weapons from the West, illustrating his near-daily tweets with photographs of smiling men in uniform unloading heavy pallets from cargo aircraft.
âThe 8th [American] bird has arrived in Kyiv!â Reznikov exulted on Feb. 5. âOur partners from #USA have sent more than 650 tons of defense ammunition to Ukraine! To be continued.â
The last such message came on Feb. 23, the day before Russia invaded.
There have been no known air deliveries since then. Ukraineâs airspace is now part of a war zone that no Western nation wants to enter, even as the United States and its allies and partners pledge to deliver more weaponry for the fight.
NATO territory to the west â where Ukraine borders Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania â provides the only still-uncontested ground access. But east-west roads that can handle truck transport into Ukraine are few, and most are clogged with refugees fleeing the country.
Video shows Sky News journalists under gunfire during ambush in Ukraine
Return to menuWATCH: Sky News reporters ambushed near Kyiv, injuring one of them pic.twitter.com/zDXGGEwJ40
— BNO News (@BNONews) March 4, 2022A chilling video published on Friday shows the moment a team of Sky News journalists came under gunfire while driving through Ukraine â highlighting the increasing violence in an invasion that has killed hundreds of civilians.
Sky News foreign correspondent Stuart Ramsay and his team of four were attacked Monday after being ambushed by âa saboteur Russian reconnaissance squad,â according to Ramsayâs account of the incident.
The group was on its way to the town of Bucha, about 18 miles away from Kyiv. Near an intersection, the pop of a small explosion is heard. âItâs the tire, isnât it?â producer Dominique Van Heerden is heard wondering out loud.
But when the car comes to a stop, that is the moment âour world turned upside down,â Ramsay wrote. The crackle of a cascade of gunfire can be heard as flashes of bullets fly through the car, the video shows.
âAt this stage we thought it was a Ukrainian army checkpoint firing at us and that it was a mistake, so we started screaming we were journalists, but the rounds kept coming,â Ramsay said.
With bullets flying, the group eventually managed to escape from the car. They jumped down a 40-foot embankment at the side of the road, where Ramsay said he landed âlike a sack of potatoes.â
According to Ramsay, they found refuge in a garage, while the sound of gunfire rattled outside. The five journalists were eventually rescued by Ukrainian police the next morning, when it was âpitch-black outside.â
Ramsay was wounded after being shot in the back. Camera operator Richie Mockler took two rounds to his body armor during the ordeal. In Ukraine, the U.N. human rights office said Friday that at least 331 civilians had been killed, while Ukraineâs emergency services put the number of civilian fatalities much higher, at more than 2,000.
âThe point is we were very lucky,â Ramsay wrote. âBut thousands of Ukrainians are dying, and families are being targeted by Russian hit squads just as we were, driving along in a family saloon and attacked.â
âThis war gets worse by the day,â he added.
The Ukraine power plant fire was contained. But nuclear experts fear whatâs to come in Russiaâs war.
Return to menuFor a small tribe of veteran atomic experts who helped secure the Soviet Unionâs nuclear energy and missiles as it started to fall apart in the late 1980s, the grainy images of the fighting around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine, Europeâs largest, were like something out of a frightening alternative reality.
That smoke. Those tracers. That fire. They, more than most others, knew the precise mechanics of how an accident could quickly turn into disaster.
Although the damage appears to have been contained â and Europe spared a nuclear disaster on the level of Fukushima â nuclear experts said they were still fearful as Russiaâs military battles its way across Ukraine. The country has four active nuclear power plants and one failed one, Chernobyl, whose radiation still requires constant upkeep.
Russiaâs independent media, under siege for years, teeters under new Putin crackdown
Return to menuIvan Kolpakov, editor in chief of Meduza, one of Russiaâs most popular independent media outlets, had been expecting the government to block the publicâs access to his website every day since the war with Ukraine began.
On Friday morning it finally happened. But then Russiaâs parliament went further, passing a law banning what it considers âfakeâ news about the military, including any rhetoric that calls the invasion of Ukraine an âinvasionâ â the preferred language is âspecial military operationâ â with a potential 15-year prison sentence. Putin signed it into law hours later.
âOur sources say they are likely to use this against journalists,â said Kolpakov, speaking from a location he would not disclose. âThey can use it against journalists and why wouldnât they? They decided to destroy the industry entirely.â
Kolpakov, whose website is based in Latvia, began what he called âan urgent evacuationâ of his Russian staff.
Similar scenarios are currently playing out at countless independent media outlets across Russia, a nation that has never had a fully welcoming attitude toward a free press.
CNN, ABC, CBS, Bloomberg say they will limit activity in Russia after Putin restricts news coverage
Return to menuSeveral U.S. media organizations said Friday that they would limit activity in Russia, hours after President Vladimir Putin signed a measure into law criminalizing news coverage that accurately portrays the countryâs bloody incursion into Ukraine as an âinvasion.â
Bloomberg said it will âtemporary suspend our news gathering inside Russia,â according to a statement from editor in chief John Micklethwait. âThe change to the criminal code, which seems designed to turn any independent reporter into a criminal purely by association, makes it impossible to continue any semblance of normal journalism inside the country.â
CBS and ABC both said they would not broadcast from Russia at least for the day because of the new regulations, which ABC described in a statement as a âcensorship law.â Both cited concerns about the safety of their reporting teams and said they will continue to assess the situation.
CNN, meanwhile, said the network âwill stop broadcasting in Russiaâ â effectively cutting off its signal in the country â âwhile we continue to evaluate the situation and our next steps moving forward.â
Their decisions followed an announcement earlier Friday from Britainâs BBC that it would suspend coverage from Russia after Russiaâs communications watchdog said it had blocked access to the network and several other foreign news organizationsâ websites for spreading what it called âfalse informationâ about the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Itâs unclear how much these policies will affect the ability of Western news organizations to report on the ongoing conflict in neighboring Ukraine, where dozens of media organizations have sent correspondents to cover the Russian aggression.
But Putinâs measures have already been devastating to Russian independent newspapers, TV and radio stations within the country, many of which have shuttered or sent its staff out of the country.
Zelensky criticizes NATO decision not to implement a no-fly zone over Ukraine
Return to menuUkrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned NATO allies for ruling out a no-fly zone over the war-torn country to protect its skies from Russian attackers.
Zelensky, in a video message posted on social media, called NATOâs stance âweak,â saying it gave Russia the green light to continue its bombing campaign. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday that NATO would support Ukrainians but that enforcing a no-fly zone would require sending NATO aircraft into Ukrainian airspace to shoot down Russian jets â something the alliance is unwilling to do.
âThat could lead to a full-fledged war in Europe,â Blinken said. âPresident Biden has been clear that we are not going to get into a war with Russia.â
In an emotional address late Friday, Zelensky told Ukrainians to remain strong and said NATO would be to blame for the deaths of Ukrainians as Russia continues its missile attacks, striking cities.
âFor nine days, we have seen a brutal war,â he said. âThey are destroying our cities. They are shelling our people, our children and residential neighborhoods. Churches. Schools. They destroy everything that ensures a normal life. And they want to continue it.â
Earlier in the day, after Ukrainians said Russian shelling caused a fire at Europeâs largest nuclear power plant, Zelensky called again on international allies to implement a no-fly zone over Ukraine and said that only âan immediate closure of sky over Ukraineâ would guarantee Russia would not bomb nuclear installations. He accused Russian forces of targeting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant facility in an attack he said could have been as bad as âsix Chernobyls.â
Adela Suliman, David Stern and Alexander Stetsenko contributed to this report.
Map: Latest ground advances by Russian forces in Ukraine
Return to menuRussian forces continue their efforts to take Kyiv. Ukrainian authorities said a Russian attack was repelled in Hostomel, a town 20 miles northwest of the capital. On the east, Russian troops are advancing rapidly and could attack the city in the next 24 hours.
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