In an invasion with the apparent goal of regime change, Russian forces have faced stiffer than expected resistance. But Moscow has a substantial advantage in military power, and Russiaâs Defense Ministry on Saturday said it had taken control of Melitopol, a city of 150,000 north of the annexed peninsula of Crimea. Ukraine has not commented on the claim, and a U.K. defense minister said the city was âstill in Ukrainian hands.â French President Emmanuel Macron warned that the conflict could be âlong.â
While some Ukrainians have picked up arms and created improvised weaponry, more than 50,000 others have fled, and 100,000 have been internally displaced. Ukraine has accused Russia of targeting civilian infrastructure, which the Kremlin denies. Unverified video Saturday showed a damaged residential building, which Ukraineâs foreign minister said had been struck after a night of missile attacks.
Hereâs what to know
U.S. and European allies to push for resolution supporting Ukraine at U.N. General Assembly
Return to menuThe United States and its European allies are turning to the United Nations General Assembly after Russia vetoed a U.S.-backed Security Council resolution condemning the Kremlinâs invasion of Ukraine on Friday.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Twitter late Friday that the United States would pursue the matter in the General Assembly, âwhere the nations of the world can, will, and should hold Russia accountable and stand.â
âWe will work to put forward a General Assembly resolution to demand immediate withdrawal of Russian forces,â the European Union delegation at the United Nations said after the veto.
Eleven of the Security Councilâs 15 members voted in favor of the resolution, while the United Arab Emirates, India and China abstained â a result that the United States said was proof of Russiaâs diplomatic isolation following its assault on Ukraine. Russia is one of the five permanent members of the council with veto power.
A resolution in support of Ukraine can still pass in the 193-member General Assembly, where no member state has a veto. During rare occasions such as the Korean War, member states have sought to bypass vetoes in the Security Council by seeking approval from the wider body, Park In-kook, former South Korean ambassador to the United Nations, said in a phone interview.
The procedure has been invoked after both U.S. and Russian vetoes.
If the United States succeeds in getting the General Assembly to pass a resolution in support of Ukraine, it would boost the diplomatic legitimacy of Western criticism of Moscowâs invasion, Park said.
Ukraine says nearly 200 dead and over 1,000 wounded
Return to menuUkraineâs health minister marked a rising death toll in an update posted Saturday morning on Facebook. The minister, Viktor Liashko, said that 198 people had been killed in the fighting â up from 137 a day earlier â and that 1,115 had been wounded, including 33 children.
Liashko said Ukraineâs medical system continues to function, both for those injured in the war and those who already needed care because of the coronavirus pandemic.
âIsolated pocketsâ of Russian troops are behind Kyiv street fighting, U.K. armed forces minister says
Return to menuBritainâs armed forces minister said early Saturday that âisolated pocketsâ of Russian special forces were waging the street battles in Kyiv overnight as gunfire and explosions rocked the Ukrainian capital.
Municipal authorities said fighting was taking place in the streets and told residents to find shelter as Russian troops pressed toward the city. Videos verified by The Washington Post showed fire and billowing smoke, as well as the sound of live rounds, on a road some seven miles west of the legislature. The Ukrainian military later said it had destroyed combat vehicles in the vicinity.
âWhat youâre seeing in Kyiv at the moment are very isolated pockets of Russian special forces and paratroopers,â James Heappey, the U.K. minister for the armed forces, said in a morning television interview. âThe main armored columns approaching Kyiv are still some way off,â he said.
âAs far as weâre concerned, all of Russiaâs main day 1 objectives ⦠are still in Ukrainian hands,â he added, mentioning the eastern city of Kharkiv, the port city of Mariupol on the Azov Sea and the southeastern city of Melitopol. Russiaâs Defense Ministry said earlier its forces had taken control of Melitopol, while Ukraine did not confirm the report, and footage from the city depicted sounds of heavy shelling.
Ukrainian officials share images of damaged residential building in Kyiv
Return to menuImages and videos of a blown-out residential building in Kyiv were being shared widely on social media by Ukrainian officials Saturday.
Ukraineâs foreign minster, Dmytro Kuleba, shared a photo of the high-rise apartment building, which he said was damaged by shelling in Kyiv.
The Kyiv City Council also posted images and video of the building being hit on its official website and said floors 17 to 21 had been destroyed and its residents evacuated.
Images from Reuters also showed firefighters extinguishing flames at the residential building, which appeared to be located above shops.
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko shared similar images and photos of the building on his Telegram page and called it a âdifficultâ night for the capital, home to almost 3 million people.
In a video address, he said the city had witnessed âseveral clashes, skirmishesâ overnight and estimated that about 35 people had been injured in the city as of 6 a.m. local time. âI ask everyone to keep their composure. And the safest thing is to stay in the shelters. Because the enemy will attack from the air,â he said.
Meta to ban Russian state-owned media outlets from monetization and ads on Facebook
Return to menuMeta, the parent company of Facebook, said Russian state-owned media outlets will no longer be allowed to run advertisements or monetize their content on the social media giantâs platform.
In a statement posted to Twitter on Friday, the head of Facebookâs security policy, Nathaniel Gleicher, said the company will also continue to label accounts affiliated with Russian state-run media. It will also share the steps it is taking to âprotect peopleâ on the site as Russiaâs invasion in Ukraine goes into its third day.
Facebook rolled out the policy of labeling accounts and posts from what it considers âstate-controlledâ outlets in 2019, a response to criticism that it helped the spread of disinformation during the 2016 presidential election.
The official Facebook account for RT, for instance, already has the tag âRussia state-controlled mediaâ under its name. RT, previously known as Russia Today and widely considered a propaganda outlet, is registered as a foreign agent for the Russian government in the United States.
Russia announced on Friday that it was restricting some access to Facebook, accusing it of âcensoringâ Russian media outlets.
Ukraineâs government still controls Kyiv; 35 wounded overnight, top officials say
Return to menuResidents of Kyiv spent the early hours of Saturday sheltering indoors from street fighting and shelling, but Ukrainian authorities still controlled the capital as of the morning, top officials said.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky started the night with the grim warning that people should prepare for Russia to storm the capital. But as dawn broke, the president posted a video of himself apparently in the capitalâs streets to show he remained at his post.
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Saturday morning that the night was âdifficultâ but that there âare no Russian troops in the capital.â He said 35 people, including two children, were wounded overnight.
âIsolated pockets of Russian special forces and paratroopersâ were in the city, but the bulk of Russian forces have not entered, James Heappey, a junior British defense minister, said on Sky News.
Movement within the city will be restricted throughout the day because of roadblocks, Klitschko added, urging people to stay in shelters for protection from potential air raids.
âIt will be difficult, but we must withstand â with us are the army and the territorial defense,â Klitschko said. âWith us is justice.â
âKyiv, our splendid, peaceful city, survived another night under attacks,â Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba posted on Twitter.
Russia says it has taken city of Melitopol in Ukraineâs south
Return to menuMOSCOW â Russiaâs Defense Ministry said on Saturday morning that its forces had taken control over Melitopol, a city of about 150,000 people in southern Ukraine, between the annexed Crimean peninsula and Mariupol.
The Ukrainian side has not confirmed the report. The Institute for the Study of War, a research organization, marked Melitopol as occupied by the Russian forces as of late Friday. But James Heappey, Britainâs parliamentary undersecretary of state for the armed forces, said Melitopol is âstill in Ukrainian hands.â
Earlier, the Russian military said its troops entered Melitopol âwithout resistanceâ and claimed that locals had greeted Russian soldiers.
Footage emerging from Melitopol, however, depicts heavy fighting and gunfire, including at a hospital where fire broke out during a barrage, according to a government official and video of an explosion at the facility.
Terrible. pic.twitter.com/bJ4flVrEsa
— Christo Grozev (@christogrozev) February 25, 2022Russian officials repeatedly claimed that only military infrastructure is being hit, but mounting evidence shows civilian sites have also been targeted.
Zelensky, defiant in Kyiv, urges continued resistance, says more weapons on the way
Return to menuMUKACHEVO, Ukraine â Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky posted a video to his social media accounts Saturday morning, calling on his fellow citizens to continue defending the country against Russian invasion. The video shows the unshaven Ukrainian leader apparently standing in the streets of Kyiv and announcing that there will be no surrender.
âWe are going to defend our nation. Because our weapons are our truth,â Zelensky said in the video. âThatâs our truth because this is our land, our country, our children. And we will defend all this.â
Ðе вÑÑÑе Ñейкам. pic.twitter.com/wiLqmCuz1p
— ÐÐ¾Ð»Ð¾Ð´Ð¸Ð¼Ð¸Ñ ÐеленÑÑкий (@ZelenskyyUa) February 26, 2022Later in the morning, he said that he had spoken with French President Emmanuel Macron and that weapons and equipment from Ukraineâs partners were on the way.
âThe anti-war coalition is working!â he tweeted.
Zelensky had warned hours earlier that the fate of his country was âbeing decided right now.â Overnight, gunfire and explosions were heard in Kyiv. Residents were warned by city authorities to stay indoors and away from windows.
Cheng reported from Seoul.
Video shows fires and blasts on a key Kyiv avenue
Return to menuThe sound of gunfire and explosions continued through the early hours of Saturday in Kyiv, Ukraineâs capital.
Video verified by The Washington Post shows at least three small fires and heavy smoke lining the center of Peremohy Avenue, a two-way road with eight lanes. The video was filmed approximately 2,000 feet southeast of the Beresteiska metro station and, according to Google Maps, just 2½ miles from the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense. A crowdsourced map and media reports indicate that a military unit is based roughly 800 feet from where the fires were seen.
At the start of the video, a voice says that âeverythingâs burning.â There is then an exchange from the street that couldnât be deciphered.
Other video verified by The Post, filmed approximately 2½ miles southeast of the metro station, captured the sound of live rounds and bright lights from explosions coming from the direction of Peremohy Avenue.
On social media, there were additional reports of heavy gunfire and explosions in this area. Later, the Ukrainian military said they had destroyed combat vehicles in the vicinity. Blasts could be heard on several YouTube livestreams of the city throughout the early morning.
In a video message overnight, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told citizens that Russian troops would begin storming Kyiv that evening. âWe all have to know what awaits us, and we have to withstand. The fate of Ukraine is being decided right now,â he said.
More video verified by The Post showed an explosion at a hospital in the southeastern city of Melitopol on Friday.
David L. Stern in Mukachevo, Ukraine, contributed to this report.
Biden authorizes Pentagon to send up to $350 million in defense aid
Return to menuPresident Biden has authorized a defense aid package to Ukraine worth up to $350 million, the White House announced late Friday, as Washington rushes to send more assistance to the pro-Western government that is being attacked by Russia.
The package includes âdefense articlesâ as well as military education and training. The Biden administration intends to provide support as long as there is a viable Ukrainian government, The Washington Post previously reported.
Western leaders have said that U.S. and NATO troops would not be deployed to Ukraine, though they have ramped up shipments of materiel to Kyiv.
The United States had already provided some $650 million in defense aid to Ukraine in the past year. It has sent equipment including antitank Javelin missiles that were used to destroy Russian tanks this week, according to the Ukrainian government.
Earlier in the day, the White House asked Congress to approve $6.4 billion in new emergency aid to assist Ukraine, hoping to boost humanitarian assistance to the war-torn country and shore up other allies in the region against any further Russian aggression.
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