Day 52 Russian War-Ukraine: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Friday that between 2,500 to 3,000 Ukrainian troops had died so far in the war with Russia and 10,000 others had been injured.
As Russia and Ukraine entered the 52 wars of war, some parts of the war that were hit by war continued to be bombed. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he discussed the fate of Mariupol port which was surrounded at a meeting on Friday with the country’s military leaders and the head of the intelligence agency.
“The details cannot be published now, but we did everything we could to save our people,” Zelensky said at the video address at the night to this country.
Elsewhere in South Ukraine, officials claimed Russian troops occupy the areas around Kherson and Zaporizhzhia ‘terrorized civilians’ and looked for anyone who had served in the army or government.
Russian President Vladimir Putin sent his troops to Ukraine on February 24 for what he called “special military operations” for demilitarization and “anchor” Ukraine. Russian aggression has encouraged a quarter of the 44 million Ukrainians from their homes and caused thousands of deaths.
Here are 8 top developments in the Russian-Ukrainian War:
1. Ukraine said on Friday it tried to solve the siege of Mariupol Russia as a barring rampage around steel work and the massive port of the city. “The situation in Mariupol is difficult and hard. The battle is happening now. Russian soldiers constantly call additional units to invade the city,” said a Ukrainian defense ministry spokesman as quoted by Reuters.
2. Mariupol, at the Azov Sea in Southeast Ukraine, has seen the worst battle of the seven-week war. Ukraine said Russia wasn’t ‘really captured’ Mariupol. If Moscow caught Mariupol, it would be the only big city that fell to Russia so far.
3. The body of more than 900 civilians has been found in the region around the capital of Ukraine after Russian withdrawal – most of them fatal shots, said the police on Friday, an indication that many people were “only executed.” The Russian Defense Ministry promised to increase missile attacks in Kyiv ‘earlier this week in response to the suspicion of Ukraine in the Russian region.
4. Russia also pounded the Ukrainian rocket factory after losing an icon warship on the Black Sea on Friday. Vizar factory, near the capital city of the capital, was very damaged in the last night strike, AFP reporter reported.
Moscow said that his warship was on the Black Sea drowned while being pulled in the storm sea after a fire caused by an explosion of ammunition. Ukraine said one of his missiles caused it to sink.
5. President Volodymyr Zelensky, renew calls for the West to provide more weapons to Ukraine and expand sanctions in Russia, the word Ukrainian allies have it in their hands to avoid the war compiled. “It’s in your hand to make the war significantly shorter. The more and more quickly we will get all the weapons we requested, the stronger our position will and peace that will soon come,” he said in the video address late at night on Friday.
6. Zelensky also appealed directly to US President Joe Biden to appoint Russia “Sponsor of terrorism countries,” Report US media reported on Friday quoting people who were familiar with this problem. The current list includes four countries: North Korea, Cuba, Iran and Syria.
7. The United States believes that it is possible that conflict in Ukraine can last until the end of the year, and ‘do the best’ to shorten it, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ned Price told us the media outlet cnn.us State Secretary Antony Blinken also told EU Allies that the US believed in Russian military operations in Ukraine could last until the end of 2022, US media reported.
8. Meanwhile, Ukrainian Prime Minister Tickets Shmyhal and financial officials Ukrainian will visit Washington next week during the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, the sources are familiar to Reuters. This will be the first opportunity for Ukrainian main officials to meet directly with a number of financial officials from the developed economy since the Russian invasion to Ukraine