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Ukraine warns of 'last chance' to flee as Russia prepares eastern attack

Russia accuses Ukraine of changing demands since Istanbul talks

By - Apr 07,2022 - Last updated at Apr 07,2022

This aerial view taken on Wednesday shows a destroyed residential building in the town of Borodianka, northwest of Kyiv, on Wednesday, during Russia's military invasion launched on Ukraine (AFP photo)

SEVERODONETSK, Ukraine — Ukraine urged its residents in the east of the country Thursday to take their "last chance" to flee mounting Russian attacks, after devastation around the capital Kyiv shocked the world.

Six weeks after they invaded, Russian troops have withdrawn from Kyiv and Ukraine's north and are focusing on the country's southeast, where desperate attempts are under way to evacuate civilians.

The retreat from Kyiv revealed scenes of carnage, including in the town of Bucha, that Ukraine said were evidence of Russian war crimes, and which triggered a fresh wave of Western sanctions against Moscow.

On Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned that Russia, which denies responsibility for the killings of civilians, was undeterred and continued “to accumulate fighting force to realise their ill ambitions in [eastern] Donbas”. 

“They are preparing to resume an active offensive,” he said, while officials in Donbas’ Lugansk and Donetsk regions begged civilians to leave.

“These few days may be the last chance to leave,” Lugansk regional governor Sergiy Gaiday wrote on Facebook, saying that all cities in the region were under fire and one person had died in the town of Kreminna.

“Do not wait to evacuate,” he said, adding: “The enemy is trying to cut off all possible ways of getting people out.”

Talks

Russia on Thursday accused Ukrainian negotiators of changing demands since last month’s talks in Istanbul, claiming that Kyiv was not interested in ending fighting.

Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met in Istanbul in March but there have been few signs of the conflict abating on the ground. 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that on Wednesday the Ukrainian side had presented its draft agreement. 

“It shows a departure from the most important provisions spelled out at the meeting in Istanbul on March 29,” he said. 

In Turkey, “the Ukrainians clearly stated that future [international] security guarantees for Ukraine do not apply to Crimea and Sevastopol,” Lavrov said, referring to territory Moscow annexed in 2014.

“In yesterday’s draft, this clear statement is missing,” he added.

He also said that Ukrainians wanted the leaders of Russia and Ukraine to discuss Crimea and separatist-held territory in eastern Ukraine face-to-face.

“At the next stage, the Ukrainian side will certainly ask for the withdrawal of troops and will put forward new preconditions,” Lavrov predicted.

“This is unacceptable.”

He accused Ukrainian authorities of seeking to scupper talks and not wanting to end more than a month of fighting.

“We see this as a manifestation of the fact that the Kyiv regime is controlled by Washington and its allies, who are pushing President Volodymyr Zelensky to continue hostilities,” Lavrov said.

‘Nowhere to go’ 

Gaiday said previously that more than 1,200 people had been evacuated from Lugansk on Wednesday, but that efforts were being hampered by artillery fire, with some areas already inaccessible. 

For those unable to leave, he said, tonnes of food, medicine and hygiene products were being delivered as part of a massive humanitarian effort.

The head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration said strikes had targeted aid points. 

“The enemy aimed directly there with a goal to destroy the civilians,” Pavlo Kyrylenko wrote on Facebook. 

He added that people were heeding calls to flee and he would be coordinating evacuation to make it “faster and more effective”. 

Large areas of Lugansk and the neighbouring Donetsk region have been controlled since 2014 by pro-Russian separatists.

Shells and rockets were also slamming into the industrial city of Severodonetsk, the easternmost city held by Ukrainian forces. 

“We have nowhere to go, it’s been like this for days,” 38-year-old Volodymyr told AFP, standing opposite a burning building in Severodonetsk.

More than 11 million people have been displaced since Russia invaded on February 24, with the stated aim to “de-militarise” Ukraine and support Moscow-backed separatists.

It is currently believed to be trying to create a land link between occupied Crimea and the statelets in Donbas.

‘Weapons, weapons, weapons’ 

Ukrainian forces are also regrouping for the offensive, including on a two-lane highway through the rolling eastern plains connecting Kharkiv and Donetsk.

Trench positions were being dug, and the road was littered with anti-tank obstacles. 

“We’re waiting for them!” said a lieutenant tasked with reinforcing the positions, giving a thumbs up.

Western allies have already sent funds and weapons to help Ukraine, but Kyiv’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on Thursday made a fresh appeal to NATO for heavy weaponry, including air defence systems, artillery, armoured vehicles and jets.

“My agenda is very simple. It has only three items on it. It’s weapons, weapons, and weapons,” he told journalists ahead of a meeting with NATO ministers in Brussels.

‘Brutality and inhumanity’ 

The evacuation calls are being fuelled by fears of fresh atrocities, after chilling discoveries in areas from which Moscow’s troops have withdrawn.

US President Joe Biden said “major war crimes” were being committed in Ukraine, where images have emerged in recent days of bodies with their hands bound or in shallow graves.

“Civilians executed in cold blood, bodies dumped into mass graves, the sense of brutality and inhumanity left for all the world to see, unapologetically,” Biden said. 

In one of the worst affected towns, Bucha, some residents were still trying to learn the fate of loved ones, while others were hoping to forget. 

Tetiana Ustymenko’s son and his two friends were gunned down in the street, and she buried them in the garden of the family home. 

“How can I live now?” she said.

The Kremlin denies responsibility for any civilian deaths and President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday accused Ukrainian authorities of “crude and cynical provocations” in Bucha.

But the German government pointed to satellite pictures taken while the town was still under Moscow’s control, which appear to show bodies in the streets.

Russia’s denials “are in our view not tenable”, said German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit. 

Ukrainian officials have warned other areas may have suffered worse than Bucha, including nearby Borodianka.

“Locals talk about how planes came in during the first days of the war and fired rockets at them from low altitudes at these buildings,” Interior Minister Denys Monastyrsky told local media.

Officials have alleged that Russian troops are now trying to cover up atrocities elsewhere to prevent further international outcry, including in the besieged city of Mariupol.

Ukrainian human rights official Lyudmila Denisova said Wednesday, citing witness testimony, that Russian forces have brought mobile crematoria to burn bodies and other heavy equipment to clear debris in the city.

Sanctions ‘not enough’ 

Western powers have already pummelled Russia with debilitating economic sanctions and on Wednesday the United States unveiled further measures targeting Russia’s top banks and two of Putin’s daughters.

Britain sanctioned two banks and vowed to eliminate all Russian oil and gas imports by the end of the year, while the European Union is poised to cut off Russian coal imports.

EU nations this week have also expelled more than 200 Russian diplomats and staff, while a vote will be held later Thursday in the UN General Assembly on excluding Moscow from the UN Human Rights Council.

“We are convinced that now is the time to suspend Russian membership of the Human Rights Council,” G-7 foreign ministers from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain and the United States said in a statement.

But in his nightly address, Zelensky said the new sanctions were “not enough”.

He urged countries to completely cut off Russia’s banks from the international financial system, and to stop buying the country’s oil. 

Oil exports are “one of the foundations of Russian aggression”, he said, which “allows the Russian leadership not to take seriously the negotiations on ending the war.”

Australia to rebury ancient Indigenous Mungo remains

By - Apr 06,2022 - Last updated at Apr 06,2022

A handout photo taken and received on Wednesday from the New South Wales (NSW) Department of Environment shows Robert Kelly conducting a traditional Aboriginal smoking ceremony in the Mungo National Park (AFP photo)

SYDNEY — Australia’s oldest human remains, dating back at least 40,000 years, will be reburied near the Outback site at Mungo Lakes where they were first uncovered, the Australian government announced on Wednesday.

The ancestral remains of 108 people, including the most famous bones known as the Mungo Man and Lady, will be interred near their original resting place in the Mungo National Park — about 11 hours drive west of Sydney, NSW Environment Minister James Griffin said.

“While the discovery of Mungo Man and Mungo Lady helped scientists establish that Aboriginal people have been in Australia for more than 42,000 years, it’s time to let their spirits rest in peace,” Griffin said.

The discoveries at Lake Mungo and Willandra Lakes between 1960 and 1980 redefined the anthropological understanding of Australia, pushing back the estimates of when humans first arrived on the continent by tens of thousands of years.

Mungo Lady is still among the earliest evidence of cremation in the world.

Further research of rock shelters in the Northern Territory has since extended evidence of Indigenous Australians, believed to be the world’s oldest continuous culture, to at least 65,000 years.

After their excavation, the remains were removed from the site and taken away for study without permission from traditional owners.

Decades of campaigning by Indigenous elders led to the return of the remains to the World Heritage site at Mungo National Park in 2017.

Patsy Winch — chair of the Aboriginal Advisory Group representing Paakantji, MutthiMutthi and Ngiyampaa people from the area — welcomed the decision.

“Finally, after all that time has passed, the voices of the elders have been heard, and I am thankful that these ancestral remains will finally be laid to rest the traditional way, in country,” Winch said in a statement.

The government said the decision to rebury the bones was decided after an “extensive community consultation” and will be carried out in accordance with the wishes of the traditional owners of the land.

Peru ends Lima curfew aimed at quelling protests

By - Apr 06,2022 - Last updated at Apr 06,2022

Riot police protect themselves from tear gas thrown back by demonstrators during a protest against the governement of Peru’s President Pedro Castillo, in Lima, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

LIMA — Peruvian President Pedro Castillo on Tuesday announced the end of a curfew in the capital Lima aimed at containing protests against rising fuel prices following crisis talks with Congress.

“We will with immediate effect remove this immobility [curfew]. We call on the Peruvian people to be calm,” said the leftist leader, alongside Congress President Maria del Carmen Alva.

Police and soldiers patrolled the largely empty streets of the capital earlier on Tuesday after Castillo announced the curfew shortly before midnight on Monday for Lima and the neighbouring port city of Callao.

It was due to last until midnight on Tuesday as authorities attempted to curtail protests against rising fuel and toll prices amid growing economic hardship.

But news of the curfew’s end was met with cheers by hundreds of protesters outside Congress and in other parts of the capital, AFP journalists noted.

“The people did it!” said opposition legislator Alva on Twitter.

Shops and schools were closed and bus services mostly suspended but many workers, at hotels or hospitals for example, ignored the shut-down, which was widely criticised on social media.

The measure took many in Lima by surprise, given that the most violent protests in recent days took place far from the capital.

Many had no choice but to take a taxi or walk to their place of work.

“It was a very late and improvised” announcement, complained Cinthya Rojas, a nutritionist who waited patiently for one of the handful of buses still running to get to work at a hospital east of Lima.

A hotel employee told AFP she had to pay the equivalent of $8, a small fortune on her salary, for a taxi to work.

Some tourists had difficulty finding food, with restaurants and supermarkets closed, but domestic and international flights continued as normal from Jorge Chavez airport, its concessioner said.

Residents of some Lima neighbourhoods beat pots and pans at their windows in protest against the lockdown at noon.

 

Soaring food prices 

 

“The measures taken, like those taken yesterday, are not against the people but in order to save the lives of compatriots,” said Castillo, balked by the first social protests of his eight-month-old presidency.

He had said the curfew move was “to reestablish peace” after countrywide protests amidst biting food inflation.

“There was information from a source that there were going to be acts of vandalism today. That is why we have taken this step,” Defence Minister Jose Gavidia said earlier on Tuesday.

While Lima was under curfew, protests continued and roads were blocked in several smaller cities elsewhere in Peru.

Like much of the rest of the world, Peru’s economy is reeling from the damages wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.

The country’s Consumer Price Index in March saw its highest monthly increase in 26 years, driven by soaring food, transport and education prices, according to the national statistics institute.

In an attempt to appease protesters, the government over the weekend eliminated the fuel tax and decreed a 10 per cent increase in the minimum wage from May 1.

But the General Confederation of Workers of Peru — the country’s main trade union federation — considered the measures insufficient and took to the streets again on Monday in Lima and several regions in Peru’s north.

Some protesters set fire to toll booths on highways, looted shops and clashed with police.

Others burned tires and blocked the north-south Pan-American highway, the country’s most important artery for people and goods.

The disruptions halted public transport and closed schools on Monday.

“Social protest is a constitutional right, but it must be done within the law,” Castillo, a 52-year-old former rural school teacher, pleaded during his brief TV appearance late on Monday.

 

‘Authoritarian measure’ 

 

Two-thirds of Peruvians disapprove of Castillo’s rule, according to an Ipsos opinion poll in March.

Castillo’s announcement of a curfew came a week after he escaped impeachment by Congress, where opponents accuse his administration of a “lack of direction” and of allowing corruption in his entourage.

It also coincided with the 30th anniversary of a coup staged by ex-president Alberto Fujimori, jailed over his regime’s bloody campaign against insurgents.

“The measure dictated by President Pedro Castillo is openly unconstitutional, disproportionate and violates people’s right to individual freedom,” tweeted lawyer Carlos Rivera, a representative of Fujimori’s victims.

Political analyst Luis Benavente told AFP the curfew was “an authoritarian measure” that revealed “ineptitude, incapacity to govern”.

A large proportion of Lima’s 10 million residents work in the informal sector, as street sellers and other traders, meaning the curfew left them without income for the day.

A Copa Libertadores football match between Peruvian Club Sporting Cristal and Brazil’s Flamengo, which had been thrown into doubt, would go ahead as scheduled on Tuesday night in Lima, regional governing body CONMEBOL said on Instagram.

One dead, four hurt in Greek COVID hospital ward explosion

By - Apr 06,2022 - Last updated at Apr 06,2022

THESSALONIKI, Greece — One person died on Wednesday and another four were hurt in an explosion at a COVID-19 ward in one of Greece’s main hospitals, officials said.

“A strong explosion was heard and everyone jumped out... we’ve never seen anything like this,” a staff member at Papanikolaou hospital in the northern city of Thessaloniki told state agency ANA.

The fire department said two men had suffered major burns in the incident, while Nikos Kapravelos, director of one the hospital’s intensive care units, had earlier told AFP that two other patients suffered smoke inhalation.

Thirty-five people had to be evacuated, the fire department added, noting that the explosion and ensuing fire had caused significant damage to the ward.

Local reports said a patient lit a cigarette in the ward, setting off an explosion through his oxygen supply.

Health Minister Thanos Plevris, who rushed to the scene, said that the consequences would have been more serious had staff not quickly shut off the oxygen elsewhere in the building.

The hospital remained in operation and the causes of the incident were under investigation, he added.

Stavros Tryfon, head of the hospital’s pulmonary department, told reporters the man killed in the blast had been “vaporised”.

Television footage showed at least two windows blown out at the back of the building, with dark smoke billowing out.

A member of staff told AFP: “A doctor who responded saw a man on fire, and a patient trying to help him.”

“The ward was destroyed,” she told AFP.

The fire department said it had despatched 30 firemen and 11 fire engines to the scene.

 

Germany to get weaponised drones for the first time

By - Apr 06,2022 - Last updated at Apr 06,2022

German Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht addresses members of the parliament during a session of the Bundestag (lower house of parliament) in Berlin on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BERLIN — Germany will get weaponised drones for the first time after years of debate, parliamentary sources told AFP on Wednesday, as the EU giant, shaken by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, moves to ramp up its defence capabilities.

Germany’s armed forces have until now only been allowed to deploy unarmed drones for reconnaissance purposes, leaving other allies to use weaponised unmanned combat aerial vehicles in the field.

Non-weaponised drones were approved by parliament in 2018, but a plan to equip them with arms was put on ice after strong opposition from the Social Democrats, then junior partners in former chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition.

But the devices have come back on the military’s shopping list as Chancellor Olaf Scholz, himself a Social Democrat, announced a massive spending spree to equip Germany militarily after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s offensive in Ukraine.

On Wednesday, the parliamentary defence committee approved the purchase of 140 Heron TP armed drones from Israel in a contract worth 152.6 million euros ($165 million), sources said.

The drones are expected to be delivered within two years, with 60 of them to be used for training purposes while the remaining 80 will be used for “operational deployment”.

“The security situation in Europe has essentially changed with the attack of Russia on Ukraine,” the defence ministry said in a position paper put to the parliamentary committee and seen by AFP.

“In order to counter the new threat, the Bundeswehr’s equipment must be upgraded without delay, including in particular the arming of the Heron drones.

“The need is absolutely necessary because serious state interests of a political nature would be otherwise compromised and this is not acceptable.”

 

Disrepair 

 

Germany’s army has been suffering from underinvestment over the years.

Defence Commissioner Eva Hoegl’s latest report of the state of the military had underlined a litany of equipment issues — from the majority of combat vehicles, naval ships and fighter jets in disrepair to a woeful lack of newer generation arms like rifles or even parachutes.

Scholz had announced in a landmark speech three days after Russian troops marched into Ukraine that Germany would set aside a special budget of 100 billion euros for the military, as well as plough more than 2 per cent of its output on defence annually.

Since then frantic negotiations have been ongoing to close huge defence deals, including a purchase of up to 35 F-35 fighter jets from the United States and 15 Eurofighter jets from a consortium that includes Airbus.

Germany is also looking at acquiring an anti-missile shield system dubbed the Iron Dome from Israel. The Arrow 3 system, costing around 2 billion euros, is powerful enough to offer protective cover for neighbouring EU nations.

 

Moscow accuses Ukraine of 'staging' footage of dead civilians

By - Apr 05,2022 - Last updated at Apr 05,2022

An Ukrainian serviceman walks accross a destroyed bridge in the town of Borodianka, northwest of Kyiv, on Monday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Russia on Tuesday accused Ukraine of staging new civilian deaths in a number of locations in an effort to pin the blame on Moscow.

The Russian defence ministry made the assertion after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky demanded tough new sanctions on Moscow over killings in the town of Bucha that have prompted international condemnation.

The Russian defence ministry said on Tuesday that the Ukrainian military recorded a fake video that purported to show "peaceful civilians allegedly killed by the Russian armed forces".

The video was made on Monday evening in the settlement of Moshchun some 20 kilometres northwest of Kyiv and was designed to be distributed through Western media, Moscow said.

"Similar events are now being organised by the Ukrainian special services in Sumy, Konotop and other cities," the Russian defence ministry said, referring to cities in north-eastern Ukraine.

The ministry did not say how it obtained the information in its statement.

At the weekend, dozens of bodies were discovered in Bucha near Kyiv after the withdrawal of Russian troops. Ukrainian officials said some had their hands bound behind them.

Ukraine has blamed Russian forces, with Zelensky describing the killings as “war crimes” and “genocide”.

Moscow denies any responsibility, saying that the images are fake or that the deaths occurred after Russian forces pulled out of the area.

The Kremlin repeated the denial on Tuesday, adding the West wanted to “smear” the Russian army.

“We still insist that any accusations against the Russian side, against the Russian military are not just groundless,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“This is a well-directed show. Nothing else. A tragic show.”

He said Russia would continue to promote its version of events. “We won’t sit idle,” he added.

Sri Lanka president loses parliament majority as protests mount

By - Apr 05,2022 - Last updated at Apr 05,2022

COLOMBO — Sri Lanka's president lost his parliamentary majority on Tuesday as former allies urged his resignation following days of street protests over the island nation's crippling economic crisis.

Unprecedented shortages of food and fuel along with record inflation and blackouts have inflicted widespread misery in the country's most painful downturn since independence from Britain in 1948.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa's once-powerful ruling coalition is in turmoil after a string of defections, capped on Tuesday by the new finance minister's resignation just one day after taking office.

And as anti-Rajapaksa demonstrations continued for a fifth straight day, the government warned of retaliation if rallies turned violent.

"Security forces will not hesitate to enforce the law against those involved in violence," defence ministry secretary Kamal Gunaratne said in a statement.

More than 60 people had been arrested in connection with unrest since Friday and many have said they were tortured in police custody.

The UN Human Rights Council said it was closely watching the deteriorating situation in Sri Lanka, which is already facing international censure over its human rights record.

"The drift towards militarisation and the weakening of institutional checks and balances in Sri Lanka have affected the state's ability to effectively tackle the economic crisis," the UNHRC said.

Public anger is at a fever pitch in Sri Lanka, where crowds have since the weekend attempted to storm the homes of several senior government officials.

"If we don't act now, there will be a river of blood in the country," said Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, a newly independent lawmaker who broke ranks with the president's party and joined calls for the leader to step down.

"We have to forget party politics and ensure an interim government."

Tuesday's parliamentary session was the first since dozens of MPs withdrew their support for Rajapaksa's government, including 16 lawmakers from his own Sri Lanka Podujana Party (SLPP).

The government is now at least five short of a majority in the 225-member house, but there has been no clear signal that legislators will attempt a no-confidence motion to topple it.

Opposition parties have already rebuffed Rajapaksa's call to join a unity administration led by him and his elder brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Their government imposed a state of emergency last week in an effort to contain street protests, but the ordinance is set to expire next week unless ratified by parliament.

Rejecting calls for a vote on the emergency decree, the government cut short Tuesday's proceedings by two hours, but promised a debate on Wednesday.

Nimal Lanza, a former minister who has also abandoned Rajapaksa's administration, conceded that the ruling party no longer had a mandate to govern.

"I beg and appeal to you to take the side of the protesters," he told parliament, addressing the prime minister, who attended the session but remained silent.

Every member of Sri Lanka's cabinet except the president and prime minister resigned late Sunday.

Former justice minister Ali Sabry was appointed as finance minister on Monday, replacing the president's brother Basil Rajapaksa, but abruptly resigned after just one day in office.

The finance ministry's top civil servant also resigned on Tuesday, a day after the central bank governor quit.

'Cry of the people' 

 

Boisterous demonstrations have spread across the country of 22 million, despite emergency laws allowing troops to detain participants. A weekend curfew lapsed on Monday morning.

Most demonstrations have been peaceful, with Catholic clergy and nuns led by Sri Lanka's Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith leading a procession in the capital.

"This is a valuable country with intelligent people. But our intelligence, the people's intelligence, has been insulted by corruption," Ranjith said.

"Therefore now we call out... please now listen to the cry of the people and step down."

A critical lack of foreign currency has left Sri Lanka struggling to service its ballooning $51 billion foreign debt, with the pandemic torpedoing vital revenue from tourism and remittances.

The result has seen unprecedented shortages with no sign of an end to the economic woes.

Economists say Sri Lanka's crisis has been exacerbated by government mismanagement, years of accumulated borrowing and ill-advised tax cuts.

The foreign exchange shortage forced the government to announce the shutting of three of its diplomatic missions in Norway, Iraq and Australia. Three others in Nigeria, Germany and Cyprus were shut in January.

Tougher Russia sanctions urged over Ukraine 'war crimes'

Russia rejects accusations of Ukraine Bucha killings

By - Apr 04,2022 - Last updated at Apr 04,2022

Families arrive to board a train at Kramatorsk central station as they flee the eastern city of Kramatorsk, in the Donbass region on Monday, amid Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP photo)

BUCHA, Ukraine — EU officials said Monday they were weighing new sanctions targeting Moscow in response to alleged atrocities against Ukrainian civilians by Russian forces that sparked a wave of international outrage.

Despite Russian denials of responsibility, condemnation was swift, with Western leaders, NATO and the UN all voicing horror at images of dead bodies in Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, and elsewhere.

Local authorities said they had been forced to dig communal graves to bury the dead accumulating in the streets, including one in Bucha found with his hands bound behind his back.

The Kremlin on Monday rejected accusations that Russian forces were responsible for killing civilians near Kyiv and suggested images of corpses were "fakes".

"We categorically reject all allegations," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists.

Peskov said that Russian "experts at the ministry of defence have identified signs of video fakes and various fakes".

"We would demand that many international leaders do not rush to sweeping accusations and at least listen to our arguments," he said.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the bloc was urgently discussing a new round of sanctions as it condemned "atrocities" reported in Ukrainian towns that have been occupied by troops sent in by Russian President Vladimir Putin five weeks ago.

The proposals, which French President Emmanuel Macron said could target Russia’s oil and coal sectors, could be discussed by foreign ministers on the sidelines of a NATO meeting on Wednesday and Thursday, or at their regular meeting early next week, an EU official told AFP.

Borrell also offered EU assistance in documenting evidence of the alleged atrocities, and Zelensky said he had created a special body to investigate.

The scale of the killings is still being pieced together, but Ukrainian prosecutor general Iryna Venediktova said 410 civilian bodies had been recovered so far.

And Bucha’s Mayor Anatoly Fedoruk told AFP that 280 bodies were placed in mass graves because it was impossible to bury them in cemeteries still within firing range of Russian forces.

Satellite imagery firm Maxar released pictures it said showed a mass grave located in the grounds of a church in the town.

Municipal worker Serhii Kaplychnyi told AFP that Russian troops initially refused to allow residents to bury the dead in Bucha.

“They said while it was cold to let them lie there.”

Eventually, they were able to retrieve the bodies, he said. “We dug a mass grave with a tractor and buried everyone.”

AFP reporters in the town saw at least 20 bodies, all in civilian clothing, strewn across a single street.

Zelensky’s spokesman, Sergiy Nikiforov, said the scene in Bucha “looks exactly like war crimes”.

Moscow rejected the accusations and suggested the images of corpses were “fakes” while calling for a UN Security Council meeting on what its deputy ambassador to the body called a “heinous provocation of Ukrainian radicals in Bucha.”

“We categorically reject all allegations,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists.

But Macron said he was in favour of fresh sanctions since “there are very clear indications of war crimes. It was the Russian army that was in Bucha,” he told France Inter radio.

In Germany, Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s defence minister raised the possibility of an end to gas imports.

“President Putin and his supporters will feel the consequences,” Scholz said.

Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki of Poland, whose country has welcomed millions of Ukrainians fleeing the violence, called for an international investigation into what he termed a “genocide”.

‘Even worse things’ 

Zelensky warned that the worst could be yet to come as Moscow refocuses its attention on the south and east of the country, in a bid to create a land link between occupied Crimea and the Russian-backed separatist statelets of Donetsk and Lugansk.

“Russian troops still control the occupied areas of other regions, and after the expulsion of the occupiers, even worse things could be found there, even more deaths and tortures,” he said.

Eight people were killed and 34 wounded in Russian attacks on two towns in southern Ukraine on Sunday, prosecutors in Kyiv said.

Europe’s worst conflict in decades, sparked by Russia’s invasion on February 24, has already killed 20,000 people, according to Ukrainian estimates.

Nearly 4.2 million Ukrainians have fled the country, with almost 40,000 pouring into neighbouring countries in the last 24 hours alone, the UN refugee agency said.

In the eastern city of Kramatorsk, women, children and elderly people were boarding trains to flee the Donbas region.

“The rumour is that something terrible is coming,” said Svetlana, a volunteer organising the crowd on the station platform.

Russia has redoubled its efforts in Ukraine’s south and east, including carrying out several strikes on Sunday on the strategic Black Sea port of Odessa, which Moscow said targeted an oil refinery and fuel depots.

“We were woken up by the first explosion, then we saw a flash in the sky, then another, then another. I lost count,” a 22-year-old resident, Mykola, told AFP.

Britain’s defence ministry said recent Russian air activity had been focused on south-eastern Ukraine, adding that heavy fighting was continuing in the devastated and besieged southern city of Mariupol.

“The city continues to be subject to intense, indiscriminate strikes,” the ministry said in an update on Twitter.

The UN’s top humanitarian envoy Martin Griffiths is expected in Kyiv soon after arriving in Moscow on Sunday in an attempt to halt the fighting.

And peace talks are scheduled to resume by video on Monday, though Russia’s chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said it was too early for a top-level meeting between Zelensky and Putin.

He said Kyiv had become “more realistic” in its approach to issues related to the neutral and non-nuclear status of Ukraine, but a draft agreement for submission to a summit meeting was not ready.

Streets reopened after California shooting leaves six dead

By - Apr 04,2022 - Last updated at Apr 04,2022

LOS ANGELES — Police investigating an apparent gun battle in California that left six dead and 12 wounded re-opened the streets on Monday, as the United States grappled again with deadly violence.

No one has been arrested after the worst mass shooting in Sacramento's history, which appeared to have erupted following a fight in the downtown area as nightclubs were emptying around 2:00am on Sunday.

Sacramento Police said multiple shooters were involved and a stolen handgun had been recovered.

But detectives have given no information as to whether anyone was targeted or if the shooters were firing indiscriminately.

Video circulating on social media appeared to show some kind of brawl, followed by the sounds of gunfire and people running.

Police Chief Kathy Lester told reporters that officers on patrol nearby had been alerted by the sound of the gunshots, and arrived to find a large crowd and "multiple gunshot victims".

Video footage of the immediate aftermath showed first responders tending to bloodied victims. The bodies of the dead lay nearby.

Three of those who died were women. All six have now been identified.

"It was just horrific," said community activist Berry Accius, who arrived minutes after the shooting.

"Just as soon as I walked up you saw a chaotic scene, police all over the place, victims with blood all over their bodies, folks screaming, folks crying, people going, 'Where is my brother?' Mothers crying and trying to identify who their child was," he told local broadcaster KXTV.

The shooting happened in the downtown area, just blocks from the state capitol and close to the venue where the NBA's Sacramento Kings play.

'We must act' 

The Kings hosted the Golden State Warriors on Sunday evening, holding a moment of silence before the game.

Outspoken Warriors coach Steve Kerr said gun laws had to change if tragedies like this were to be avoided.

"It's probably the ninth or 10th moment of silence I've experienced as coach of the Warriors when we mourn the losses of our people who have died in mass shootings," he said, according to the Sacramento Bee newspaper.

"At some point, our government has to decide: Are we going to have some commonsense gun laws? It's not going to solve everything, but it will save lives."

President Joe Biden on Sunday added his voice to calls for action.

"America once again mourns for another community devastated. We must do more than mourn; we must act," he said, reiterating his call for Congress to pass legislation to strengthen restrictions on guns.

California Governor Gavin Newsom described gun violence as a "crisis" for the country.

"We cannot continue to let gun violence be the new normal," he said.

The mass casualty shooting is the latest in the United States, where firearms are involved in approximately 40,000 deaths a year, including suicides, according to the Gun Violence Archive website.

Lax gun laws and a constitutionally guaranteed right to bear arms have repeatedly stymied attempts to clamp down on the number of weapons in circulation, despite greater controls being favoured by the majority of Americans.

Three-quarters of all homicides in the US are committed with guns, and the number of pistols, revolvers and other firearms sold continues to rise.

More than 23 million guns were sold in 2020 — a record — on top of 20 million in 2021, according to data compiled by website Small Arms Analytics.

That number does not include "ghost" guns, which are sold disassembled, lack serial numbers, and are highly prized in criminal circles.

In June 2021, 30 per cent of American adults said they owned at least one gun, according to a Pew survey.

More than 150 still missing after Nigeria train attack

By - Apr 04,2022 - Last updated at Apr 04,2022

LAGOS — One week after gunmen attacked a train with explosives in northwestern Nigeria, the whereabouts of 168 passengers are still unknown, the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has said.

At least eight people were killed and others missing on March 28 when gunmen detonated a bomb on the track and opened fire on the train linking the capital Abuja with the northwestern city of Kaduna.

President Muhammadu Buhari had said some passengers had been kidnapped and survivors said gunmen had snatched a number of passengers, but it is not clear how many.

It was the latest deadly assault blamed on heavily armed criminal gangs known locally as bandits in the region.

In a statement late Sunday, the NRC said of the 362 passengers on board the train when it was attacked, 186 had been confirmed safe.

"Of the 362 validated passengers on board the attacked AK9 train service on March 28, 186 persons on the manifest are confirmed to be safe and at their various homes," it said.

The NRC said of the remaining 176 passengers, eight have been confirmed dead, leaving the whereabouts of 168 still unknown.

It said efforts were still underway to rescue the missing passengers.

The corporation said damaged track and coaches were being repaired while services on the Abuja-Kaduna route had been “temporarily suspended”.

Two days earlier, gunmen killed a perimeter security guard in an attack at Kaduna airport before armed forces intervened.

Gunmen also attacked the same railway line with explosives in October.

Bandit gangs in the northwest and central Nigerian states have long terrorised communities, conducting mass kidnappings for ransom, raiding villages and stealing cattle.

But their violence has intensified. Gunmen often arrive in their scores by motorbike, sometimes striking several villages, killing and abducting residents.

Gunmen have also targeted highways for kidnappings between the capital and cities such as Kaduna and the north-western commercial hub Kano.

Nigeria’s military has been carrying out operations and air strikes to clear bandits out of their camps hidden in forests across several states in the northwest. But the violence has continued.

Security forces are also battling Nigeria’s 12-year extremist insurgency in the northeast that has killed 40,000 people and displaced more than two million more.

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