World
On Ukraine front, civilians cling on as troops repel Russia
VUHLEDAR, Ukraine (AP) — The murky water oh so slowly trickles from the filthy drainpipe into her dirty container — the ticking seconds ramping up the danger that Emilia Budskaya may lose life or limb to Russian artillery strikes torturing her front-line metropolis in japanese Ukraine.
Gaping gashes from lethal shrapnel within the courtyard partitions round her testify to the hazards of being exterior — uncovered and with out the physique armor that Ukrainian troopers defending Vuhledar put on after they enterprise from their bunkers.
However Budskaya and her daughter want water to cling on and to outlive, to eke out one other day within the ruins.
And they also wait — tick, tick, tick — for the container to fill, for Budskaya to then pour the water into plastic bottles and — tick, tick, tick — for her to then begin the method once more till their bottles are crammed.
Choosing their method by the particles and dirt, they carry their bounty again to the darkish basement that now passes for his or her dwelling.
“We have now no water, nothing,” Budskaya says. “I’m getting rain water to scrub dishes and arms.”
On the largely static entrance line between Ukrainian and Russian forces that stretches over a whole bunch of kilometers (miles) — from the Black Sea within the south to Ukraine’s northeastern border with Russia — Vuhledar has grow to be one of many deadliest hotspots. It has joined Bakhmut, Marinka and different cities and cities, notably within the fiercely contested east, now synonymous with grinding and harmful attritional warfare and which have grow to be symbols of Ukrainian resistance.
By defending their ruins, Ukrainian forces are slowing expensive Russian offensive efforts to increase Moscow’s management over the whole thing of japanese Ukraine’s industrial Donbas area. It turned Russian President Vladimir Putin’s revised goal for conquest after his forces had been overwhelmed again from the capital, Kyiv, and northern Ukraine within the invasion’s opening stage a yr in the past.
Ukrainian troopers are paying a heavy worth, too, however say their sacrifices are carrying down waves of troops and gear that Moscow is throwing into battle.
In Bakhmut, a soldier who allowed himself to be recognized solely by his struggle identify, “Professional,” mentioned the pulverized metropolis within the Donbas’ Donetsk area “has grow to be a stronghold ” for Ukraine.
“See what they’ve finished to it?” he mentioned of Russian forces which have been pounding Bakhmut for months, slowly inching ahead with heavy casualties to seize a prize that, if it falls, would possibly permit Moscow to argue that the invasion is making progress.
“And this isn’t the one metropolis,” the soldier who fights in a Ukrainian speedy response unit added. “I want they might break their tooth attempting to chew it.”
Battlefields round Vuhledar, southwest of Bakhmut and likewise within the Donetsk area, bear witness to the dear gear and manpower that Russia is expending, with little territorial acquire for now. Tanks and different armored combating automobiles blown up by mines or stopped of their tracks by Ukrainian strikes are clumped collectively on the blasted, cratered terrain.
Though Russia has seized many of the Luhansk area that additionally kinds a part of the Donbas, the adjoining Donetsk area stays roughly divided between Ukrainian and Russian management.
Ukraine’s army mentioned Sunday in one in every of its common updates on the combating that Russian assaults within the east stay focused on Bakhmut and different targets.
Russian forces being dedicated embrace mercenaries of the infamous Wagner Group, a personal army firm that has recruited fighters from prisons and tossed them into fight, with excessive casualty charges. Its millionaire proprietor with longtime hyperlinks to Putin, former convicted felon Yevgeny Prigozhin, mentioned Saturday that his fighters superior right into a settlement on Bakhmut’s northern outskirts. The Ukrainian army disputed that declare, saying Russian forces had been repelled.
Donetsk Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko on Sunday reported three civilians killed and 4 wounded in Russian strikes on Saturday. Vuhledar and its surrounds had been additionally intensely shelled, he mentioned. Additional alongside the entrance line, within the southern Kherson area that is also break up between Ukrainian and Russian management, Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin on Sunday reported two civilians killed and 7 injured in 78 Russian strikes on the area on Saturday.
On patrol in Vuhledar’s ruins, hurrying down muddy paths to take cowl behind pockmarked partitions, Ukrainian troopers mentioned their combat was bigger than for management of town.
“We combat for our youngsters, for our fellow Ukrainians, for our nation,” mentioned a marine with the struggle identify “Moryak.”
“As a result of I believe what Russia is doing now could be genocide of Ukrainians. And Ukrainians don’t have another choice however to win.”
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John Leicester in Kyiv, Ukraine, and Elise Morton in London contributed to this report.
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Comply with AP’s protection of the struggle in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine and of the invasion’s anniversary at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine-a-year-of-war
World
Bangladesh police clash with protesters as Hindu leader detained
A court in Chittagong denied bail to the man charged with sedition as India cautioned about justice for minorities.
Police in Bangladesh have used tear gas against Hindus protesting against the arrest of a religious leader as neighbouring India called for ensuring the safety of Hindus and minorities in the Muslim-majority nation.
Chinmoy Krishna Das, also known as Krishna Das Prabhu, was arrested at Dhaka airport on Monday on charges including sedition.
A court in the port city of Chittagong on Tuesday denied bail to the priest associated with the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), widely known as the Hare Krishna movement.
According to the city’s police, more than 2,000 supporters surrounded the van and blocked its path for some time when Das was being escorted back to prison from court.
The demonstrators threw bricks at the police and officers fired tear gas to disperse the crowds, said Chittagong Metropolitan Police Commissioner Hasib Aziz, who added no one was seriously hurt.
Das’s arrest set off protests by his supporters in both Chittagong, the country’s second-largest city, and the capital, Dhaka.
India noted the arrest and denial of bail with “deep concern”. The neighbouring Hindu-majority country’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement that the incident follows attacks on Hindus and other minorities, along with places of worship, by “extremist elements in Bangladesh”.
It said the perpetrators of those incidents remain at large while Bangladeshi authorities pressed charges against “a religious leader presenting legitimate demands through peaceful gatherings”.
Sedition charges were filed against Das in October after he led a large rally in Chittagong, during which it is accused he disrespected Bangladesh’s national flag.
The rally was aimed at demanding justice for Hindus facing targeted attacks in Bangladesh and seeking better protections for minorities.
The interim government, which took over in the aftermath of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s flight from the country on August 5 amid a mass uprising against her rule earlier this year, has said the threat to Hindus is being exaggerated and they are working on the issue.
While there was large-scale looting and the ransacking of national monuments and government buildings in the wake of Hasina’s overthrow, student leaders who spearheaded the protests had also asked supporters to guard Hindu temples and churches.
More than 90 percent of the population in Bangladesh is Muslim, with Hindus – many of who support Hasina’s Awami League party – making up almost all of the rest.
“We urge Bangladesh authorities to ensure the safety and security of Hindus and all minorities, including their right of freedom of peaceful assembly and expression,” the Indian ministry said.
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World
Russian forces capture former British soldier fighting for Ukraine in Kursk: report
Russian forces captured a former British Army soldier who was fighting with Ukrainian troops in the Kursk region, according to reports on Monday.
In a video, the prisoner of war was sitting on a bench with his hand restrained as he identified himself as 22-year-old James Scott Rhys Anderson.
Russia’s Tass news agency reported on Monday that Russian security officials confirmed a British mercenary had been captured in the Kursk area.
“I was in the British Army before, from 2019 to 2023, 22 Signal Regiment,” Anderson told Russian authorities while being recorded. “Just a private. I was a signalman. One Signal Brigade, 22 Signal Regiment, 252 Squadron.”
RUSSIA TRICKS YEMENI MEN TO FIGHT IN UKRAINE UNDER HOUTHI SCHEME
He expressed regret for joining Ukraine in its fight against Russia, explaining he had nearly lost everything.
When he left the military, he got fired from his job and applied on the International Legion (of Ukraine) webpage.
“I had just lost everything. I just lost my job. My dad was away in prison. I see it on the TV,” Anderson said while shaking his head. “It was a stupid idea.”
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The International Legion for Defense of Ukraine was created at the request of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after Russia’s full-scale invasion of the country in February 2022.
The Associated Press reported that the Legion is a unit of Ukraine’s ground forces that mainly consists of foreign volunteers.
Anderson reportedly served as an instructor for Ukrainian troops and was deployed to the Kursk region against his will.
In the video, he said his commander took his stuff — passport, phone and other items — and ordered him to go to the Kursk region.
UKRAINE TO ANALYZE FRAGMENTS OF MISSILE FIRED BY RUSSIA CAPABLE OF CARRYING NUCLEAR WARHEADS
“I don’t want to be here,” Anderson said.
The AP could not independently verify the report, but if confirmed, it said this could be one of the first publicly known cases of a Western national getting captured on Russian soil while fighting for Ukraine.
The U.K. Embassy in Moscow told the wire officials were “supporting the family of a British man following reports of his detention” though no other details were provided.
Anderson’s father, Scott Anderson, told Britain’s Daily Mail that his son’s Ukrainian commander informed him the young man had been captured.
The senior Anderson also said his son served in the British military for four years, worked as a police custody officer, and then went to Ukraine to fight. He told the paper he tried to convince his son not to join the Ukrainian military, and now fears for his safety.
“I’m hoping he’ll be used as a bargaining chip, but my son told me they torture their prisoners, and I’m so frightened he’ll be tortured,” he told Britain’s Daily Mail.
While being questioned, the younger Anderson talked about how he got to Ukraine from Britain, saying he flew to Krakow, Poland from London Luton. From there, he took a bus to Medyka in Poland, which is on the Ukrainian border.
Anderson’s capture comes amid reports Russia is recruiting hundreds of Yemeni men to fight in its war in Ukraine by luring them to Russia under false pretenses in coordination with the Houthi terrorist network, as reported by the Financial Times.
A senior Ukrainian defense official told Fox News that Moscow is trying to involve as many foreign mercenaries as possible in its war against Ukraine, whether from its allies or proxies in poor, impoverished countries.
The Ukrainian Ministry of Defense similarly confirmed the report to Fox News and said, “Russi[a] has escalated this war twice recently. First, when they brought North Korean fighters, and second, when they used [a] ballistic missile in Ukraine.”
Fox News Digital’s Caitlin McFall and Nana Sajaia, as well as The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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