Russian defence ministry says its forces captured Kostiantynivka in eastern Ukraine
Russian defence ministry says its forces captured Kostiantynivka in eastern Ukraine
July 3 (Reuters) – Russia’s military told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday that its forces had taken control of Kostiantynivka in eastern Ukraine, a key locality whose capture Moscow has long sought in its advance through the Donetsk region.
Putin, shown in videos visiting a command post and receiving a report from top commanders, praised the city’s capture as an important strategic achievement.
He also said Russian forces had to increase the scale of security zones in response to intensified Ukrainian long-range strikes, mainly against Russia’s oil industry.
Ukraine made no comment on Russia’s claim to have seized Kostiantynivka.
General Valery Gerasimov, chief of Russia’s General Staff, announced the city’s capture in a report on the conduct of the war, now in its fifth year.
Gerasimov said the southern group of forces was carrying out offensive operations to “liberate” all of the Donetsk region, part of the broader Donbas region over which Russia has vowed to secure control as a key aim of its war effort.
“The troops of the group have liberated the city of Kostiantynivka, one of the main defensive hubs of the enemy within the Sloviansk-Kramatorsk-Kostiantynivka fortified area”, Gerasimov said.
Russia’s military has for some time reported that its troops were in control of parts of Kostiantynivka, one of several cities seen as a network of key fortifications in Ukraine’s defence of the region.
Putin described the city as having an important strategic significance.
“We all know that this city is a key transport and large industrial centre of Donbas,” Putin said.
RUSSIAN PICTURES SHOW SOLDIERS IN CITY
The Defence Ministry posted images on Telegram that it said were scenes from Kostiantynivka, including pictures of Russian soldiers holding national flags by shattered buildings.
Gerasimov also told Putin that Russian forces were closing in on Lyman, a town about 70 km (45 miles) to the north which he said was “of key logistical and strategic importance for further advances in this direction”.
The head of Russia’s northern troops, Yevgeny Nikiforov, said his forces had “not yet fully managed to resolve the task” of preventing Ukrainian drone strikes that have hit oil installations and caused fuel shortages in Russia.
Putin responded by saying: “The more attacks the enemy tries to carry out on our civilian facilities … the larger a security zone we’ll have to establish in the neighbouring territory.”
Nikiforov told Putin that Russian troops were making progress in securing border areas in the Kharkiv and Sumy regions, where Moscow has called for expanded buffer zones.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and other officials have said Russia’s advances in eastern Ukraine have slowed considerably since the beginning of the year and Kyiv’s forces have even recaptured some territory.
Putin, in his remarks, dismissed Kyiv’s statements as an “information campaign in which it puts on display supposed successes”. Zelenskiy sent an open letter to Putin last month seeking a direct meeting but the Kremlin leader rejected the proposal.
U.S.-brokered attempts to move towards a peace deal have been put on hold during the conflict in Iran, but both Moscow and Kyiv say they are anticipating a visit soon by the two top negotiators, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.
(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Edmund Klamann, Bill Berkrot and Tom Hogue)
After a year of storms, heatwaves and record rainfall, communities are grappling with climate change.
Reading councillors have approved another plan for the town centre office building.
An accessible bronze statue of Susie the Cat will be installed in Dorchester’s South Street.
The charity behind the event hopes to see a full carnival back in Oxford in July 2027.
The ancient ceremony that forms the centre of the Isle of Man’s national day takes place on Monday.
Statues have kept watch from atop the Clarendon Building for more than three centuries.
The scheme in Preston city centre will include new trees, paving, planting and street furniture.
Liverpool’s metro mayor says he hopes devolution could lead the city to attract civil service jobs.
Tony Drake, from Alton, suffered a cardiac arrest at his home in December.
BBC West Midlands political editor Elizabeth Glinka assesses how Andy Burnham as PM might prioritise the region.
The procession features a life-sized statue of the Virgin Mary, dating back to the 1880s.
In a speech delayed by a two-hour evacuation of the National Mall due to severe weather, President Trump mixed politics with history.
The Royal College of Pharmacy says “urgent action” is needed over persistent nationwide shortages.
Paris’ appeals court is set to rule Tuesday in Marine Le Pen’s embezzlement case, a decision that could determine whether one of France’s leading presidential contenders can run in next year’s election. Le Pen, 57, is appealing a March 2025 conviction that found her and other members of her National Rally party guilty of misusing European Parliament funds by paying party staff with money intended for EU parliamentary assistants between 2004 and 2016. The lower court sentenced her to prison time, suspended pending appeal, and imposed a five-year ban on holding elected office.
The number of pubs in Wales has grown so far this year, bucking the trend of closures in recent years.
The Loughborough University team says shaded homes could be six degrees cooler than exposed homes.
US President Donald Trump’s visit to Ankara for the NATO summit could help secure Turkey’s acquisition of dozens of fighter jet engines, but won’t resolve the F-35 dispute that has soured ties, analysts say.And that’s exactly what’s happening with President Trump’s decision to export jet engines,” Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, head of the German Marshall Fund in Ankara said.
A longboat carving inside Stow Minster is one of the earliest known examples in England.
The Zion Church founder’s release comes after a direct plea to Xi Jinping from Donald Trump.
Hopes are growing that a long-closed Greek Orthodox seminary on an island off Istanbul could reopen soon, with formulas for its new status under discussion, Bishop Aravissu Kassianos Nikolar told AFP.
Located on Heybeliada, one of the Princes’ Islands, the Halki seminary opened in the mid-19th century and was the main theological school for the Eastern Orthodox Church until it was closed under a Turkish law in 1971. But after years of closure, the patriarchate has agreed to accept a formula that
Powered by WPeMatico
