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As it happenedended

Ukraine-Russia war latest: US to host Kyiv team for minerals deal talks while Trump demands Putin stop bombing

Trump doesn’t ‘like the bombing’ and has called on Moscow to stop, after 20 were killed in a devastating strike on Kryvyi Rih

Arpan Rai,Alex Croft
Tuesday 08 April 2025 03:42 BST
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Zelensky condemns Russian strikes on hometown: ‘Diplomacy means nothing to them’

A Ukrainian team will visit Washington this week for crunch talks on a minerals deal, the first visit since the deal collapsed in dramatic fashion five weeks ago.

Volodymyr Zelensky was set to sign a framework agreement in late February before he was booted out of the White House, when a furious Donald Trump berated the Ukrainian president for not being thankful enough for US war assistance.

Since then, teams from Kyiv and Washington have been working to hash out a revised agreement - and to rebuild a broken relationship.

Washington has proposed a more expansive minerals deal which could give it access to valuable mineral resources, including titanium, lithium, and uranium, according to economy minister Yuliia Svyrydenko.

But the deal has not yet been agreed by Ukraine and it is unclear exactly how close the two sides are to reaching an agreement.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump has urged Russia to stop bombing Ukraine, after a ballistic missile strike in Kryvyi Rih killed 20, including nine children.,

“We are talking to Russia. We would like them to stop,” Trump told reporters onboard Air Force One. “I don’t like the bombing, the bombing goes on and on, and every week thousands of young people being killed.”

US citizen forcibly admitted to a psychiatric hospital in Russia

An American citizen awaiting trial in Moscow for allegedly assaulting a police officer has been forcibly committed to a psychiatric hospital following a court order.

A Moscow court approved the involuntary admission of Joseph Tater to a psychiatric hospital following a medical evaluation on 15 March, according to Russian state news agency Tass.

Doctors reportedly described him as exhibiting “tension, impulsivity, persecutory delusions, and a lack of awareness about his condition”.

Mr Tater’s defence lawyer, who has appealed his forced hospitalisation, said that the officials were trying to “isolate the defendant from society”, Tass quoted him as saying.

Human rights groups have long condemned Russia’s use of psychiatric facilities against dissenters — a tactic that echoes Soviet-era practices. Mr Tater’s case adds to a growing list of Americans detained in Russia on criminal charges.

Mr Tater was arrested last year in August.

File. In this photo released by Meshchansky District Court press service on Wednesday, 14 August 2024, US citizen Joseph Tater stands in a courtroom facing criminal assault charges after allegedly attacking a police officer in a Moscow hotel
File. In this photo released by Meshchansky District Court press service on Wednesday, 14 August 2024, US citizen Joseph Tater stands in a courtroom facing criminal assault charges after allegedly attacking a police officer in a Moscow hotel (Meshchansky District Court Press Service)

The 46-year-old had said at the court hearing in September last year that he had sought political asylum in Russia as he was being persecuted by the CIA.

Maroosha Muzaffar7 April 2025 06:10

Thousands of Ukrainian civilians in Russian custody, group says

According to the Center for Civil Liberties — a Ukrainian rights group that won the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize — more than 20,000 Ukrainian civilians are currently held by Russia in occupied territories and within Russia itself — a number also cited by Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman, Dmytro Lubinets.

The group has claimed that there is a growing body of evidence that reveals that thousands of civilians are being held in Russian custody – often without charges or under dubious accusations such as terrorism and espionage.

The “People First” campaign, launched in January by the Center for Civil Liberties alongside the Russian group Memorial (also a Nobel laureate), is demanding that the release of all civilian captives be prioritised in any peace talks.

“While politicians discuss natural resources, possible territorial concessions, geopolitical interests and even Zelensky’s suit in the Oval Office, they’re not talking about people,” Oleksandra Matviichuk, head of the Center for Civil Liberties told the Associated Press.

Memorial says it has verified at least 1,672 Ukrainian civilians in Russian custody, though the real number is believed to be far higher. “There’s a larger number of them that we don’t know about,” Oleg Orlov, co-founder of Memorial said.

Maroosha Muzaffar7 April 2025 06:24

Russian envoy says next Russia-US contact could be this week

Vladimir Putin’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev has said Moscow and Washington could resume contact this week, according to TASS.

Dmitriev is the Kremlin’s international economy envoy and last week became the most senior Russian official to visit Washington since the start of the war in Ukraine.

He told Channel One television, that there were “positive dynamics” but cautioned that “there are undoubtedly still a large number of enemies of Russia in the American government”.

Dmitriev, who also heads Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, said that “there is now a fragile hope that dialogue has been restored”, while stressing the need to counter what he described as “information attacks” – a phrase typically used by Russian officials to refer to critical international media reports.

Maroosha Muzaffar7 April 2025 06:49

Restarting Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant would be ‘unsafe’, Ukraine’s nuclear energy chief warns

Restarting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant — currently occupied by Russia — would be unsafe and extremely difficult under wartime conditions, according to Ukraine’s nuclear energy chief, Petro Kotin.

He warned that restarting even one reactor during the war is “impossible” due to a lack of cooling water, personnel, and power.

If Ukraine regains control, it could take two months to two years to safely bring the plant back online after full demilitarisation and safety checks, the chief executive of Energoatom said, according to The Guardian.

Russia has said it intends to restart the plant when conditions allow, but experts have raised serious safety concerns, especially given the degraded infrastructure, risk of mines, and untrained staff.

File. A view of the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine
File. A view of the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine (AFP via Getty Images)

In February this year, Alexey Likhachev, head of Russian nuclear operator Rosatom, said it would be restarted when “military and political conditions allow”.

Maroosha Muzaffar7 April 2025 07:00

UK’s largest exhibition on Ukraine war opens at The Tank Museum in Dorset

Tanks and deeply personal items donated by Ukrainian refugees – including a hamster cage, house keys from a bombed home in Mariupol, and drawings by an 11-year-old girl – are at the heart of what is believed to be the UK’s largest exhibition on the Ukraine war, now open at The Tank Museum in Bovington, Dorset.

Opened by Ukraine’s ambassador, General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, the exhibition includes many artefacts of symbolic value. “It’s about the personal stories,” the museum’s exhibitions manager, Luke Clark, told BBC News.

“If you come here and you take anything away from this exhibition, it’s hopefully that you’ll have hope for those people who are still out there [in Ukraine], the people who are still in the UK and the hope that they will go home.

“We want to give as much hope to those people as possible.”

The exhibition is due to last for two years.

Maroosha Muzaffar7 April 2025 07:15

Ukraine labels Russian claims of capturing village in Sumy 'disinformation’

Russia claimed it had captured the village of Basivka in Ukraine’s Sumy oblast in March this year, but Ukrainian officials have now denied the report, calling it part of a “disinformation campaign”.

While Moscow said the move could disrupt Ukrainian supply lines, Kyiv confirmed ongoing border clashes but insisted its forces were repelling Russian assault groups.

“Russia continues its disinformation campaign regarding the seizure of settlements in Sumy Oblast or the breakthrough of the border,” border guard spokesperson Andrii Demchenko told Ukrainian Pravda.

Volodymyr Zelensky visits the command posts of the 36th Separate Marine Brigade and the 82nd Bukovynska Separate Air Assault Brigade in the Sumy region
Volodymyr Zelensky visits the command posts of the 36th Separate Marine Brigade and the 82nd Bukovynska Separate Air Assault Brigade in the Sumy region (UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SER)
Maroosha Muzaffar7 April 2025 07:25

Russia shoots down 19 Ukrainian drones overnight, Moscow says

Russian defences shot down 19 Ukrainian drones overnight, Moscow’s defence ministry said on Monday.

Thirteen of the drones were destroyed over the Sea of Azov bordering southwest Russia, and the rest of the drones were downed over the Krasnodar and Bryansk regions and over the Crimean Peninsula.

Moscow does not alway reveal the total number of drones fired by Kyiv’s forces.

Alex Croft7 April 2025 07:35

Russian railway tracks damaged in Ukrainian strike

A Ukrainian drone damaged Russian railway tracks in the southwest Krasnodar region, local authorities said on Monday.

"There were no casualties, and no fire occurred," the administration of the region said on Telegram.

Russia's defence ministry earlier reported that its air defences shot down19 Ukrainian drones overnight, four of which were over the Krasnodar region.

Alex Croft7 April 2025 07:50

In pictures: Ukraine supporters rally in Washington

Supporters of Ukraine rally at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington
Supporters of Ukraine rally at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington (AP)
It comes amid strained relations between Kyiv and the Trump administration
It comes amid strained relations between Kyiv and the Trump administration (AP)
The supporters listened to the national anthem during the rally
The supporters listened to the national anthem during the rally (AP)
Alex Croft7 April 2025 08:03

Watch: Former MI6 Chief 'worried' Trump has bias that Russia has right to Ukraine due to its size

Former MI6 Chief 'worried' Trump has bias that Russia has right to Ukraine due to its size
Alex Croft7 April 2025 08:15

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