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Russia-Ukraine war live: Zelenskiy decries corruption in military medical exemptions

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Zelenskiy denounces corrupt medical exemptions

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has decried corrupt medical exemptions that have enabled people to avoid military service, saying the system was subject to bribes and mass departures abroad.

Zelenskiy said the National Security and Defence Council had considered data showing the extent of false exemptions, bribe-taking and flight abroad since Russia’s February 2022 invasion. The investigation of dubious medical exemptions was still being conducted, he said.

“There are examples of regions where the number of exemptions from military service due to medical commission decisions has increased tenfold since February last year,” Zelenskiy said on Wednesday in his nightly video address.

“It is absolutely clear what sort of decisions these are. Corrupt decisions.”

He said the investigation had exposed corrupt practices in different regions and by officials in different positions, involving bribes ranging from $3,000 to $15,000.

Zelenskiy said a separate analysis was needed to determine the numbers of people who had fled abroad, largely on the basis of medical commission decisions.

“We are talking about at least thousands of individuals,” he said.

Zelenskiy this month dismissed all the heads of Ukraine’s regional army recruitment centres.

He said more than 100 criminal cases had been opened in a wide-ranging investigation launched after a graft scandal at a recruitment office in southern Odesa region last month.

Key events

The UK’s prime minister, Rishi Sunak, will reportedly appoint a new defence secretary later on Thursday, replacing Ben Wallace.

Wallace announced last month he would resign from the senior Cabinet role at the next reshuffle, bringing to an end his four years in the job.

The armed forces minister, James Heappey, and, chief secretary to the Treasury, John Glen, have both been linked with the role.

The Daily Telegraph also suggested former defence secretary Liam Fox is a possibility.

Ben Wallace arrives at a Cabinet meeting in Downing Street on 04 July 2023.
Ben Wallace arrives at a Cabinet meeting in Downing Street on 04 July 2023. Photograph: Thomas Krych/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, has met with his Spanish counterpart, José Manuel Albares. He said expanding Spanish military aid to Ukraine was among the topics discussed.

Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has said the war in Ukraine and its consequences would be a priority for Spain’s EU presidency.

Countries holding the presidency traditionally try to set the agenda within the bloc, though the results ultimately depend on all member states.

Ukraine makes progress towards Novoprokopivka, military spokesperson says

Emma Graham-Harrison

Emma Graham-Harrison

A military spokesperson says Ukrainian armed forces are making progress in the direction of Novoprokopivka – the village beyond Robotyne, in the direction of Melitopol.

The capture of Robotyne was announced earlier this week. Even though just a few miles from where Ukrainian troops were at the start of the counter-offensive, it marked a significant achievement in breaking through an initial line of Russian defences prepared over the winter.

This is very preliminary, but suggests they are consolidating those gains and moving further south.

The ultimate goal is to break through to the Azov sea, severing Russian logistics and communications lines with troops in Kherson and Crimea.

Hello everyone, this is Yohannes Lowe. I’ll be running the blog until 3pm (UK time). Please do feel free to get in touch on Twitter if you have any story tips.

Ukraine is using a US rocket system designed to combat drones, according to Bloomberg.

The Vampire rockets, short for Vehicle Agnostic Modular Palletised ISR Rocket Equipment, can be mounted on trucks and carry fuses designed to detonate near drones.

“Initial Vampire systems have been delivered and are in operation by Ukrainian Armed Forces,” the Pentagon’s Acquisition and Sustainment Office was quoted as saying.

Four of the 14 Vampire systems ordered in January under a $40m contract arrived in Ukraine midyear, Bloomberg reported, citing a newsletter by the manufacturer, L3Harris, to investors.

A large majority of elite and ordinary Russians would accept a ceasefire in Ukraine, Anatol Lieven writes in the Guardian, but there is still a general unwillingness to see Russia defeated and humiliated.

Complete defeat in Ukraine would lead to the fall of the Putin regime and this in turn could lead to a period of chaos. Fears of a new Time of Troubles have very deep roots in Russian culture and were strongly revived by the disastrous experience of the 1990s.

At the heart of this fear on the part of the elites is a fear of each other, or even one might say of themselves. The chaos of the 1990s included vicious struggles among the so-called oligarchs including, in some cases, murder.

It would seem that the elites of today believe that without a strong leader like Putin to keep them in order, they would be unable to mediate their differences and hold the state together.

Read the full piece here:

Russia struggling to detect Ukrainian drones, MoD says

Russia’s air defences are struggling to detect and destroy Ukrainian drones launched on its territory, judging by how many have reached their targets, according to the UK Ministry of Defence.

In its latest intelligence assessment, the MoD said the Ukrainian drone strikes on Wednesday were “the largest attack on Russia since the start of the conflict”, while it experienced 25 drone attacks in August alone.

“Russia is likely rethinking its air defence posture in the area between Ukraine and Moscow to better deal with these attacks,” the MoD said.

Russian Domino’s renamed Domino under new ownership

A Russian restaurateur and a pro-Kremlin rapper who together bought Starbucks’ business in Russia last year have taken over the assets of Domino’s Pizza in the country.

Anton Pinskiy and Timati said on Wednesday they would run the restaurants under the barely changed brand Domino Pizza, replacing the “I” with the Cyrillic equivalent “И” and retaining the franchise’s partners, 120 restaurants and more than 2,000 employees in Russia.

The announcement came nine days after DP Eurasia, the operator of the Domino’s Pizza brand in Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia, said it would file for bankruptcy for its Russian business after giving up attempts to sell it.

Western companies that pulled out of Russia when it sent its army into Ukraine last year have in many cases had to write off the value of their business there or sell their operations at huge discounts.

In July, the government seized control of the Russian subsidiaries of French yoghurt maker Danone and Danish brewer Carlsberg. Dutch brewer Heineken said last week it had sold its Russian operations for a symbolic one euro.

The shakeout has led to several high-profile rebrandings, with Lego stores becoming World of Cubes, Krispy Kreme morphing into Krunchy Dream and McDonald’s restaurants being relaunched as Vkusno & Tochka, or “Tasty and that’s it”. Pinskiy and Timati rebranded Starbucks as Stars Coffee.

Timati, whose real name is Timur Yunusov, already owns a big burger chain called Black Star. He has a long track record of support for the Kremlin, appearing with another performer, Sasha Chest, in a 2015 song with the lyric “My best friend is President Putin”.

Anton Pinskiy and Timati unveiling their barely changed brand Domino Pizza, after taking over Russian Domino’s.
Anton Pinskiy and Timati unveiling their barely changed brand Domino Pizza after taking over Russian Domino’s. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

EU imports of Russian liquified natural gas (LNG) have increased by 40% since the invasion of Ukraine despite efforts to cut down supplies, the Guardian reports.

Member states have bought more than half of Russia’s LNG on the market in the first seven months of this year, according to analysis of data by Kpler, which tracks marine and tanker traffic.

Spain and Belgium, which acts as major gateways for LNG supplies to the bloc, have emerged as the second and third-biggest customers of Russian LNG respectively after China.

“EU countries now buy the majority of Russia’s supply, propping up one of the Kremlin’s most important sources of revenue,” said Jonathan Noronha-Gant, a senior fossil fuel campaigner at the anti-corruption group Global Witness, which did the analysis.

Read the full story here:

Drone approaching Moscow shot down, says mayor

Russian air defences shot down a drone that was approaching Moscow on Thursday morning, the city’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

Russian media reported that more than 40 flights were delayed on Thursday morning at the capital’s Vnukovo and Domodedovo airports, citing a flight tracking website.

Airports in Moscow have in the past weeks suspended flights repeatedly due to what Russian authorities said were Ukrainian drone attacks on the city.

Earlier, Russia said it had downed two Ukrainian drones in its southern Bryansk region a day after drones struck targets in at least six regions deep within Russia.

On Wednesday, Ukrainian drones struck targets deep within Russia, in one of the largest-scale attacks on Russia in months.

As well as Bryansk, drones hit an airport in the western Pskov region and were shot down over Moscow, Oryol, Ryazan and Kaluga.

The chief official in Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014, said a cruise missile was also fired at the peninsula on Wednesday.

“Anti-aircraft forces in eastern Crimea have downed a cruise missile,” Sergei Aksyonov said on Telegram.

Zelenskiy denounces corrupt medical exemptions

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has decried corrupt medical exemptions that have enabled people to avoid military service, saying the system was subject to bribes and mass departures abroad.

Zelenskiy said the National Security and Defence Council had considered data showing the extent of false exemptions, bribe-taking and flight abroad since Russia’s February 2022 invasion. The investigation of dubious medical exemptions was still being conducted, he said.

“There are examples of regions where the number of exemptions from military service due to medical commission decisions has increased tenfold since February last year,” Zelenskiy said on Wednesday in his nightly video address.

“It is absolutely clear what sort of decisions these are. Corrupt decisions.”

He said the investigation had exposed corrupt practices in different regions and by officials in different positions, involving bribes ranging from $3,000 to $15,000.

Zelenskiy said a separate analysis was needed to determine the numbers of people who had fled abroad, largely on the basis of medical commission decisions.

“We are talking about at least thousands of individuals,” he said.

Zelenskiy this month dismissed all the heads of Ukraine’s regional army recruitment centres.

He said more than 100 criminal cases had been opened in a wide-ranging investigation launched after a graft scandal at a recruitment office in southern Odesa region last month.

Opening summary

Welcome back to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine. This is Mark Gerts bringing you the latest news.

Our top story this morning: Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has decried corrupt medical exemptions that have enabled people to avoid military service, saying the system was subject to bribes and mass departures abroad.

Meanwhile, Russian air defences shot down a drone that was approaching Moscow on Thursday morning, the city’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said and Russia has claimed to have thwarted new Ukrainian attacks in its southern Bryansk region a day after drones struck targets in at least six areas deep within Russia.

More on these shortly. In other news:

  • At least two people were reported killed in Kyiv in what authorities described as the heaviest series of Russian airstrikes on the Ukrainian capital for months. Air defences shot down all 28 Russian missiles and 15 out of 16 drones, Gen Valerii Zaluzhnyi, commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, said on Wednesday.

  • Six Ukrainian pilots were reportedly killed when two military helicopters crashed in the eastern Donetsk region. According to the Ukrainska Pravda newspaper, the two Mi-8 helicopters crashed in Kramatorsk on Tuesday. The aircraft were completely destroyed and the bodies of six dead servicemen were found.

  • Russian investigators are considering the possibility that the plane carrying the Wagner mercenary head Yevgeny Prigozhin was shot down on purpose, the Kremlin said on Wednesday in the first explicit acknowledgment of what most already believed to have been an assassination. “It is obvious that different versions are being considered, including … a deliberate atrocity,” the Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

  • Russia is in secret, active talks with North Korea to acquire a range of munitions and supplies, the White House has said. “Arms negotiations between Russia and the DPRK are actively advancing,” the White House national security spokesperson, John Kirby, said, adding that a key focus of the talks was artillery ammunition.

  • Tech companies including TikTok and Twitter failed to effectively tackle Russian disinformation online during the first year of the war in Ukraine, according to a study published on Wednesday by the EU. The independent study for the EU comes after tougher rules under its Digital Services Act kicked in this month for the world’s biggest online platforms.

  • The Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, and his Turkish counterpart will discuss a proposal by Moscow for an alternative to the Black Sea grain deal when they meet this week, Lavrov’s ministry has said. Under the plan, Russia would send a million tonnes of grain to Turkey at a discounted price, with financial support from Qatar, to be processed in Turkey and sent to countries most in need, the foreign ministry said.



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