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Netherlands to send Patriot missile system to Ukraine; six children among dead in Dnipro strike – as it happened | Ukraine

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The Netherlands to send Patriot missile defence system to Ukraine – report

The Netherlands will send a Patriot missile defence system to Ukraine, Dutch news agency ANP has reported, citing prime minister Mark Rutte.

Rutte is currently in Washington to meet with Joe Biden.

Updated at 18.55 GMT

Key events

Closing summary

It’s 9pm in Kyiv. Here’s where things stand:

  • A search and rescue operation in the rubble of Saturday’s Russian missile strike on an apartment building in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro has been completed, authorities said. The death toll currently stands at 45, including a child, the head of the Dnipropetrovsk region military administration said. At least 19 people are still missing and a further 79 people injured, according to local officials. A makeshift memorial has appeared in Moscow to commemorate the victims of the Russian missile attack.

  • The Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych has tendered his resignation after a public outcry over comments he made suggesting the Russian missile that struck the building in Dnipro had been shot down by Ukraine. The Ukrainian air force says the apartment complex was hit by a Russian Kh-22 missile, which Kyiv does not have the equipment to shoot down.

  • Russia has announced it will make “major changes” to its armed forces from 2023-26, promising to shake up its military structure after months of setbacks on the battlefield in Ukraine. In addition to administrative changes, the defence ministry said it would strengthen the combat capabilities of its naval, aerospace and strategic missile forces. The Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said the changes had been made necessary by the “proxy war” being conducted in Ukraine by the west.

  • More than 9,000 civilians, including 453 children, have been killed in Ukraine since Russia’s invasion last February, Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian presidential staff, said at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort of Davos. “We will not forgive a single (act of) torture or life taken. Each criminal will be held accountable,” he said, adding that Ukraine wanted a special international tribunal to try Russian political leaders and reparations for the destruction caused by Russia’s invasion.

  • More than 7,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since Russia invaded its neighbour last February, the Office of the UN high commissioner for Human Rights said on Monday. The UN rights office said it had confirmed 7,031 civilian deaths but believed actual casualty tolls were considerably higher, given the pending corroboration of many reports and the inaccessibility of areas where intense fighting was taking place.

  • Ukraine’s top general, Valerii Zaluzhnyi, spoke to his US counterpart, Gen Mark Milley, at a face to face meeting near the Ukraine-Poland border for the first time. Milley, who is the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met for a couple of hours with Zaluzhnyi at an undisclosed location in south-eastern Poland on Tuesday. The pair have talked frequently about Ukraine’s military needs and the state of the war over the past year but had never met.

  • Ukraine has urged world leaders to intensify efforts to remove Vladimir Putin’s troops from its soil as its war with Russia dominated the first full day of the gathering of the global elite in Davos. With the war clouding the outlook for the global economy in 2023, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister Yuliia Svyrydenko urged the country’s allies to step up supplies of military hardware so that Russia could be more quickly defeated. Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, used a special address to demand that those attending the World Economic Forum used their influence to end Russia’s aggression.

  • The Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, has told the US president, Joe Biden, that the Netherlands will offer Patriot missiles to Ukraine. The Netherlands will join the US and Germany in sending the Patriot missile defence system to Ukraine, Rutte told Biden at the White House. Biden thanked Rutte for being “very very stalwart” on its support for Ukraine.

  • The UK foreign secretary, James Cleverly, has justified the supply of Challenger tanks to Ukraine, saying it was designed to bring the war to a quick conclusion and there was a moral imperative to end the war soon due to the casualties and cost. His remarks seemed designed to encourage the US to step up its own weapons supply and to push back against those Republicans calling for US support for the war to be scaled back.

  • Finland is prepared to support Ukraine in its war with Russia for “as long as needed”, its prime minister, Sanna Marin, said. “I think the only message that we need to send is that we will support Ukraine as long as needed. One year, two years, five years, 10 years, 15 years,” Marin said at Davos. Finland spent about €300m on support to Ukraine last year, around €190m of it on buying defence equipment.

  • The British defence minister, Ben Wallace, will join counterparts from Poland and the Baltic countries in Estonia to mount a final attempt to put pressure on Germany to authorise sending Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine this week. Defence sources said a purpose of the meeting on Thursday was “to encourage the Germans” if no decision had been made by Berlin before then, although chancellor Olaf Scholz is due to speak at the Davos summit on Wednesday afternoon.

  • The EU executive has confirmed it is releasing €3bn in emergency aid for Ukraine, the first tranche of an €18bn fund intended to help its government run essential public services during the winter. The money will pay public sector wages, pensions and keep schools and hospitals running, the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said at Davos.

  • A former commander with the Russian mercenary Wagner Group who last week sought asylum in Norway has spoken of how he is “scared for his life”. Andrey Medvedev, 26, said in an interview last month with the Guardian that in Ukraine he had witnessed the summary killing of Wagner fighters accused by their own commanders of disobeying orders, sometimes in pairs.

  • Serbia’s president has called on Russia to stop recruiting Serbs to fight alongside its mercenary Wagner Group in Ukraine. Aleksandar Vučić criticised Russian websites and social media groups for publicising adverts in the Serbian language in which the Russian private mercenary group calls for volunteers to join its ranks. He denied reports that the Wagner Group had a presence in Serbia, where pro-Kremlin and ultranationalist organisations have supported the invasion of Ukraine.

  • The jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has vowed he will not give up his activism on the second anniversary of his return to Russia and imprisonment. Navalny’s daughter, Dasha Navalnaya, also posted a video calling for her father’s release, accusing the Putin regime of “tormenting and depriving” him “of any connection with the world in order to silence him”.

Updated at 19.07 GMT

The British defence minister, Ben Wallace, will join counterparts from Poland and the Baltic countries in Estonia to mount a final attempt to put pressure on Germany to authorise sending Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine this week.

The meeting of the “Leopard coalition” of countries willing to or keen to see western tanks sent to Kyiv comes a day before a group of about 50 defence ministers assemble in Ramstein, Germany, to discuss future weapons shipments to Ukraine.

Defence sources said a purpose of the meeting on Thursday was “to encourage the Germans” if no decision had been made by Berlin before then, although chancellor Olaf Scholz is due to speak at the Davos summit on Wednesday afternoon.

Andrzej Duda, the president of Poland, speaking at the Davos World Economic Forum on Tuesday, said that a positive decision from Berlin to allow the re-export of German-manufactured Leopard 2 tanks was “very, very, very, very needed” and that a group of Nato countries wanted to come together to help form an armoured brigade that could be given to Ukraine.

He added:

I was asked by Volodymyr Zelenskiy for that military support a few times. He said to me, ‘Andrzej, we need those modern tanks because it is the only way to stop the Russian invasion.’

Read the full story by my colleagues Dan Sabbagh and Kate Connolly:

Updated at 19.01 GMT

Ukraine’s top general, Valerii Zaluzhnyi, spoke with his US counterpart, Gen. Mark Milley, at a face-to-face meeting near the Ukraine-Poland border for the first time.

Milley, who is the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met for a couple of hours with Zaluzhnyi at an undisclosed location in south-eastern Poland on Tuesday.

The pair have talked frequently about Ukraine’s military needs and the state of the war over the past year but had never met.

In a statement posted to Telegram, Zaluzhnyi said:

I outlined the urgent needs of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the fulfilment of which will accelerate our Victory.

In an interview with the Economist last month, Zaluzhnyi said he needed 300 tanks, 600-700 infantry fighting vehicles and 500 howitzers to help his forces push back the invaders.

President Joe Biden praised the Netherlands for stepping up assistance to Ukraine as he met the Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, for talks at the White House today.

Biden praised the Netherlands as one of the US’s strongest allies. In turn, Rutte praised the US president for leading the international effort to back Ukraine.

History would “judge in 2022 if the United States had not stepped up like you did things would have been very different”, he told Biden.

US President Joe Biden meets Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte (L) in the Oval Office of the White House.
The US president, Joe Biden, meets the Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, in the Oval Office of the White House. Photograph: Al Drago/EPA

Updated at 18.58 GMT

Patrick Wintour

Patrick Wintour

The UK foreign secretary has justified the supply of Challenger tanks to Ukraine, saying it was designed to bring the war to a quick conclusion and there was a moral imperative to end the war soon due to the casualties and cost.

“This war has been dragging on for a long time already. And now is the time to bring it to a conclusion,” James Cleverly told a Washington thinktank.

His remarks seemed designed both to encourage the US to step up its own weapons supply, and to push back against those Republicans calling for US support for the war to be scaled back.

Before meeting the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, Cleverly said it was clear Putin believed Russian stoicism could outlast the west and that he wanted to drag out an attritional conflict, so it was incumbent on the west to apply the opposite strategy.

He said:

We should look to bring it to a conclusion quickly, the conclusion has to be Ukrainian victory. And that dictates therefore that we need to intensify our support at this point in time, while Russia has been on the back foot.

Read the full story here:

Updated at 18.56 GMT

The Netherlands to send Patriot missile defence system to Ukraine – report

The Netherlands will send a Patriot missile defence system to Ukraine, Dutch news agency ANP has reported, citing prime minister Mark Rutte.

Rutte is currently in Washington to meet with Joe Biden.

Updated at 18.55 GMT

A former commander of Russia’s Wagner Group who fought in Ukraine said he has fled to Norway and is seeking asylum.

Andrey Medvedev, an orphan who joined the Russian army and served time in prison before joining the mercenary group in July 2022, said he had slipped away after witnessing the killing of captured deserters.

“I am afraid of dying in agony,” Medvedev told Vladimir Osechkin, founder of Gulagu.net in a video published by the rights group on 15 January.

‘Afraid of dying in agony’: former Wagner commander on dramatic escape – audio

Gulag.net said it had helped Medvedev leave Russia after he approached them in fear for his life. Medvedev said he crossed the border, climbing through barbed-wire fences and evading a border patrol with dogs, and heard guards firing shots as he ran over breaking ice into Norway.

Norwegian police said a foreign citizen had been arrested on Thursday night after illegally crossing the Russian-Norwegian border in the Arctic and was seeking asylum.

Ukrainian journalist Myroslava Petsa has shared a clip of a man who said his one-year-old grandson is buried under the rubble of Saturday’s Russian missile attack on a residential building in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro.

Six children were among those killed in the strike, according to local authorities. The current death toll stands at 45. At least 19 people are still missing.

Ukraine has urged world leaders to intensify efforts to remove Vladimir Putin’s troops from its soil as its war with Russia dominated the first full day of the gathering of the global elite in Davos.

With the war clouding the outlook for the global economy in 2023, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister Yuliia Svyrydenko urged the country’s allies to step up supplies of military hardware so that Russia could be more quickly defeated.

Asked what was next for Ukraine, Svyrydenko said:

What’s next is success. Russia won’t achieve its goal and we will definitely win this war.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, used a special address to demand that those attending the World Economic Forum use their influence to end Russia’s aggression.

Olena Zelenska (second left) with Ursula von der Leyen, Swiss president Alain Berset (left) and founder and executive chair of the World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab.
Olena Zelenska (second left) with Ursula von der Leyen, Swiss president Alain Berset (left) and founder and executive chair of the World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Zelenska told delegates in Davos that some were failing to use their influence, or sometimes using it in a way “that divides even more”.

She asked:

What can life be in a world where tanks are allowed to strike at nuclear power stations? What will happen to inflation when state borders start to collapse, and the integrity of countries is trampled?

“This war can go further, and make crises wider, if the aggressor does not lose,” Zelenska added.

She brought three letters from her husband, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, to hand to Alain Berset, the president of the Swiss Confederation, to the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and for China’s Xi Jinping, which has been handed to the vice-premier, Liu He, who is attending Davos.

The note says that “if people come together, they can move mountains”, Zelenska revealed.

Read the full report here:

Updated at 16.44 GMT

19 people still missing as death toll from Dnipro strike rises to 45

The death toll from Saturday’s Russian missile attack on a residential building in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro has risen to 45, according to Dnipropetrovsk’s governor, Valentyn Reznichenko.

Another child was found among the dead, Reznichenko wrote on Facebook, bringing the number of children killed by the attack to six.

At least 19 people are still missing.

Summary of the day so far

It’s 6pm in Kyiv. Here’s where we stand:

  • A search and rescue operation in the rubble of Saturday’s Russian missile strike on an apartment building in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro has been completed, authorities said. The death toll currently stands at 45, including a child, the head of the Dnipropetrovsk region military administration said. At least 19 people are still missing and a further 79 people injured, according to local officials. A makeshift memorial has appeared in Moscow to commemorate the victims of the Russian missile attack.

  • The Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych has tendered his resignation after a public outcry over comments he made suggesting the Russian missile that struck the building in Dnipro had been shot down by Ukraine. The Ukrainian air force says the apartment complex was hit by a Russian Kh-22 missile, which Kyiv does not have the equipment to shoot down.

  • Russia has announced it will make “major changes” to its armed forces from 2023-26, promising to shake up its military structure after months of setbacks on the battlefield in Ukraine. In addition to administrative changes, the defence ministry said it would strengthen the combat capabilities of its naval, aerospace and strategic missile forces. The Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said the changes had been made necessary by the “proxy war” being conducted in Ukraine by the west.

  • More than 9,000 civilians, including 453 children, have been killed in Ukraine since Russia’s invasion last February, Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian presidential staff, said at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort of Davos. “We will not forgive a single (act of) torture or life taken. Each criminal will be held accountable,” he said, adding that Ukraine wanted a special international tribunal to try Russian political leaders and reparations for the destruction caused by Russia’s invasion.

  • More than 7,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine since Russia invaded its neighbour last February, the Office of the UN high commissioner for Human Rights said on Monday. The UN rights office said it had confirmed 7,031 civilian deaths but believed actual casualty tolls were considerably higher, given the pending corroboration of many reports and the inaccessibility of areas where intense fighting was taking place.

  • Russia and Ukraine have been working on a large prisoner exchange deal that will include 1,000 people in total, the Turkish ombudsman Şeref Malkoç said on Monday. The Russian human rights commissioner, Tatyana Moskalkova, and her Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Lubinets, met last week on the sidelines of an international ombudsman conference in Ankara.

  • Finland is prepared to support Ukraine in its war with Russia for “as long as needed”, its prime minister, Sanna Marin, said. “I think the only message that we need to send is that we will support Ukraine as long as needed. One year, two years, five years, 10 years, 15 years,” Marin said at Davos. Finland spent about €300m on support to Ukraine last year, around €190m of it on buying defence equipment.

  • The EU executive has confirmed it is releasing €3bn in emergency aid for Ukraine, the first tranche of an €18bn fund intended to help its government run essential public services during the winter. The money will pay public sector wages, pensions and keep schools and hospitals running, the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said at Davos.

  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said he spoke to Germany’s federal president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier. The pair discussed “the necessity of increasing defence support for Ukraine”, Zelenskiy wrote on Telegram.

  • A former commander with the Russian mercenary Wagner Group who last week sought asylum in Norway has spoken of how he is “scared for his life”. Andrey Medvedev, 26, said in an interview last month with the Guardian that in Ukraine he had witnessed the summary killing of Wagner fighters accused by their own commanders of disobeying orders, sometimes in pairs.

  • Serbia’s president has called on Russia to stop recruiting Serbs to fight alongside its mercenary Wagner Group in Ukraine. Aleksandar Vučić criticised Russian websites and social media groups for publicising adverts in the Serbian language in which the Russian private mercenary group calls for volunteers to join its ranks. He denied reports that the Wagner Group had a presence in Serbia, where pro-Kremlin and ultranationalist organisations have supported the invasion of Ukraine.

  • The jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has vowed he will not give up his activism on the second anniversary of his return to Russia and imprisonment. Navalny’s daughter, Dasha Navalnaya, also posted a video calling for her father’s release, accusing the Putin regime of “tormenting and depriving” him “of any connection with the world in order to silence him”.

Hello everyone. It’s Léonie Chao-Fong still here with all the latest from Ukraine. Feel free to get in touch on Twitter or via email.

Updated at 16.11 GMT

Finland vows years of support for Ukraine

Finland is prepared to support Ukraine in its war with Russia for “as long as needed”, its prime minister, Sanna Marin, said.

Speaking at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, she said:

I think the only message that we need to send is that we will support Ukraine as long as needed. One year, two years, five years, 10 years, 15 years.

Prime minister Sanna Marin of Finland at the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2023 in the Alpine resort of Davos, Switzerland.
Prime minister Sanna Marin of Finland at the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2023 in the Alpine resort of Davos, Switzerland. Photograph: Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters

Marin’s government spent about €300m on support to Ukraine last year, around €190m of it on buying defence equipment.

Finland’s president, Sauli Niinisto, last week said Helsinki could donate a small number of German-made Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine if a wider group of European nations also decided to do so.

Updated at 15.43 GMT

Kate Connolly

Kate Connolly

A veteran but low-profile politician is to be appointed as Germany’s new defence minister, the government has announced, filling the role at a crucial time when the country is under acute pressure to increase its commitment to Ukraine, especially by allowing it the use of tanks.

Boris Pistorius, 62, who has been the interior minister of the northern state of Lower Saxony for the past decade, will face his first major task on Friday when western allies meet at the US military’s Ramstein base in south-west Germany to discuss providing Kyiv with more weapons and equipment.

Boris Pistorius has a reputation as a sharp-tongued, no-nonsense policymaker.
Boris Pistorius has a reputation as a sharp-tongued, no-nonsense policymaker. Photograph: Julian Stratenschulte/AP

Germany has been extremely cautious so far about approving the sending of heavy Leopard tanks to Ukraine, owing to concerns that the decision could lead to an escalation of the war. Other countries in possession of the German-designed tanks need the permission of Berlin before they are able to be dispatched to another country.

Read the full story here:

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