Russia-Ukraine war live updates: Moscow broke international law, OSCE says, as Biden accuses Putin of ‘genocide’ - NBC News
Russia has committed human rights abuses and broken international humanitarian law during its invasion of Ukraine, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe has found.
The report, which follows mounting evidence of atrocities in the wake of the Kremlin's retreat from around Kyiv, comes a day after President Joe Biden accused Moscow of "genocide," a rhetorical escalation that earned praise from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
“True words of a true leader," Zelenskyy said in a tweet, asserting that "calling things by their names is essential to stand up to evil."
It also comes as new satellite images appeared to show Russian troops advancing on Ukraine’s east this week, as British and European officials warned Moscow was readying a fresh military offensive in the region.
- No humanitarian corridors will open Wednesday, Ukraine's deputy prime minister has said, accusing Russian forces of violating a cease-fire and blocking evacuation buses.
- Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko has said at least 100,000 people still need to be evacuated out of the besieged port city.
- The White House could announce a new $750 million military aid package for Ukraine as early as this week, U.S. officials said.
- Russian President Vladimir Putin has vowed Russia will keep fighting, saying, "There is no doubt we will achieve our goals."
See our full coverage here.
'Music helps people': Musicians play on while seeking safety
Shanshan Dong
21m ago / 1:40 PM UTC
LVIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region has been one of the hardest hit during this war, with casualties estimated in the hundreds, and evacuees estimated in the thousands.
One of those evacuees is Igor Shapovalov, the musical director of the Luhansk Philharmonic Orchestra. He’s now in Lviv, living in a dormitory for musicians with his wife and daughter.
“For us it’s very, very dangerous, very hard life for our heart,” said Shapovalov. “It’s this aggression from Russia. It’s like for me, I don’t understand. I think it’s Putin, it’s really crazy.”
Twelve members of the Luhansk orchestra have made it to the relative safety of Lviv. But 10 of their musicians stayed behind — an ongoing concern for all those musicians who did get out.
Now, those who were able to flee are picking up their instruments and doing what they do best, playing concerts again in Lviv.
“I think because the music helps people and it helps for feeling good things for people,” said Shapovalov. “To be happy, we listen to music. We have a trauma, we listen to music, every time it help for people.”
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Russia warns Western weapons transports in Ukraine will be considered 'legitimate military targets'
36m ago / 1:25 PM UTC
Russia’s deputy foreign minister said Wednesday that Western weapons transports in Ukraine would be considered "legitimate military targets" by Moscow.
" In the context of Washington’s reckless support for the militant aspirations of the (Kyiv) regime with its large-scale pumping of modern weapons, any full-scale contacts with the U.S. administration on the situation around Ukraine seem meaningless," Sergei Ryabkov said in an interview with TASS. "We warn you that the U.S.-NATO transports with weapons following the Ukrainian territory are considered by us as legitimate military targets."
"We bring the Americans and other Westerners to the understanding that attempts to slow down our special operation, inflict maximum damage to Russian contingents and formations of the DPR/LPR (Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People's Republic) will be severely suppressed," he said.
Ryabkov had issued a similar warning back in March, saying the U.S. had been warned that Russia would see the deliveries of Western weapons to Ukraine as targets.
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Russia can redirect energy exports away from West, Putin suggests
Chantal Da Silva and Reuters
1h ago / 12:54 PM UTC
Russian President Vladimir Putin has suggested Moscow can easily redirect exports of its energy resources away from the West to countries "where they are really needed" and boost domestic consumption of oil, gas and coal.
“When it comes to Russian oil, gas and coal, we will be able to increase their consumption on the domestic market, stimulate the deep processing of raw materials,” Putin said in a televised meeting to discuss the development of the Russian Arctic, Reuters reported. “We will also increase the supply of energy resources to other regions of the world where they are really needed," he added.
It comes after the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia imposed bans on Russian oil imports in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Putin said those moves had "provoked a real energy crisis" in Europe. “Of course we are also facing problems but this opens up new opportunities,” he said.
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Finland’s parliament to debate NATO membership as soon as next week, PM says
Mithil Aggarwal
2h ago / 12:27 PM UTC
Finland’s parliament is set to debate joining NATO as soon as next week, Prime Minister Sanna Marin announced in a joint press conference with Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson, as both countries weigh security guarantees in light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The government will deliver a report to the parliament outlining various security options for Finland, which will be deliberated upon after the Easter break, she said on Wednesday. Joining NATO would open Finland to potential risks from Russia, including cyberattacks, but the country is prepared and it must not let “fear influence our choices," she said.
The Nordic country shares a 832-mile border with Russia and has been a NATO partner since 1994. “The difference between being a partner and being a member is very clear and will remain so,” Marin said.
“There is no other way to have security guarantees than under NATO’s deterrence and common defense as guaranteed by NATO’s Article Five,” added Marin.
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Russia has broken international humanitarian law in Ukraine, OSCE says
Chantal Da Silva
2h ago / 11:59 AM UTC
Russia has committed human rights abuses and broken international humanitarian law during its invasion of Ukraine, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe has found.
In a report released Wednesday by the security organization, the OSCE said independent experts had found clear patterns of International Humanitarian Law violations by Russian forces in Ukraine.
The report said experts had found credible evidence suggesting that violations concerned even the "most fundamental human rights," including the "right to life, prohibition of torture and other inhuman and degrading treatment and punishment."
"Taken as a whole, the report documents the catalog of inhumanity perpetrated by Russia’s forces in Ukraine," Michael Carpenter, the United States ambassador to the OSCE, said in a separate statement.
"This includes evidence of direct targeting of civilians, attacks on medical facilities, rape, executions, looting, and forced deportation of civilians to Russia," he said.
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ICC prosecutor meets Ukrainian Prosecutor General in Kyiv
Rhoda Kwan
2h ago / 11:51 AM UTC
A prosecutor for the International Criminal Court met with Ukraine's prosecutor general in Kyiv on Wednesday.
The ICC said in a tweet that Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan and Ukraine's Prosecutor-General Iryna Venediktova had agreed that "deepening engagement and further strengthening partnerships" was "crucial to delivering accountability" for possible international crimes committed in Ukraine.
The ICC is independently investigating potential war crimes committed by Russian forces during the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.
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U.K. adds 206 new listings to Russia sanctions
Chantal Da Silva
3h ago / 11:13 AM UTC
The British government has added 206 new listings to its sanctions against Russia.
The U.K.'s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office announced the development in an update to its sanctions list on Wednesday.
It did not immediately outline which individuals or entities were specifically targeted in the new listings.
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Over 100,000 waiting to be evacuated from Mariupol, mayor says
Rhoda Kwan and Oksana Parafeniuk
3h ago / 11:10 AM UTC
Over 100,000 people are still awaiting to be evacuated to safety from the besieged city of Mariupol, its mayor said in a televised interview on Wednesday.
In the same interview, Vadym Boychenko said Russian forces had deployed an unconfirmed "substance" on the city on Tuesday.
"Yesterday they flew unmanned aircraft into our territory... and dropped a small amount of this substance, which struck our boys,” the mayor said. "Unfortunately, we cannot take samples to prove what it was," he said.
NBC News was unable to independently verify the claim.
Boychenko said residents in two settlements on the outskirts of the city had complained of "bad taste and deteriorating health" and were forced to leave their homes.
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Fake BBC News video pushes anti-Ukraine disinformation
3h ago / 11:01 AM UTC
Anti-Ukraine disinformation in the form of a fake BBC News video spread across social media on Wednesday.
The video, mocked up with a BBC News logo and using a similar graphics style to the U.K.'s national broadcaster, pushes baseless claims that Ukraine was behind the recent attack on the Kramatorsk railway station.
BBC journalists warned that the video was not from their outlet.
Similar claims seeking to pin violence on Ukraine have circulated on social media from profiles that have routinely trafficked in Russian talking points, though the fake BBC video appears to be among the most advanced disinformation released in relation to the war.
BBC News said it is trying to have the fake videos removed from social media.
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NBC News
3h ago / 10:53 AM UTC
An aerial view captured on Tuesday shows the besieged city of Mariupol during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
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Estonia's PM says it's 'becoming clear' Russia's actions in Ukraine amount to 'genocide'
Chantal Da Silva
3h ago / 10:36 AM UTC
Estonia's prime minister has said it is "becoming clear" that atrocities carried out by Russian forces in Ukraine amount to "genocide."
"Looking at the Kremlin's words and deeds, it's becoming clear that Russia's crimes committed in Ukraine can amount to genocide," Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said in a tweet Wednesday.
Her comments came shortly after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivered an address before Estonia's Parliament, during which he accused Russia of using phosphorus bombs in its attacks on Ukraine, a claim for which he did not provide evidence and which NBC News has been unable to independently verify.
Kallas said that "all those guilty must face justice and be punished accordingly," adding that "Estonia will support investigations every way we can." In a separate post, she thanked Zelenskyy for his appearance and appeared to address his calls for tougher sanctions, saying "tough energy sanctions" against Russia were essential to stop "funding Russia’s aggression."
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Lebanese bakeries on their last 10 days of wheat supply, union leader says
Rhoda Kwan and Charlene Gubash
4h ago / 10:18 AM UTC
Both Egypt and Lebanon are facing severe wheat shortages as the conflict in Ukraine disrupts its wheat exports.
Bakeries in Lebanon have begun to shutter while others have seen long queues as the country's national trade union warned businesses may only have wheat supplies to last for the next 10 days.
Meanwhile, Egypt said earlier this month that local wheat supplies were expected to last for around two and a half more months as it awaits supply from local harvests.
Both Egypt and Lebanon are highly dependent on Ukraine for their wheat and fertilizer imports, which have been disrupted by the ongoing conflict. Prices for wheat have also skyrocketed since the beginning of Russia's invasion.
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Russian users sue Netflix for leaving market
Mithil Aggarwal and Reuters
4h ago / 10:00 AM UTC
Russian Netflix users have sued the streaming giant for exiting the market, demanding $726,000 in compensation, the state news agency RIA Novosti reported Wednesday.
“Today, a law firm representing the interests of Netflix users filed a class action lawsuit against the American Netflix service with the Khamovnichesky District Court of Moscow,” RIA Novosti said, citing the law firm Chernyshov, Lukoyanov & Partners.
“The reason for the lawsuit was a violation of Russian users’ rights due to Netflix’s unilateral refusal to provide services in Russia,” it said.
Netflix had suspended all its services and future projects in March following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Scores of foreign companies, from streaming to retail, have either suspended their services or barred sales in Russia.
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NBC News
4h ago / 9:54 AM UTC
A woman walks as firefighters try to extinguish a fire after a missile hit a building on the outskirts of Kharkiv on Tuesday.
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Russia claims over 1,000 Ukrainian marines surrendered in Mariupol
Rhoda Kwan, Oksana Parafeniuk and The Associated Press
4h ago / 9:46 AM UTC
Russia claimed Wednesday that more than 1,000 Ukrainian marines had surrendered in the besieged city of Mariupol.
Major Gen. Igor Konashenkov, a spokesman for the Russian defense ministry, said 1,026 marines from the 36th Marine Brigade had surrendered to Russian forces at a metal plant in the city.
Russia's claim came hours after Ukrainian local media reported troops holding out against Russian attacks. NBC was not able to independently verify Russia's claims.
In his latest update on the situation in Mariupol, Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych did not mention any mass surrender, instead saying the brigade had managed to link up with other Ukrainian troops in the city.
"In Mariupol, units of the 36th Marine Brigade, as a result of a complex and very risky maneuver, broke through to join the Azov regiment," he wrote in a statement on Facebook. "In general, the city's defense system has grown and strengthened," he wrote.
Ukraine’s defense ministry has not commented on Russia’s claims.
Mariupol has been under siege for weeks since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February, which has caused severe shortages of food, water, heat and electricity within the city.
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7 dead in Kharkiv after a day of shelling, governor says
Mithil Aggarwal and Oksana Parafeniuk
4h ago / 9:36 AM UTC
Seven people have died in the past 24 hours from heavy shelling in Kharkiv, leaving 22 civilians injured, including three children, Gov. Oleh Sinegubov announced Wednesday.
“Russians continue to terrorize civilians. Over the past 24 hours, the occupying forces have struck approximately 53 artillery and MLRS strikes,” he said in a Telegram post, referring to multiple launch rocket system missiles. NBC News was not able to independently verify the attacks or the reported death toll.
Sinegubov said a 2-year-old boy who had been injured in shelling a few days ago had also died in a hospital.
He said Ukrainian armed forces were “constantly fighting” in the southeast direction of Izyum in the Kharkiv region to “prevent the enemy from passing to Donetsk and Luhansk regions."
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China’s trade with Russia slows but outpaces overall growth
Mithil Aggarwal and Reuters
5h ago / 9:14 AM UTC
China’s overall trade with Russia grew more than 12 percent from a year before, outpacing overall growth in China’s exports and imports even as it slowed down from February since the invasion.
Chinese customs data Wednesday showed that the growth in shipments to and from Russia dipped to 12.76 percent in March, worth $11.67 billion, compared to 25.7 percent in February, according to Reuters. It still beat China's total growth in March of 7.75 percent in its trade with all countries and regions, the news agency said.
Beijing, a major importer of Russian oil, gas, coal and agricultural commodities, has refused to call Russia’s attack on Ukraine an invasion and has rebuked the West for imposing sanctions on Moscow.
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U.S. climate envoy calls for renewable energy push amid Russian aggression
Rhoda Kwan and Reuters
5h ago / 9:04 AM UTC
U.S. climate envoy John Kerry has urged countries to boost renewable energy production amid Russia's war in Ukraine.
"Now is the time to accelerate the transition to an independent and a clean energy future. President Putin cannot control the power of the wind or the sun," Kerry said in his opening speech at a climate conference in Palau on Wednesday.
Russian provides 40 per cent of Europe's gas supply.
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Ukraine warns risk of Russia using chemical weapons remains ‘high’
Mithil Aggarwal and Oksana Parafeniuk
5h ago / 8:45 AM UTC
Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar has warned that the risk of Russia using chemical weapons in the war remains “high.”
“It is too early to return, including to the capital,” she said in an interview with Ukraine's Parliamentary TV channel on Wednesday. “And we must not forget that today in the country, there is a high risk of the use of chemical weapons by Russia, because they are considering such scenarios.”
U.S. and U.K. officials have said they're investigating unconfirmed reports of chemical weapons being used in an attack on the port city of Mariupol. NBC News has not been able to verify the reports.
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NBC News
6h ago / 8:16 AM UTC
A priest and the relative of a civilian man, whose body was exhumed from his yard, react in Gostomel village in Kyiv region Tuesday.
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Presidents of Poland, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia go to Kyiv in support of Ukraine
6h ago / 7:54 AM UTC
The presidents of Poland and the Baltic states are headed to Kyiv in a show of support for Ukraine, the latest leaders to visit the Ukrainian capital amid Russia’s attack and invasion of the country.
Estonian President Alar Karis tweeted Wednesday that they will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The visit comes days after European Union officials and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson visited Kyiv in separate trips.
Russian forces had occupied areas around Kyiv and attacked the city after launching an invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, but after facing setbacks have since withdrawn from around the city.
Pentagon officials have said they expect those forces to be resupplied, and possibly used elsewhere in the country. Zelenskyy has warned of a ramped-up Russian offensive in Ukraine's east.
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Russia's appointment of a new war commander represents new bid to centralize control, U.K. says
Mithil Aggarwal
6h ago / 7:39 AM UTC
Russia's recent appointment of Army Gen. Alexander Dvornikov as the commander of the war in Ukraine represents a bid to centralize "command and control" after a lack of coordination hampered Moscow's invasion, the British defense ministry has said.
In an intelligence update published Wednesday, it said that “ineffective pre-war planning” and Ukrainian resistance have forced Russia to reassess its operations, refocusing its offensive in the eastern region of Donbas.
Dvornikov, who has previous led operations in Syria, has commanded Russia’s southern district which borders Ukraine’s Donbas region since 2016, it said.
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No humanitarian corridors to open after Ukraine says Russia violated cease-fire
Mithil Aggarwal and Mariia Ulianovska
7h ago / 7:25 AM UTC
Humanitarian corridors will not open Wednesday in Ukraine after Russia violated a cease-fire and blocked evacuation efforts, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Wednesday.
In a post on Telegram, she said that the Russian military had blocked evacuation buses in Zaphorizhzhia and violated a cease-fire in the eastern region of Luhansk.
Ukrainian officials have repeatedly accused Russia of hampering humanitarian efforts, especially out of the besieged port city of Mariupol, where thousands of residents remain without access to food, water, electricity and other essentials.
“All this creates such a level of danger on the routes that we have to refrain from opening humanitarian corridors today,” she said.
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New satellite images show Russian troops advancing on Ukraine's east
Chantal Da Silva
7h ago / 7:14 AM UTC
New satellite images appear to show Russian troops advancing on Ukraine's east this week, as British and European officials warn Moscow is preparing to mount a fresh offensive in the region.
The images, captured by Maxar Technologies, a U.S. defense contractor, show Russian forces continuing to move into eastern Ukraine on Monday.
Military deployments were observed along the 14K-34 highway and a corridor leading from Soloti and Valuyki in western Russia toward the border with Ukraine, the company said.
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'Music helps people': Musicians play on while seeking safety
Shanshan Dong
21m ago / 1:40 PM UTC

LVIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region has been one of the hardest hit during this war, with casualties estimated in the hundreds, and evacuees estimated in the thousands.
One of those evacuees is Igor Shapovalov, the musical director of the Luhansk Philharmonic Orchestra. He’s now in Lviv, living in a dormitory for musicians with his wife and daughter.
“For us it’s very, very dangerous, very hard life for our heart,” said Shapovalov. “It’s this aggression from Russia. It’s like for me, I don’t understand. I think it’s Putin, it’s really crazy.”
Twelve members of the Luhansk orchestra have made it to the relative safety of Lviv. But 10 of their musicians stayed behind — an ongoing concern for all those musicians who did get out.
Now, those who were able to flee are picking up their instruments and doing what they do best, playing concerts again in Lviv.
“I think because the music helps people and it helps for feeling good things for people,” said Shapovalov. “To be happy, we listen to music. We have a trauma, we listen to music, every time it help for people.”
- Share this -
Russia warns Western weapons transports in Ukraine will be considered 'legitimate military targets'
36m ago / 1:25 PM UTC
Russia’s deputy foreign minister said Wednesday that Western weapons transports in Ukraine would be considered "legitimate military targets" by Moscow.
" In the context of Washington’s reckless support for the militant aspirations of the (Kyiv) regime with its large-scale pumping of modern weapons, any full-scale contacts with the U.S. administration on the situation around Ukraine seem meaningless," Sergei Ryabkov said in an interview with TASS. "We warn you that the U.S.-NATO transports with weapons following the Ukrainian territory are considered by us as legitimate military targets."
"We bring the Americans and other Westerners to the understanding that attempts to slow down our special operation, inflict maximum damage to Russian contingents and formations of the DPR/LPR (Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People's Republic) will be severely suppressed," he said.
Ryabkov had issued a similar warning back in March, saying the U.S. had been warned that Russia would see the deliveries of Western weapons to Ukraine as targets.
- Share this -
Russia can redirect energy exports away from West, Putin suggests
Chantal Da Silva and Reuters
1h ago / 12:54 PM UTC
Russian President Vladimir Putin has suggested Moscow can easily redirect exports of its energy resources away from the West to countries "where they are really needed" and boost domestic consumption of oil, gas and coal.
“When it comes to Russian oil, gas and coal, we will be able to increase their consumption on the domestic market, stimulate the deep processing of raw materials,” Putin said in a televised meeting to discuss the development of the Russian Arctic, Reuters reported. “We will also increase the supply of energy resources to other regions of the world where they are really needed," he added.
It comes after the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia imposed bans on Russian oil imports in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Putin said those moves had "provoked a real energy crisis" in Europe. “Of course we are also facing problems but this opens up new opportunities,” he said.
- Share this -
Finland’s parliament to debate NATO membership as soon as next week, PM says
Mithil Aggarwal
2h ago / 12:27 PM UTC
Finland’s parliament is set to debate joining NATO as soon as next week, Prime Minister Sanna Marin announced in a joint press conference with Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson, as both countries weigh security guarantees in light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The government will deliver a report to the parliament outlining various security options for Finland, which will be deliberated upon after the Easter break, she said on Wednesday. Joining NATO would open Finland to potential risks from Russia, including cyberattacks, but the country is prepared and it must not let “fear influence our choices," she said.
The Nordic country shares a 832-mile border with Russia and has been a NATO partner since 1994. “The difference between being a partner and being a member is very clear and will remain so,” Marin said.
“There is no other way to have security guarantees than under NATO’s deterrence and common defense as guaranteed by NATO’s Article Five,” added Marin.
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Russia has broken international humanitarian law in Ukraine, OSCE says
Chantal Da Silva
2h ago / 11:59 AM UTC
Russia has committed human rights abuses and broken international humanitarian law during its invasion of Ukraine, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe has found.
In a report released Wednesday by the security organization, the OSCE said independent experts had found clear patterns of International Humanitarian Law violations by Russian forces in Ukraine.
The report said experts had found credible evidence suggesting that violations concerned even the "most fundamental human rights," including the "right to life, prohibition of torture and other inhuman and degrading treatment and punishment."
"Taken as a whole, the report documents the catalog of inhumanity perpetrated by Russia’s forces in Ukraine," Michael Carpenter, the United States ambassador to the OSCE, said in a separate statement.
"This includes evidence of direct targeting of civilians, attacks on medical facilities, rape, executions, looting, and forced deportation of civilians to Russia," he said.
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ICC prosecutor meets Ukrainian Prosecutor General in Kyiv
Rhoda Kwan
2h ago / 11:51 AM UTC
A prosecutor for the International Criminal Court met with Ukraine's prosecutor general in Kyiv on Wednesday.
The ICC said in a tweet that Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan and Ukraine's Prosecutor-General Iryna Venediktova had agreed that "deepening engagement and further strengthening partnerships" was "crucial to delivering accountability" for possible international crimes committed in Ukraine.
The ICC is independently investigating potential war crimes committed by Russian forces during the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.
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U.K. adds 206 new listings to Russia sanctions
Chantal Da Silva
3h ago / 11:13 AM UTC
The British government has added 206 new listings to its sanctions against Russia.
The U.K.'s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office announced the development in an update to its sanctions list on Wednesday.
It did not immediately outline which individuals or entities were specifically targeted in the new listings.
- Share this -
Over 100,000 waiting to be evacuated from Mariupol, mayor says
Rhoda Kwan and Oksana Parafeniuk
3h ago / 11:10 AM UTC
Over 100,000 people are still awaiting to be evacuated to safety from the besieged city of Mariupol, its mayor said in a televised interview on Wednesday.
In the same interview, Vadym Boychenko said Russian forces had deployed an unconfirmed "substance" on the city on Tuesday.
"Yesterday they flew unmanned aircraft into our territory... and dropped a small amount of this substance, which struck our boys,” the mayor said. "Unfortunately, we cannot take samples to prove what it was," he said.
NBC News was unable to independently verify the claim.
Boychenko said residents in two settlements on the outskirts of the city had complained of "bad taste and deteriorating health" and were forced to leave their homes.
- Share this -
Fake BBC News video pushes anti-Ukraine disinformation
3h ago / 11:01 AM UTC
Anti-Ukraine disinformation in the form of a fake BBC News video spread across social media on Wednesday.
The video, mocked up with a BBC News logo and using a similar graphics style to the U.K.'s national broadcaster, pushes baseless claims that Ukraine was behind the recent attack on the Kramatorsk railway station.
BBC journalists warned that the video was not from their outlet.
Similar claims seeking to pin violence on Ukraine have circulated on social media from profiles that have routinely trafficked in Russian talking points, though the fake BBC video appears to be among the most advanced disinformation released in relation to the war.
BBC News said it is trying to have the fake videos removed from social media.
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NBC News
3h ago / 10:53 AM UTC

An aerial view captured on Tuesday shows the besieged city of Mariupol during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
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Estonia's PM says it's 'becoming clear' Russia's actions in Ukraine amount to 'genocide'
Chantal Da Silva
3h ago / 10:36 AM UTC
Estonia's prime minister has said it is "becoming clear" that atrocities carried out by Russian forces in Ukraine amount to "genocide."
"Looking at the Kremlin's words and deeds, it's becoming clear that Russia's crimes committed in Ukraine can amount to genocide," Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said in a tweet Wednesday.
Her comments came shortly after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivered an address before Estonia's Parliament, during which he accused Russia of using phosphorus bombs in its attacks on Ukraine, a claim for which he did not provide evidence and which NBC News has been unable to independently verify.
Kallas said that "all those guilty must face justice and be punished accordingly," adding that "Estonia will support investigations every way we can." In a separate post, she thanked Zelenskyy for his appearance and appeared to address his calls for tougher sanctions, saying "tough energy sanctions" against Russia were essential to stop "funding Russia’s aggression."
- Share this -
Lebanese bakeries on their last 10 days of wheat supply, union leader says
Rhoda Kwan and Charlene Gubash
4h ago / 10:18 AM UTC
Both Egypt and Lebanon are facing severe wheat shortages as the conflict in Ukraine disrupts its wheat exports.
Bakeries in Lebanon have begun to shutter while others have seen long queues as the country's national trade union warned businesses may only have wheat supplies to last for the next 10 days.
Meanwhile, Egypt said earlier this month that local wheat supplies were expected to last for around two and a half more months as it awaits supply from local harvests.
Both Egypt and Lebanon are highly dependent on Ukraine for their wheat and fertilizer imports, which have been disrupted by the ongoing conflict. Prices for wheat have also skyrocketed since the beginning of Russia's invasion.
- Share this -
Russian users sue Netflix for leaving market
Mithil Aggarwal and Reuters
4h ago / 10:00 AM UTC
Russian Netflix users have sued the streaming giant for exiting the market, demanding $726,000 in compensation, the state news agency RIA Novosti reported Wednesday.
“Today, a law firm representing the interests of Netflix users filed a class action lawsuit against the American Netflix service with the Khamovnichesky District Court of Moscow,” RIA Novosti said, citing the law firm Chernyshov, Lukoyanov & Partners.
“The reason for the lawsuit was a violation of Russian users’ rights due to Netflix’s unilateral refusal to provide services in Russia,” it said.
Netflix had suspended all its services and future projects in March following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Scores of foreign companies, from streaming to retail, have either suspended their services or barred sales in Russia.
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NBC News
4h ago / 9:54 AM UTC
A woman walks as firefighters try to extinguish a fire after a missile hit a building on the outskirts of Kharkiv on Tuesday.

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Russia claims over 1,000 Ukrainian marines surrendered in Mariupol
Rhoda Kwan, Oksana Parafeniuk and The Associated Press
4h ago / 9:46 AM UTC
Russia claimed Wednesday that more than 1,000 Ukrainian marines had surrendered in the besieged city of Mariupol.
Major Gen. Igor Konashenkov, a spokesman for the Russian defense ministry, said 1,026 marines from the 36th Marine Brigade had surrendered to Russian forces at a metal plant in the city.
Russia's claim came hours after Ukrainian local media reported troops holding out against Russian attacks. NBC was not able to independently verify Russia's claims.
In his latest update on the situation in Mariupol, Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych did not mention any mass surrender, instead saying the brigade had managed to link up with other Ukrainian troops in the city.
"In Mariupol, units of the 36th Marine Brigade, as a result of a complex and very risky maneuver, broke through to join the Azov regiment," he wrote in a statement on Facebook. "In general, the city's defense system has grown and strengthened," he wrote.
Ukraine’s defense ministry has not commented on Russia’s claims.
Mariupol has been under siege for weeks since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February, which has caused severe shortages of food, water, heat and electricity within the city.
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7 dead in Kharkiv after a day of shelling, governor says
Mithil Aggarwal and Oksana Parafeniuk
4h ago / 9:36 AM UTC
Seven people have died in the past 24 hours from heavy shelling in Kharkiv, leaving 22 civilians injured, including three children, Gov. Oleh Sinegubov announced Wednesday.
“Russians continue to terrorize civilians. Over the past 24 hours, the occupying forces have struck approximately 53 artillery and MLRS strikes,” he said in a Telegram post, referring to multiple launch rocket system missiles. NBC News was not able to independently verify the attacks or the reported death toll.
Sinegubov said a 2-year-old boy who had been injured in shelling a few days ago had also died in a hospital.
He said Ukrainian armed forces were “constantly fighting” in the southeast direction of Izyum in the Kharkiv region to “prevent the enemy from passing to Donetsk and Luhansk regions."
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China’s trade with Russia slows but outpaces overall growth
Mithil Aggarwal and Reuters
5h ago / 9:14 AM UTC
China’s overall trade with Russia grew more than 12 percent from a year before, outpacing overall growth in China’s exports and imports even as it slowed down from February since the invasion.
Chinese customs data Wednesday showed that the growth in shipments to and from Russia dipped to 12.76 percent in March, worth $11.67 billion, compared to 25.7 percent in February, according to Reuters. It still beat China's total growth in March of 7.75 percent in its trade with all countries and regions, the news agency said.
Beijing, a major importer of Russian oil, gas, coal and agricultural commodities, has refused to call Russia’s attack on Ukraine an invasion and has rebuked the West for imposing sanctions on Moscow.
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U.S. climate envoy calls for renewable energy push amid Russian aggression
Rhoda Kwan and Reuters
5h ago / 9:04 AM UTC
U.S. climate envoy John Kerry has urged countries to boost renewable energy production amid Russia's war in Ukraine.
"Now is the time to accelerate the transition to an independent and a clean energy future. President Putin cannot control the power of the wind or the sun," Kerry said in his opening speech at a climate conference in Palau on Wednesday.
Russian provides 40 per cent of Europe's gas supply.
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Ukraine warns risk of Russia using chemical weapons remains ‘high’
Mithil Aggarwal and Oksana Parafeniuk
5h ago / 8:45 AM UTC
Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar has warned that the risk of Russia using chemical weapons in the war remains “high.”
“It is too early to return, including to the capital,” she said in an interview with Ukraine's Parliamentary TV channel on Wednesday. “And we must not forget that today in the country, there is a high risk of the use of chemical weapons by Russia, because they are considering such scenarios.”
U.S. and U.K. officials have said they're investigating unconfirmed reports of chemical weapons being used in an attack on the port city of Mariupol. NBC News has not been able to verify the reports.
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NBC News
6h ago / 8:16 AM UTC

A priest and the relative of a civilian man, whose body was exhumed from his yard, react in Gostomel village in Kyiv region Tuesday.
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Presidents of Poland, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia go to Kyiv in support of Ukraine
6h ago / 7:54 AM UTC
The presidents of Poland and the Baltic states are headed to Kyiv in a show of support for Ukraine, the latest leaders to visit the Ukrainian capital amid Russia’s attack and invasion of the country.
Estonian President Alar Karis tweeted Wednesday that they will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The visit comes days after European Union officials and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson visited Kyiv in separate trips.
Russian forces had occupied areas around Kyiv and attacked the city after launching an invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, but after facing setbacks have since withdrawn from around the city.
Pentagon officials have said they expect those forces to be resupplied, and possibly used elsewhere in the country. Zelenskyy has warned of a ramped-up Russian offensive in Ukraine's east.
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Russia's appointment of a new war commander represents new bid to centralize control, U.K. says
Mithil Aggarwal
6h ago / 7:39 AM UTC
Russia's recent appointment of Army Gen. Alexander Dvornikov as the commander of the war in Ukraine represents a bid to centralize "command and control" after a lack of coordination hampered Moscow's invasion, the British defense ministry has said.
In an intelligence update published Wednesday, it said that “ineffective pre-war planning” and Ukrainian resistance have forced Russia to reassess its operations, refocusing its offensive in the eastern region of Donbas.
Dvornikov, who has previous led operations in Syria, has commanded Russia’s southern district which borders Ukraine’s Donbas region since 2016, it said.
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No humanitarian corridors to open after Ukraine says Russia violated cease-fire
Mithil Aggarwal and Mariia Ulianovska
7h ago / 7:25 AM UTC
Humanitarian corridors will not open Wednesday in Ukraine after Russia violated a cease-fire and blocked evacuation efforts, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Wednesday.
In a post on Telegram, she said that the Russian military had blocked evacuation buses in Zaphorizhzhia and violated a cease-fire in the eastern region of Luhansk.
Ukrainian officials have repeatedly accused Russia of hampering humanitarian efforts, especially out of the besieged port city of Mariupol, where thousands of residents remain without access to food, water, electricity and other essentials.
“All this creates such a level of danger on the routes that we have to refrain from opening humanitarian corridors today,” she said.
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New satellite images show Russian troops advancing on Ukraine's east
Chantal Da Silva
7h ago / 7:14 AM UTC
New satellite images appear to show Russian troops advancing on Ukraine's east this week, as British and European officials warn Moscow is preparing to mount a fresh offensive in the region.
The images, captured by Maxar Technologies, a U.S. defense contractor, show Russian forces continuing to move into eastern Ukraine on Monday.
Military deployments were observed along the 14K-34 highway and a corridor leading from Soloti and Valuyki in western Russia toward the border with Ukraine, the company said.
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source: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/live-blog/russia-ukraine-war-live-updates-russian-troops-massing-east-biden-accu-rcna24175
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