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Putin's obliterated tanks line streets of Kyiv as Zelensky rallies the country on Independence Day

Jimie 2022. 8. 24. 16:27

'Ukraine was reborn when Russia invaded us!' Putin's obliterated tanks line streets of Kyiv as Zelensky rallies the country on Independence Day… and vows to retake Crimea

  • Ukraine is celebrating the 31st anniversary of independence from Soviet Union
  • Destroyed Russian tanks and armoured vehicles have been displayed in Kyiv
  • Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukrainians believe the war will end with victory

By JACK NEWMAN FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 17:05 AEST, 24 August 2022 | UPDATED: 17:12 AEST, 24 August 2022

 

Ukraine is celebrating 31 years today since they broke free from Moscow's shackles as the embattled country marks its Independence Day amid fears of a surge in attacks by Putin's forces.

Independence Day, which commemorates Ukraine's decision to leave the Soviet Union in 1991, falls exactly six months after Russia launched its brutal invasion that Volodymyr Zelensky said today has made his country feel 'reborn'.

Celebrations will be muted, with public gatherings banned in Kyiv where a sea of destroyed Kremlin tanks have been displayed to the public, and a curfew is in force in the front-line eastern city of Kharkiv.

 

There are fears Russia will use the anniversary to increase their savage attacks, with Zelensky warning of the possibility of 'repugnant Russian provocations'.

Ukraine's military urged people to take air raid warnings seriously, with the general staff saying: 'Russian occupiers continue to carry out air and missile attacks on civilian objects on the territory of Ukraine. Do not ignore air raid signals.'

Zelensky told representatives of about 60 states and international organisations at a virtual summit on Crimea yesterday that Ukraine would drive Russian forces out of the peninsular by any means necessary, without consulting other countries beforehand.

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People take pictures with a Ukrainian flag near destroyed Russian army equipment displayed at Khreshchatyk in the centre of Kyiv

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Ukrainians arrive at Khreschatyk Street to see the seized military equipment and weapons including tank and motorized artillery systems

Police president Andrzej Duda echoed his sentiments, saying the entire territory of Ukraine including Crimea needs to be liberated.

He said at the summit yesterday: 'Crimea is Ukraine. Just as Gdansk or Lublin are part of Poland, Crimea is and will be part of Ukraine.'

In an emotional speech today, Zelensky said Ukrainians now believe the war will end when they secure victory rather than negotiate peace.

He said: 'A new nation appeared in the world on February 24 at 4 in the morning. It was not born, but reborn. A nation that did not cry, scream or take fright. One that did not flee. Did not give up. And did not forget,' he said.

The 44-year-old wartime leader delivered the speech in his trademark combat fatigues in front of Kyiv's central monument to independence from the Russia-controlled Soviet Union.

 

'What for us is the end of the war? We used to say: peace. Now we say: victory,' he said.

But back home, ordinary Russians are becoming more and more disillusioned with Putin's constant barbarism and the unrelenting Kremlin war machine.

A survey by the Rosmir polling centre found only 65 per cent watch Kremlin-run stations, down from 86 per cent at the outbreak of the war, the Moscow Times reported.

Channel-1, Rossiya-1 and NT TV all tow the party line, issuing dire threats to the West and Ukraine as part of Putin's propaganda to shore up support for his war.

Opinion polls show only 55 per cent of Russians are in favour of the invasion, compared to 66 per cent a few months ago.

Moscow restaurants numbers are at a five-month low and the cinema sector has warned it will collapse without government support as sanctions continue to bite.

It is not only Russians who are tiring of the war, with EU support for Ukraine now waning because of the cost of living crisis.

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There are fears Russia will use the anniversary to increase their savage attacks, with Zelensky warning of the possibility of 'repugnant Russian provocations'

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Celebrations will be muted, with public gatherings banned in Kyiv where a sea of destroyed Kremlin tanks have been displayed to the public

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A vendor sells blue and yellow balloons in honor of the country's National Flag Day yesterday ahead of Independence Day

How Ukraine established independence

Ukraine celebrates its independence day on August 24 in commemoration of the Declaration of Independence in 1991.

The country had been a major power in the Soviet Union, becoming the center of its arms industry and a major political player.

But its output was redirected to the Soviet military and little was left for the Ukrainian population, and the quality of goods remained low compared to their neighbors.

The push for independence surged with the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986, and the subsequent demise of the Soviet Union.

In early 1990, over 300,000 Ukrainians linked arms in a human chain from Kyiv and Lviv as a show of unity against the Soviet bloc.

A student protest known as the Revolution of Granite took place in October 1990 to prevent a new union treaty with the USSR.

The country declared its independence in August 1991 and in December, a referendum backed the move with 90 percent approval, with majorities in every region including Crimea.

The Soviet Union then formally ceased to exist on December 26.

 

UK diplomats have been pleading with European leaders to not cut aid to Kyiv, travelling across the continent to make their case for the besieged nation, The Telegraph reported.

Governments are said to be wary of spending on arms and humanitarian supplies while energy bills surge at home, a source briefed on the talks said.

Josep Borrell, the EU's top foreign diplomat, said yesterday that Vladimir Putin sees 'the weariness of the Europeans and the reluctance of their citizens to bear the consequences of support for Ukraine', he told AFP, adding: 'We will have to endure, and spread the costs within the EU.'

The war has killed thousands of civilians, forced over a third of Ukraine's 41 million people from their homes, left cities in ruins, shaken global markets, and is largely at a standstill with no immediate prospect of peace talks.

In addition to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, Russian forces have expanded control to areas of the south including the Black Sea and Sea of Azov coasts, and chunks of the eastern Donbas region comprising the provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk.

Ukraine's armed forces have said almost 9,000 military personnel have been killed in the war.

Ukraine broke free of the Soviet Union in August 1991 after a failed putsch in Moscow and an overwhelming majority of Ukrainians voted in a referendum to declare independence.

International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said the U.N. nuclear watchdog hoped to gain access to the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine within days.

Both sides have accused the other of firing missiles and artillery dangerously close to the plant, Europe's biggest, raising fears of a nuclear catastrophe.

'I'm continuing to consult very actively and intensively with all parties,' Grossi said in a statement on Tuesday. 'The mission is expected to take place within the next few days if ongoing negotiations succeed.'

Pro-Moscow forces took over the plant soon after the invasion began but it is still operated by Ukrainian technicians. The United Nations has called for the area to be demilitarised.

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In Zaporizhzhia, the city is decked out in blue and yellow to mark the country's Independence Day

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Zelensky told representatives of about 60 states and international organisations at a virtual summit on Crimea yesterday that Ukraine would drive Russian forces out of the peninsular

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Russians are becoming more and more disillusioned with Putin's constant barbarism and the unrelenting Kremlin war machine

 

Russia on Tuesday accused Ukraine of attacking the plant with artillery, guided munitions and a drone, drawing a denial from Ukraine's U.N. ambassador, Sergiy Kyslytsya.

'Nobody who is at least conscious can imagine that Ukraine would target a nuclear power plant at tremendous risk of nuclear catastrophe and on its own territory,' Kyslytsya said at an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting in New York called by Russia.

The United States, which has sent $10.6 billion in security assistance to Ukraine, will announce a new package of about $3 billion as early as Wednesday, a U.S. official said.

Advanced U.S. missile systems appear to have helped Ukraine strike deep behind the front lines in recent months, taking out ammunition dumps and command posts.

In the latest mysterious fire at a Russian military facility, Russian officials said ammunition stored in southern Russia near the border with Ukraine spontaneously combusted on Tuesday.

Vyacheslav Gladkov, the governor of Belgorod region, blamed hot weather for the fire, drawing ridicule from Ukraine.

'In a few months we will find out whether Russian ammunition can explode because of the cold,' Ukraine's defence ministry said on Twitter.

'The five main causes of sudden explosions in Russia are: winter, spring, summer, autumn and smoking.'

One of the last anti-Putin politicians is detained while naked in dawn raid for 'discrediting the army'

One of Russia's last prominent politicians to oppose Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine was detained in a dawn raid today accused of 'discrediting the Russian army'.

Former mayor of Yekaterinburg, Yevgeny Roizman, 60, was naked with only a towel around his waist as armed police led by a woman law enforcement official stormed his flat.

He has regularly denounced the war defying draconian laws forbidding such criticism.

The politician is close to jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, now serving a nine year sentence after criticism of Putin.

Searches were underway at Roizman's flat, a foundation he runs, and an icon museum he owns, as he was moved 1,100 miles to Moscow to face a criminal investigation.

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Yevgeny Roizman was detained in a dawn raid today accused of 'discrediting the Russian army'

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The former mayor was naked with only a towel around his waist as armed police led by a woman law enforcement official stormed his flat

His arrest came exactly six months after the start of the conflict in Ukraine and follows his lambasting of Putin for his 'awful, monstrous, amateur war' in Ukraine.

Roizman called it 'the most despicable, shameful and wrongful war in the history of Russia'.

He said: 'Even at The Last Judgement I will not give these words up.'

He warned in March: 'The country is changing really fast. The regime is becoming fascist. Many are leaving Russia.'

He vowed to remain, even though arrest was likely as the country fell deeper into authoritarianism. 'I'm staying,' he said.

'This is my country, and I will not give up a millimetre of it.

'I cannot allow myself to be scared, and no-one will force me to say black is white.'

Before being dragged away, the 6ft 4inch politician leaned out of a window at his Yekaterinburg flat, to say: 'Article 280, part 3. The case is in Moscow.'

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The politician is close to jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, now serving a nine year sentence after criticism of Putin

This is the criminal article banning criticism of Putin's armed forces, widely used to silence critics or force them to flee abroad.

Roizman's detention - seen on a video from MASH media - was cheered today by Putin's army of propagandists, who claim he was under the sway of Britain.

Leading pro-Kremlin cheerleader Vladimir Solovyov's channel UralLive today highlighted Roizman's meetings with British ambassador Deborah Bronnert, and his predecessor Sir Laurie Bristow after which he was 'filmed leaving her with a suspicious package in his hands'.

The Solovyov outlet asked: 'So at whose suggestion is Yevgeny Roizman pouring dirt on our soldiers?'

'The detained ex-mayor of Yekaterinburg Yevgeny Roizman has a rich history of relations with the West,' it stated.

Pro-Putin social activist Ekaterina Ipatova said: 'Roizman sneered at us for a long time, supported the terrorists from the Azov battalions…and Donbass, insulted and humiliated Russian citizens, and carried out anti-Russian activities.'

Pro-war correspondent Sergey Mardan said: 'Yevgeny Roizman is finally detained.

'Everyone who supports Ukraine must be held in a camp until the end of the war. There is no place for such people in Russian cities.'

'A criminal case for discrediting the RF Armed Forces was opened against the ex-mayor of Yekaterinburg, Yevgeny Roizman,' reported state owned RIA Novosti news agency.

He could face up to five years in jail, and double this if any charges are widened.

Russians are banned from calling Putin's 'special military operation' a war.

He is also being investigated over the alleged theft of icons in his museum collection.

Roizman beat a Putin candidate to become mayor of Yekaterinburg in 2012.

Another opposition politician Lev Schlosberg - who was banned from seeking election - likened Putin's Russia to Hitler's Germany.

He said in an interview: 'The dehumanisation of a society is the worst thing that can happen to any country. 'Absolutely the worst. 'Hitler, prior to becoming a European, and then world, aggressor dehumanised German society. 'A society that had been raised on the ideals of a great culture. 'He made it inhumane. 'Seeing the aggressive part of Russian society's reaction to the death of Darya Dugina, I understand awful things are happening to our society, too.

'This is the first thing we need to speak about.'

 

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Putin's obliterated tanks line streets of Kyiv as Zelensky rallies the country on Independence Day