Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (2024)

Table of Contents
What we covered here Authorities are working nonstop to evacuate people in flooded areas after dam collapse, Zelensky says With an election looming, British prime minister says he's confident US support for Ukraine is secure White House official criticizes Moscow over claims that Russian forces are shelling Kherson rescue workers The US is helping Ukraine with recovery from its major dam collapse, foreign minister says Russian defenses shoot down targets over its Belgorod region, governor says "Thedisaster isPutin," Ukrainian president says while addressingcatastrophic dam collapse UN agency says dam break hasn't disrupted Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, but reservoir is still draining Kherson region faces resource shortages amid shelling and flooding, officials say. Catch up here on the latest 3 key theories on the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse — and what experts and officials say about each At least 8 people injured after missile attack hits Ukraine’s central Cherkasy region, official says A warehouse in a secret location in Ukraine houses a workshop repairing tanks damaged in the war Biden says he's confident political will won't run out for US support to Ukraine US president and British prime minister tout their support for Ukraine during joint news conference Defensive progress being made in Bakhmut area with troops destroying a Russian tank, Ukrainian commander says UN agencies providing clean water and food to people affected by dam collapse Rescuers in Kherson face shortage of equipment amid Russian shelling, official says Landmines displaced and shifted by Ukraine dam collapse “a big problem,” NGO says Russian defense minister calls for expedition of military hardware to Ukraine At least 9 people wounded in shelling during Kherson evacuations, Ukrainian officials say Ukraine sees "stiff resistance" and losses in attempt to breach Russian lines, US officials say Ukrainian troops trying to push through Russian lines in Zaporizhzhia, Kremlin-backed official says 1 person has died in flooding in Ukrainian-held Mykolaiv region Russian forces shelling "places of evacuation" in Kherson city, Ukrainian officials say Analysis: Ukraine dam collapse serves neither side well as war enters next crucial phase Kremlin claims rescue workers in flooded occupied areas under Ukrainian fire Atleast5dead in Russian-occupied town of Nova Kakhovka, officials say It's mid afternoon in flooded Kherson, southern Ukraine. Here's what you need to know Rescue workers face “extreme danger” amid continued Russian shelling during flood evacuation efforts 3 people believed drowned in Russian-occupied town of Oleshky Zelensky visits flooded Kherson region UN nuclear watchdog to strengthen presence at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant 600 square kilometers of Kherson region is flooded, regional commander says Climber proudly waves Ukrainian flag at top of Mount Everest It's early morning in flooded Kherson, southern Ukraine. Here's what you need to know Zelensky says Russians are shooting at rescuers in flooded areas China sees biggest trade increase with Russia in 2023, Chinese customs data shows International NGO warns of landmine risk after Nova Kakhovka dam collapse Russia's war in Ukraine is undermining global efforts to tackle the climate crisis, report says

By Helen Regan, Caolán Magee, Rob Picheta, Aditi Sangal, Adrienne Vogt, Matt Meyer and Maureen Chowdhury, CNN

Updated 12:01 AM EDT, Fri June 9, 2023

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (4)

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Military drone video shows family trapped in a Russian controlled village after dam collapse

01:42 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • At least nine people were wounded by shelling in the southern Ukrainian-held city of Kherson as mass evacuations continue after the collapse of a major dam caused widespread flooding, local officials say.
  • Russia and Ukraine both claim rescue workers are taking fire in areas they control — and blame one another for causing the breach.
  • Kyiv’s military said it was making progress in eastern Ukraine, notably around the beleaguered city of Bakhmut.
  • US President Joe Biden, at a joint news conference with UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, reaffirmed the allies’ commitment to supporting Ukraine.

39 Posts

Our live coverage of Russia’s war in Ukraine has moved here.

Authorities are working nonstop to evacuate people in flooded areas after dam collapse, Zelensky says

From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Mohammed Tawfeeq
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (5)

Zelensky speaks during his nightly address on Thursday, June 8.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said all levels of government and local authorities have been working nonstop to save as many people as they can from flooded areas following Ukraine’s catastrophic dam collapse.

He also thanked international organizations “who are present on our free territory and provide specific assistance,” though he expressed concernthatnoneof those groupshave accessedRussian-occupied areasof thedisaster zone.

The effort so far: At least 2,339 people, including 120 children, have been evacuated from flooded areas following the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam in Ukraine, the country’s Ministry of Internal Affairs said in a Telegram post Thursday.

The ministry said at least 563 people — including 28 children — were rescued from the flooding and that nine evacuation centers have been set up.

On the western bank of the Dnipro River, at least 3,426 houses are completely flooded, according to Oleksandr Prokudin, the head of the Kherson region military administration.

With an election looming, British prime minister says he's confident US support for Ukraine is secure

From CNN's Tara John and Luke McGee
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (6)

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins interviews British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

The looming US presidential election has raised the possibility of a new administration that is less enthusiastic in supporting Ukraine’s defense against Russia.

Former President Donald Trump, the GOP frontrunner,has refusedto say whether he believes Ukraine should win the war against Russia. His main challenger, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, has hedged on the conflict, describing Russia’s unprovoked invasion as a “territorial” dispute.

Asked by CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on Thursday about Trump’s comments, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak highlighted “strong support” in the US for funding Ukraine, adding that his meetings with congressional leaders in both parties this week indicated a willingness to support the country’s ongoing efforts to repel Russia’s assault.

That’s a sentiment US President Joe Biden, who is gearing up for an eventual general election contest against Trump, DeSantis or another GOP candidate, echoed in his comments at a joint news conference with Sunak Thursday.

“I ask people to picture what would happen if we were not supporting Ukraine. Do we think Russia would stop in Kyiv? Do you think that is all there would be happening? I think not, and I think the vast majority of my colleagues —even the critics —think that would not be the case, as well,” he said, voicing confidence that the US will not run out of political will to aid Kyiv.

Read more from Sunak’s interview with CNN here.

White House official criticizes Moscow over claims that Russian forces are shelling Kherson rescue workers

From CNN's DJ Judd

A top US national security official sharply criticized Moscow over Ukraine’s claim that Russian forces are shelling Ukrainian-held parts of the Kherson region as rescue workers try to evacuate civilians from flood zones.

“This is a life and death situation here, and it’s a situation caused by this devastating flood that we want to make sure we get humanitarian assistance in there,” he added.

Kirby pointed to humanitarian efforts from USAID to assist in the rescue and evacuation of civilians following the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam earlier this week, noting agencies were working with humanitarian partners on the ground to provide transportation, water purification equipment and rescue capabilities in the region.

“We have been at this really since just a couple of hours after the breach, and we’re going to stay committed to that,” he said. “We’ve got good eyes on and good partners on the ground there, and so we’re gonna keep doing that — there’ll be more support coming from the United States as needed.”

Key context:BothRussiaandUkraineare accusing each other of shelling during the evacuations. Kyiv and Moscow also accuse each other of causing the breach in the first place, although it is unclear whether the dam was deliberately attacked, or whether the collapse was the result of structural failure.

The US is helping Ukraine with recovery from its major dam collapse, foreign minister says

From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Jen Deaton

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he spoke to his US counterpart Antony Blinken on Thursday about the Nova Kakhovka dam disaster.

The collapse in southern Ukraine is one of the biggest industrial and ecological disasters in Europe for decades.

“The U.S. is helping us mitigate the consequences of the Russia-caused Kakhovka disaster,” Kuleba tweeted.

Ukraine has blamed and condemned Russia for the dam’s collapse, and the subsequent shelling of the southern Ukrainian-held city of Kherson during mass evacuations due to the breach.

It’s still impossible to say whether the dam collapsed because it was deliberately targeted —or if the breach could have been caused by structural failure.Russia, for its part, has pointed the finger of blame at Ukraine.

Kuleba did not share further details about how the US was helping in the flood response.

The foreign minister said he and Blinken also discussed US military aid and hopeful outcomes for this summer’s NATO summit.

Russian defenses shoot down targets over its Belgorod region, governor says

From CNN's Josh Pennington and Hira Humayun

Russian defense systems have shot down targets over the Belgorod region, the governor there said.

Belgorod is near the border with Ukraine.

Some background: Russia has seen the effects of its war on Ukraine increasingly reverberate back onto its own territory in recent months.

Belgorod has seen a series of drone attacks. Last week, a“massive” shelling attackinjured four people in the region. Eight apartment buildings, four homes, a school and two administrative buildings were damaged during the shelling in Shebekino, a village in the border region of Belgorod.

More recently, Ukrainian forces carried out heavy shelling of the region overnight Wednesday, Gladkov had said.

"Thedisaster isPutin," Ukrainian president says while addressingcatastrophic dam collapse

From CNN's Mohammed Tawfeeq

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday that the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam in the Kherson region was not a natural disaster or evidence of climate change.

Instead, he said:

The collapse of theNova Kakhovka damin southern Ukraine is one of thebiggest industrial and ecological disastersin Europe for decades. The catastrophe has destroyed entire villages, flooded farmland, deprived tens of thousands of people of power and clean water, and caused massive environmental damage.

In the Russian-occupied part of the territory, where about a dozen settlements are flooded, “no evacuation is carried out at all,” Zelensky claimed in a video address to representatives of the world environmental protection community. People have been stuck on rooftops, “trapped in water” for days without drinking water, food, or medical care, he said.

“We do not know the number of dead and injured yet,” he added. “In more than 30 settlements, life is ruined. For hundreds of thousands of people in many towns and villages, access to drinking water has been greatly impeded.”

Some background: BothRussiaandUkraineare accusing each other of shelling during the evacuations. Also, Kyiv and Moscow have accused each other of causing the breach in the first place, although it is unclear whether the dam was deliberately attacked, or whether the collapse was the result of structural failure.

UN agency says dam break hasn't disrupted Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, but reservoir is still draining

From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Hira Humayun
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (7)

TheZaporizhzhiaNuclearPowerPlantis seen on March 29.

The Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine is still able to pump water from the nearby Kakhovka reservoir despite this week’s dam collapse, the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog agency said Thursday.

Water levels have dropped below the point where it was previously estimated pumps would not be able to operate, but the system has not been disrupted, explained Rafael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency. That’s bought the plant more time before it has to switch to alternative cooling sources.

Since the dam collapse, the reservoir’s water level has dropped by just over 4 meters (around 13 feet), and it’s losing between 4 and 7 centimeters each hour, Grossi said. A power plant review has found that it will likely be able to keep pumping water from the reservoir even if it drops by another meter or two —and possibly lower.

Once it can no longer use the reservoir to cool its six reactors, Grossi said alternative water supplies —which include a large cooling pond next to the plant, several smaller ponds and onsite wells — can provide required cooling water for several months.

Grossi said IAEA teams on the ground have requested access to areas surrounding the plant and reservoir so they can learn more.

About the plant: The Zaporizhzhia plant, with its six reactors, is the largest nuclear power station in Europe. Ukraine relies heavily on nuclear power, with about half of its electricity coming from reactors at four plants around the country.

The plant is held by Russian forces but operated mostly by a Ukrainian workforce. Fighting around the plant and the perilous workplace environment for its staff have made Zaporizhzhia NPP a subject of constant concern for the IAEA and other international observers.

Kherson region faces resource shortages amid shelling and flooding, officials say. Catch up here on the latest

From CNN staff
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (8)

Flooded residential buildings are seen on Thursday, June 8, in Kherson, Ukraine.

Rescuers are facing resource challenges while carrying out evacuations in Ukraine-controlled Kherson due to the scale of the flooding caused by the collapse of Nova Kakhovka dam earlier this week, an emergency services officer told CNN.

There is a shortage of resources as Russians continue shelling the western bank of the Dnipro river, said Maksym Trykur, an officer at Ukraine’s State Special Transport Service.

The catastrophe is “unprecedented and the challenge is it’s impossible to accumulate all the resources in such a short time,”Trykur told CNN.

Earlier Thursday, local officials said at least nine people had been injured by shelling as civilians evacuate Kherson city.

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (9)

Volunteers evacuate local residents from a flooded area inKherson, Ukraine on Thursday, June 8.

Here other key developments related to the dam collapse and Russia’s war in Ukraine:

  • Landmines displaced by Ukraine dam collapse “a big problem,” NGO says: The collapse of the dam has displaced landmines in the region, the head of the Red Cross Weapons Contamination Program told CNN on Thursday. Landmines “in the water, on the surface, [and] buried under the ground” in the area flooded by water have “shifted location,” Erik Tollefsen told CNN. The marking and mapping systems used by charities and NGOs to detect and locate landmines are no longer accurate, as so many landmines have moved in the water. “This is a big problem,” Tollefsen added.
  • UN agencies providing clean water and food to people affected by dam collapse: Several United Nations agencies are working to provide access to clean water and food for Kherson residents affected by the dam collapse, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA).
  • Meanwhile, several people were injured after a missile attack hit Ukraine’s central Cherkasy region: The city of Uman was hit by a missile attack on Thursday, according to Ihor Taburets, head of the Cherkasy region’s military administration. “We have two hits: on an industrial facility and a car wash. In the second case, a fire broke out as a result of the hit,” he said. Eight people were injured, two seriously, Taburets said, citing preliminary information.
  • Ukraine sees resistance and losses in an attempt to breach Russian lines, US says: Ukrainian forces have suffered losses in heavy equipment and soldiers as they met greater-than-expected resistance from Russian forces in their first attempt to breach Russian lines in the east of the country in recent days, two senior US officials tell CNN.One US official described the losses — which include US-supplied MRAP armored personnel vehicles — as “significant.”
  • Ukrainian commander says defensive progress being made in Bakhmut area: Troops are making progress and continue to advance in the Bakhmut area in eastern Ukraine,the Ukrainian military said Thursday. “The defensive operation continues, the enemy is trying to stop our forces but isgettingbeaten,“ the commander of Ukrainian Land Forces Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi said in a Telegram post. He shared a video, purportedly showing soldiers of the 77th Air Assault Brigade destroying a Russian tank.
  • US and UK reaffirm their support for Ukraine: US President Joe Biden and his British counterpart, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, touted their “unwavering support” for Ukraine and shared condemnation of Moscow’s “brutal aggression” as theymet in Washington, DC,Thursday. Biden said he believes the US will have the funding necessary to support Ukraine against Russia for as long as it takes. The US president, responding to a reporter’s question, said he’s confident in the continued funding despite what you hear from “some voices today on Capitol Hill,” referring to lawmakers who have expressed skepticism about the country’s extent and duration of aid to Kyiv.

3 key theories on the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse — and what experts and officials say about each

From CNN's Ivana KottasováandGianluca Mezzofiore

The collapse of theNova Kakhovka damin southern Ukraine is one of thebiggest industrial and ecological disastersin Europe for decades. The catastrophe has destroyed entire villages, flooded farmland, deprived tens of thousands of people of power and clean water, and caused massive environmental damage.

Here are the three main theories on what caused the dam collapse – and what experts and officials say about each:

Did Russia do it? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, his government and the country’s military were quick to blame Moscow for the disaster.They said Russian forces blew up the reservoir from inside, with Zelensky quoting a report by Ukrainian intelligence last year that claimed occupying troops had mined the dam.

The Ukrainians point out that the facility has been under Russian control for the past year, making it easy for Russian forces to plant explosives. Social media posts indicate that people in the area heard the sound of explosions around the time the dam was thought to have been damaged.

The wider timing of the incident is not insignificant. While Moscow and Kyiv have previously accused each other of plotting to blow up the Soviet-era dam, this collapse coincided with Ukrainian forces gearing up for their widely expectedsummer counter-offensive.

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (11)

Fooded residential buildings are seen in Kherson, Ukraine on Thursday, June 8,

Could it have been a missile attack by Ukraine? Russia has denied any involvement in the disaster and in turn accused Ukraine of destroying the dam, without providing evidence.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov claimed the attack was “planned and carried out by order received from Kyiv, from the Kyiv regime,” aiming to “deprive Crimea of water” and to distract from the battlefield. Ukraine has denied the accusations.

The reservoir supplies water to large swaths of southern Ukraine, including to the Crimean peninsula which Russia illegally annexed in 2014. Crimea has experienced water issues ever since Ukraine cut its supply shortly after the annexation. Russian forces captured the North Crimea Canal – which is fed by the Kakhovka reservoir – and began restoring the water supply in the first days of their invasion in 2022..

Structural failure? The Nova Kakhovka dam — the largest reservoir in Ukraine in terms of volume – is also the furthest downstream of a cascade of six Soviet-era dams on the Dnipro River. The fact that the facility has been operating for many decades has prompted speculation around a possible technical failure.

“This is a very common type of dam all around the world. They’ve been built for hundreds of years and if they were designed and built well and are maintained adequately, then the chance of a failure is very, very low. It would be extremely unusual for this type of dam to fail with no warning,” Craig Goff, the technical director and lead of the Dams and Reservoirs team at HR Wallingford, a civil engineering and environmental hydraulics consultancy, said.

However, it is unclear how well the dam has been maintained under Russian occupation. The surrounding area has been one of the most heavily contested regions since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and the dam has sustained some prior damage.

Read more.

CNN’s Sam Kiley, Natasha Bertrand, Alex Marquardt, Jim Sciutto and Jennifer Hansler contributed reporting.

At least 8 people injured after missile attack hits Ukraine’s central Cherkasy region, official says

From CNN's YuliaKesaieva
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (12)

A photo shared by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine shows the aftermath of a strike in the Cherkasy region.

The city of Uman in Ukraine’s central Cherkasy region was hit by a missile attack on Thursday, according to Ihor Taburets, head of the Cherkasy region’s military administration.

“We have two hits: on an industrial facility and a car wash. In the second case, a fire broke out as a result of the hit,” he said.

Eight people were injured, two seriously, Taburets said, citing preliminary information.

A warehouse in a secret location in Ukraine houses a workshop repairing tanks damaged in the war

From CNN's Vasco Cotovio
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (13)

Warehouse workers repair captured Russia armor and repurpose it for use on the battlefield.

The loud and repetitive metallic thudding echoes through the workshop as a worker hammers away at a large engine. He pauses, tilts his head for a quick check at what he’s done and then gets back at it.

He’s one of many — whose names CNN has agreed not to disclose to protect their identity — working inside a warehouse in a secret location in Ukraine.They are ordinary civilians, but their work is vital for Ukraine’s war effort. They repair damaged vehicles, such as tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, so that Kyiv can send them back to the front lines.

One such vehicle stands out: Its tracks are a mangled mess of metal, twisted after it struck a land mine. It was Russian, and its body is riddled with “Z” signs all over, the mark of Moscow’s full-scale invasion.

“This is a transport vehicle that we are going to modify into a medical evacuation machine,” says Bohdan Ostapchuk, project coordinator at the Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation, who is responsible for this warehouse.

It’s one of a dozen or so armored vehicles — including armored personnel carriers, infantry fighting vehicles and even a tank — being repaired at the shop. But patching these up is not the only thing the Ukrainians are doing: They are also modifying and improving them.

“We are trying to make them safer and more comfortable for use on the battlefield,” he says.

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (14)

A captured Russian armored personnel carrier with the Z mark of Moscow's invasion. Ukrainian repairmen at the warehouse want to adapt this vehicle to transport wounded soldiers.

Despite recent Western donations, Russian-made equipment — including hardware salvaged or captured from Moscow’s armies — has been used by the Ukrainian military since the early days of Russia’s invasion.

They coordinate with the military to find the missing pieces and build whatever else they cannot find, but it’s a process that takes time and consumes resources. They eventually find a way, and Ostapchuk said they have been able to repair more than 30 types of vehicles, including some Western-made ones. “I can’t go into detail,” he quickly adds.

It’s one of the reasons why this workshop is so vital and their work so intricate — and secretive.

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (15)

A repaired Russian T-72 tank ready to be sent out to the front lines.

As Ukraine prepares to launch its long-awaited counteroffensive, Ostapchuk says that —despite the dozen or so vehicles currently being worked on — the warehouse is unusually empty, compared to other times. Here too, they’ve been feeling the calm before the storm.

The next armored vehicle to go to the front lines, a T-72 B3M main battle tank, stands at the entrance of the warehouse, looking almost brand-new.

In a moment’s notice, a Ukrainian technician fires up the tank’s engine, filling the warehouse air with fumes. The workshop grinds to a halt as the powerful noise turns heads toward the tank.

Biden says he's confident political will won't run out for US support to Ukraine

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (16)

President Joe Biden speaks during a news conference with British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at the White House in Washington, DC, on June 8.

President Joe Biden said Thursday that he believes the US will have the funding necessary to support Ukraine against Russia for as long as it takes.

Biden, responding to a reporter’s question, said he’s confident in the continued funding despite what you hear from “some voices today on Capitol Hill,” referring to US lawmakers who have expressed skepticism about the country’s extent and duration of aid to Kyiv.

US House of Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy has said additional funding for Ukraine would face long odds in the Republican-controlled House, though Senate Republicans have vowed to continue on with the aid.

UK’s prime minister promises to share the burden: Biden’s comments came during his joint news conference Thursday with the visiting British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who chimed in following the president’s remarks.

“It’s actually entirely reasonable for the American people to hear what I say, and hopefully acknowledge the thanks that we have for their support of the situation in Ukraine, but also ask if everyone is doing their bit,” Sunak said.

Earlier, the prime minister had called US support for Kyiv the “decisive contribution” of the conflict.

Sunak said, for its part, the UK is proud to be the second-largest contributor to Ukraine’s defense behind the US.

“We’re lucky to have America’sinvestment in European security,but we need to share the burdenalongside you, which is whydefense spending in the UK hasbeen above the 2% NATObenchmark,” he continued, referring to the minimum percentage of GDP NATO members have been asked to contribute toward the alliance’s collective defense. The US has long carried an outsized burden in that area.

“It’s on an increasingtrajectory, and we wouldencourage other countries tofollow the lead that the USand the UK set, because oursecurity is collective,” Sunak said.

CNN’s Lauren Fox and Nicky Robertson contributed to this report.

US president and British prime minister tout their support for Ukraine during joint news conference

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (17)

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and US President Joe Biden hold a joint news conference at White House in Washington, DC, on June 8.

US President Joe Biden and his British counterpart, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, touted their “unwavering support” for Ukraine and shared condemnation of Moscow’s “brutal aggression” as they met in Washington, DC, Thursday.

“The UK and the United States, together with more than 50 partners, have committed historic levels of security assistance to Ukraine. I want to thank the prime minister for his strong, strong leadership, contributing significant amounts of security assistance and training to Ukrainian troops so they can effectively use the equipment and ammunition we’ve collectively provided them,” Biden said during a joint news conference at the White House.

Sunak said the United Kingdom was proud of its contributions to the Ukrainian war effort, including tanks, long-range weapons and training for Kyiv’s soldiers. But, he continued, it has been US leadership and resources that have provided the “decisive contribution” allowing Ukraine to hold off Russia’s wide-reaching assault.

Sunak said the pair would continue to “collaborate to protect our national security.”

Defensive progress being made in Bakhmut area with troops destroying a Russian tank, Ukrainian commander says

From CNN's YuliaKesaieva and Sarah Dean
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (18)

Ukrainian soldiers fire at a Russian air target on the frontline near Bakhmut on June 5.

Troops are making progress and continue to advance in the Bakhmut area in eastern Ukraine,the Ukrainian military said Thursday.

“The defensive operation continues, the enemy is trying to stop our forces but isgettingbeaten,“ the commander of Ukrainian Land Forces Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi said in a Telegram post. He shared a video, purportedly showing soldiers of the 77th Air Assault Brigade destroying a Russian tank.

“Heavy fighting continues for every square meter” in the Lyman, Bakhmut, Avdiivka and Mariinka directions,” the General Staff of the Armed Forces said in its daily update. It said 26 combat engagements took place in the frontline areas in the past day.

Ukraine’s 3rdAssault Brigade claimed on Telegram it had pushed Russian forces back “from 1.8 km along the front line and 1.2 km inland” over the last day around Bakhmut.

The 5th Separate Mechanized Brigade posted an update, claiming “the occupiers are losing positions in the area of ‘gardens’ in Bakhmut.”

CNN cannot independently verify the claims.

UN agencies providing clean water and food to people affected by dam collapse

From CNN's Richard Roth in New York and Jessie Gretener in London

Several United Nations agencies are working to provide access to clean water and food for Kherson residents affected by the Nova Kakhovka Dam collapse, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA).

Here’s what steps are being taken, according to a UN OCHA statement:

  • Food: The World Food Programme is working with its partners to provide ready-to-eat food for 18,000 people in affected areas.
  • Water: The International Organization for Migration, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Save the Children and other partners are also working to provide clean drinking water.
  • Infrastructure: UNICEF and its partners are working with the government to repair water and wastewater infrastructure, according to UN OCHA.
  • More aid: UN agencies are also working to offer cash support, psychosocial support, and medical support for residents evacuating affected areas.

Rescuers in Kherson face shortage of equipment amid Russian shelling, official says

FromCNN's Yulia Kesaieva
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (19)

Ukrainian security forces help to unload local residents from a boat during an evacuation from a flooded area in Kherson on June 8.

Rescuers are facing resource challenges while carrying out evacuations in Ukraine-controlled Kherson due to the scale of the flooding caused by the dam collapse, an emergency services officer told CNN.

There is a shortage of resources as Russians continue shelling the western bank of the Dnipro river, said Maksym Trykur, an officer at Ukraine’s State Special Transport Service.

The catastrophe is “unprecedented and the challenge is it’s impossible to accumulate all the resources in such a short time,”Trykur told CNN.

The State Special Transport Service has been working along with the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in evacuating civilians.

“People there are not in a position to stay. The place is unlivable, the houses are flooded, lots of cattle have been killed, the public transport doesn’t work obviously,” he added.

Trykur said most territories are flooded with 5 meters of water, or about 16 feet, and that “it’s impossible to predict the time frame that will allow people to come back to their homes.”

He said his colleagues on the ground have not encountered any humanitarian aid offices or assistance provided by any international organizations, suchas theUnited Nationsorthe International Committee of the Red Cross.

Landmines displaced and shifted by Ukraine dam collapse “a big problem,” NGO says

From CNN’s Catherine Nicholls in London

The collapse of Ukraine’s Nova Kakhovka dam has displaced landmines in the region, the head of the Red Cross Weapons Contamination Program told CNN on Thursday.

The marking and mapping systems used by charities and NGOs to detect and locate landmines are no longer accurate, as so many landmines have moved in the water. “This is a big problem,” Tollefsen said.

Mike Newton, head of The HALO Trust’s Ukraine demining program, told CNN that his organization will have to re-locate and re-map landmines in the area affected by the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam.

“Before the dam even burst its banks there was (a) significant humanitarian problem that we were dealing with. So now that the dam has gone, what we’re looking at now is just another humanitarian catastrophe, just an ecological disaster, to throw into this bigger catastrophe that has been enveloping Ukraine for the past year and a half almost,” Newton told CNN.

Soil is also being picked up by moving water and ending up on top of landmines, Newton said, sometimes detonating them, but also sometimes burying them. In these cases, teams have to be sent to remap and clear the buried mines.

More than 5000 landmines were detected by the HALO Trust’s demining team in Mykolaiv, Newton said, nearly 500 of which were on riverbanks in the region.

“Areas that previously didn’t have any risks to the population in terms of weapon contamination, [are] now very, very dangerous,” Tollefsen told CNN.

The Red Cross is “very concerned,” he added. Ukrainians “have maybe lost their loved ones, their families have been disrupted, they can’t get access to drinking water, to food, to medicine. Now they have the risk of landmines being in the area that could kill them or injure them,” he said.

Those attempting to offer assistance to civilians are also facing increased danger in the region, Tollefsen said. “We really, really call for caution.”

“You cannot rebuild a country on mine foundations,” Newton said. “Mines have got to be front and center in everyone’s minds when you’re talking about recovery in Ukraine when you talk about reconstruction. And of course, now with this dam, it’s just another thing that Ukrainians have got to deal with.”

Russian defense minister calls for expedition of military hardware to Ukraine

From CNN's Katharina Krebs in London
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (20)

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu attends the Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting in New Delhi on April 28.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has called for the expedited delivery of military hardware to the front lines in Ukraine, in a video posted on Thursday by the ministry’s press service.

“The enemy tried to advance today. In two hours of the first battle alone, Russian troops destroyed 30 tanks and 10 IFVs. In two hours of combat, since morning. So this equipment is needed, let’s hurry up,” Shoigu said in reference to his earlier claim thatRussian forces have repelled four overnight attacks in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia region. CNN cannot independently verify these claims.

Shoigu made the request during a visit to troops of the Western Military District of Russia, where he inspected the preparation of equipment and weapons for shipment at the arsenals and storage bases, according to the statement posted by the ministry.

“Shoigu drew particular attention to the quality preparation and timely dispatch of ammunition and missiles to units involved in the special military operation and also undergoing combat readiness as part of combat training,” the statement added.

At least 9 people wounded in shelling during Kherson evacuations, Ukrainian officials say

FromCNN's Yulia Kesaieva in Kyiv

At least nine people have been injured by shelling as civilians evacuate Kherson city Thursday, local Ukrainian officials said.

Two employees of the State Emergency Service, a police officer, a doctor and a volunteer from Germany are among those wounded, said Oleksandr Prokudin, the head of Kherson’s regional military administration.

“One man is in intensive care with serious injuries, and doctors are fighting for his life,” Prokudin said.

Remember: Rescuers are trying to evacuate thousands of people in the flood zone of the Russian-occupiedNova Kakhovka damand hydro-electric power plant in the southern Kherson region, which collapsed Tuesday, sending torrents of water gushing down the Dnipro River. Kherson city is under Ukrainian control.

BothRussiaandUkraineare accusing each other of shelling during the evacuations.

Kyiv and Moscow also accuse each other of causing the breach in the first place, although it is unclear whether the dam was deliberately attacked, or whether the collapse was the result of structural failure.

More from officials: Prokudin, the Ukrainian regional leader in Kherson, said Thursday water has flooded 27 settlements and damaged well over 3,000 houses, most of them in the city.

“Despite Russia’s cynical attacks, police, rescuers and volunteers continue to evacuate people from the dangerous areas. They have managed to evacuate 2,198 people, including 120 children and 38 people with limited mobility,” he added.

Kremlin officials, meanwhile, said Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone call Thursday with the Moscow-installed leader of Kherson’s occupied areas, according to the state news agency TASS.

Putin called for Russian emergency services to provide all necessary assistance to people in impacted areas, a Kremlin spokesperson said.

CNN’s Katharina Krebs and Sarah Dean contributed to this report.

Ukraine sees "stiff resistance" and losses in attempt to breach Russian lines, US officials say

From CNN's Jim Sciutto

Ukrainian forces have suffered losses in heavy equipment and soldiers as they met greater-than-expected resistance from Russian forces in their first attempt to breach Russian lines in the east of the country in recent days, two senior US officials tell CNN.

One US official described the losses — which include US-supplied MRAP armored personnel vehicles — as “significant.”

Ukrainian forces managed to overrun some Russian forces in the east around Bakhmut. However, Russian forces, armed with anti-tank missiles, grenades and mortars, have put up “stiff resistance,” with their forces dug into defensive lines that are several layers deep in some areas and marked by minefields that have taken a heavy toll on Ukrainian armored vehicles.

US and Western officials have been bracing for an expected counteroffensive for months, moving to shore up Ukraine’s defenses ahead of its start. This week, Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said an offensive was “taking place in several directions.”

Both US officials say the losses are not expected to impact the larger planned Ukrainian counteroffensive. US and Western officials long expected the counteroffensive to take time and put Ukrainian personnel and equipment, including Western-supplied systems, at high risk.

Keep reading here.

Ukrainian troops trying to push through Russian lines in Zaporizhzhia, Kremlin-backed official says

From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London, Anna Chernova and Olga Voitovych in Kyiv

Ukraine’s frontline troops are trying to break through Russian lines in the south of the country, a Kremlin-appointed official in the Russian-occupied part of the Zaporizhzhia region has told state news agency RIA Novosti.

Vladimir Rogov said Ukraine’s armed forces were trying to advance but had not yet had any success, according to RIA.

In a series of posts on Telegram on Thursday morning, Rogov said the Ukrainians had been “hitting the positions of our guys for many hours with artillery and HIMARS.”

He said the assault was aimed at forcing Russian troops to “flee” their positions.

Ukraine shelled the occupied town of Tokmak overnight, destroying two houses, Rogov said in a separate post. He urged civilians there to leave for the southern port of Berdyansk, which lies further into Russian-held territory.

Later in the day, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Russian forces repelled four overnight attacks in the region.

Shoigu said there was a two-hour battle after Ukrainian forces attempted to break through Russian defenses at 1:30 a.m. local time “with the forces of the 47th Mechanized Brigade, numbering up to 1,500 people and 150 armored vehicles.”

CNN cannot independently verify Shoigu’s claims, which were posted by the Russian Ministry of Defense on Telegram.

Some context: Ukrainian officials have been tight-lipped about Kyiv’s plans for its long-anticipated counteroffensive, though there have been signs in recent weeks that the effort is nearing.

Ivan Fedorov, the Ukrainian mayor of Melitopol, put a cryptic message on his Telegram channel on Thursday.

“The weather for the Russo-fascists in the Zaporizhzhia direction is hot summer days and nights in the still occupied Tokmak,” Fedorov said. “The occupiers did not sleep today until two in the morning.”

1 person has died in flooding in Ukrainian-held Mykolaiv region

From CNN’s Olga Voitovych

A 53-year-old man has died after refusing to be evacuated from floodwaters in the Ukrainian-held Mykolaiv region, police said on Telegram.

“Due to the occupiers’ blowing up of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant, the territories of Snihurivka, Shyroke and Horokhivske communities in Mykolaiv region are flooded. So far, we have one victim – a 53-year-old man from the village of Vasylivka who refused to be evacuated yesterday,” said Serhii Shaikhet, the regional police chief.

Shaikhet urged people to evacuate flooded areas and said police were, “patrolling the area on boats to identify people in need of help.”

More on evacuations: At least 1,854 people have been evacuated since Tuesday as rescue efforts to free people from their flooded homes in Ukrainian-controlled Kherson continued throughout Wednesday, Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs said.

The ministry said it was also looking for ways to evacuate citizens from the Russian occupied-eastern bank of the Dnipro River.

“We are trying to do it as quickly as possible. We are hampered by a strong current and shelling by the Russian military,” said Internal Affairs Minister Ihor Klymenko.

CNN’s Yulia Kesaieva,Fred Pleitgen,Radina Gigova,Sarah DeanandHelen Regan contributed to this post.

Russian forces shelling "places of evacuation" in Kherson city, Ukrainian officials say

From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (21)

Emergency workers take cover during a Russian military strike while they evacuate people from a flooded area in Kherson,Ukraine, onJune 8.

Russian forces are shelling “places of evacuation” in Kherson city, according to Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs.

The ministry said three people have been injured in the shelling: “a civilian woman, a police officer and a rescuer.”

“Russia has left people in trouble in the occupied part of Kherson region. And it continues to prevent Ukraine from saving the most valuable - human lives,” it added.

Some context: Both Russia and Ukraine are accusing each other of shelling as evacuations continue in Ukraine’s southern Kherson region following the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse.

Analysis: Ukraine dam collapse serves neither side well as war enters next crucial phase

From CNN's Sam Kiley
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (22)

A satellite image shows the Nova KakhovkaDamand hydroelectric plant after its collapse, in Nova Kakhovka, Ukraine, on June 7.

Fish swept up and dumped byflood watersdrive home Ukraine’s claims of Russian “ecocide” while Russian gunners attacked rescuers amid the chaos of theNova Khakovka dam burst.

Apparently caught unawares, the Kremlin’s own troops werewashed away, their trenches flooded, accommodation inundated and, as they ran into the open to save themselves, Ukrainian forces rained death down upon them from the opposite bank of the Dnipro River.

At first glance, this looks like an own goal, or two, by Russia. It controlled the dam that burst, is accused by many Western nations of actually blowing it up, and it engulfed its own troops plus Ukrainian civilians under its occupation.

But Moscow has form for sacrificing the lives of many for the motherland, in the same way, on the same river.

As Nazi troops advanced against the Russian army in 1941 across Ukraine, Stalin’s secret police, the NKVD, were given an order of terrible ruthlessness. They were to blow up the Zaporizhzhia hydroelectric dam that bisected the eponymous industrial city, which stands 200 kilometers (125 miles) upriver from today’s Nova Kakhovka barricade).

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has again blamed Moscow for the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam and said Russia should bear “criminal liability” for “ecocide.”

Both Kyiv and Moscow accuse each other of being behind the major breach of the dam, although it is unclear whether the dam was deliberately attacked, or whether the collapse was the result of structural failure.

Zelensky referred to a report by Ukrainian intelligence last year that claimed occupying Russian troops had mined the dam.

“The consequences of the tragedy will be clear in a week. When the water goes away, it will become clear what is left and what will happen next,” he said.

Any plans that Kyiv may have had for a cross-river assault are now much more complicated by a much wider body of water, more boggy landscape, and unmapped waters.

Russia has lost too.

Read more here.

A satellite image shows damage to the Nova Kakhovka dam on June 6. Handout/Planet Labs PBC/Reuters Related article Ukraine dam collapse serves neither side well as war enters next crucial phase | CNN

Kremlin claims rescue workers in flooded occupied areas under Ukrainian fire

From CNN’s Anna Chernova

Occupied parts of the Kherson region are coming under Ukrainian fire as rescue workers try to help people out of flooded areas after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam, Russian officials claim.

Speaking on a conference call with journalists, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov went on to praise rescuers in the Russian-occupied areas, who he said were working under, “ongoing shelling from Ukraine, and that makes the [rescue] job difficult.”

Asked whether Russian President Vladimir Putin was planning to visit communities affected by the flooding, Peskov said he had no such plans.

What Ukraine says: Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claims that Ukrainian rescue workers have been shot at by Russian forces after he visited the region Thursday.

“When our forces try to get them [the residents] out, they are shot at by occupiers from a distance,” he told German outlet Bild.

A volunteer taking part in the rescue efforts in Kherson told CNN that rescue workers face Russian shelling, while Ukraine’s regional military administration in Kherson said Russia was shelling territory still under its control.

Atleast5dead in Russian-occupied town of Nova Kakhovka, officials say

From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv and Jo Shelley in London
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (24)

Water flows over the collapsed Kakhovka dam in Nova Kakhovka, in Russian-occupied Ukraine, on June 7.

Atleastfivepeople in the Russian-occupied town of Nova Kakhovka, which sits somethree miles from the dam that collapsed overnight on Monday, have died in the flooding, a Kremlin-backed official was quoted by state news agency TASS as saying.

“It was reported thatout of seven people who were grazing cattle,fivedrowned,” Vladimir Leontiev, head of the Nova Kakhovka city administration, told Russian television, according to TASS. “We are now engaged in the evacuation of the remaining two.”

The breach of the Nova Kakhovka dam unleashed a mass of water down the Dnipro River and flooded towns and villages on either side.

“The most difficult situation is in Aleshki [the Russian spelling of ‘Oleshky’] and Hola Prystan,” another official installed by the Kremlin in occupied territory on the east bank said on Telegram.

Andrey Alekseenko, the Russian-backed head of the government of the Kherson region said: “The level of the Dnipro increased by up to 12 meters.Atthis moment 344 people have already been evacuated from roofs and upper floors with the help of watercrafts.There are many low-mobility people among them, as well as children.”

Oleshky lies around 45 miles west of Nova Kakhovka, and Hola Prystan some 12 miles beyond that.

Earlier, Oleshky’s exiled Ukrainian mayor said he knew ofatleastthree people who died thereand thought, “there might be many more.”

The Russian-backed official, Alekseenko, said water in the area was unsafe to use and told people to be careful of mines.

More than 300 people, including 70 children, have been evacuated from the flooded occupied areas so far on Thursday, the Russian Emergencies Ministry reported on Telegram.

It's mid afternoon in flooded Kherson, southern Ukraine. Here's what you need to know

From CNN staff

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has visited Kherson, the scene of widespread flooding after the collapse of theNova Kakhovka dam.

Meanwhile, evacuationsare ongoing as the death toll rises across southern Ukraine. Zelensky has accused Russian forces of shooting at rescuers in parts under Russian control.

Here’s the latest:

  • Zelensky visit: The Ukrainian president visited Kherson after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam flooded vast swathes of the region.Zelensky discussed evacuations and relief for the flooded areas at a meeting, along with the “prospects for restoring the region’s ecosystem and the operational military situation in the man-made disaster area,” a statement posted to his official Telegram channel said.
  • Flood death toll rises: At least three people have drowned in theRussian-occupied town of Oleshkyafter waters unleashed by the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam flooded “about 90%” of the area, the town’s exiled Ukrainian mayor told CNN. Meanwhile, at least five people in the Russian-occupied town of Nova Kakhovka, have died in the flooding, a Kremlin-backed official was quoted by state news agency TASS as saying.
  • Russian attacks:Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyhas claimed Russian forces have been shooting atrescuers trying to reach flooded areas. “When our forces try to get them [the residents] out, they are shot at by occupiers from a distance,” Zelensky told German outlet Bild. “As soon as our helpers try to rescue them, they are shot at,” he added.
  • Rescue efforts:Evacuations have been launched across southern Ukraine after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam along the Dnipro River. Nearly 2,000 people have now been evacuated from the “danger zone” and were being housed and fed in temporary aid shelters, Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said in a statement on Telegram.
  • UN in Zaporizhzhia: The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will strengthen its presence at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant next week, the UN nuclear watchdog said Wednesday.A new, larger team will replace the group currently at the plant in southern Ukraine when director Rafael Grossi visits the facility, according to an IAEA statement.
  • Widespread flooding: At least 600 square kilometers (232 square miles) of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region has been flooded following the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse on Tuesday, according to a regional military commander.The collapse of the dam and hydro-electric plant sent torrents of water gushing down the Dnipro River. Floodwaters have risen to an average level of 5.61 meters (18 feet), Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said in a statement on Telegram.

Rescue workers face “extreme danger” amid continued Russian shelling during flood evacuation efforts

From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (25)

Residents are evacuated from a flooded neighborhood in Kherson, Ukraine, on June 7.

Russia continues to shell Ukrainian-held parts of the Kherson region as rescue workers try to evacuate people from the floods, local Ukrainian officials report.

“Over the past day, the enemy made 34 attacks in the region… including one artillery attack on Kherson city,” a post on Telegram by the Kherson regional military administration said on Thursday.

“There were no civilian casualties or injuries as a result of the shelling,” it added.

This comes after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam and hydroelectric power plant early Tuesday prompting mass evacuations, flooding and fears for large-scale devastation across southern Ukraine.

Both Moscow and Kyiv blame each other for the breach. CNN cannot independently verify either claim.

According to Ukrainian officials on Telegram, “20 settlements are flooded in the liberated territories. 2,629 residential buildings are under water, and 971 more homes were flooded yesterday.”

Ukrainian police said on Telegram that they are, “patrolling the flooded streets of the regional center, villages and towns to prevent looting and identify those citizens who may be trapped in the water.”

3 people believed drowned in Russian-occupied town of Oleshky

From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (26)

Satellite image shows Oleshky, Ukraine, after flooding, on June 7.

At least three people have drowned in theRussian-occupied town of Oleshkyafter waters unleashed by the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam flooded “about 90%” of the area, the town’s exiled Ukrainian mayor told CNN.

Yevhen Ryshchuk said, “three people drowned there. We do not know how many more dead people there will be. I think there might be many more.”

Between 3,500 and 4,000 people still lived in Oleshky, including “many pensioners and bedridden people,” Ryshchuk said.

Rescuers are now trying to evacuate thousands of people in the flood zone, while many have climbed onto the roof of their house to escape the floods.

This comes after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russian forces have been shooting atrescuers trying to reach flooded areas in occupied parts of the Kherson region.

Meanwhile, in villages around Oleshky the situation is more complicated as “villages like Pravi Solontsi, for example, are 100% flooded. No one was allowed to go there… How could people be rescued?” Ryshchuk told CNN.

Zelensky visits flooded Kherson region

From CNN’s Jo Shelley
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (27)

During a working trip to Kherson region on June 8, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky visited the evacuation point for residents affected by the flooding caused by the blasting of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has visited Kherson after water unleashed by the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam flooded vast swathes of the region.

Zelensky discussed evacuations and relief for the flooded areas at a meeting, along with the “prospects for restoring the region’s ecosystem and the operational military situation in the man-made disaster area,” a statement posted to his official Telegram channel said.

He also “visited a crossing point where people are being evacuated from flooded areas,” and posted a video of himself meeting rescue workers.

At least 600square kilometers(232 miles) ofthe Khersonregion has been flooded, a regional military commander said Tuesday.

UN nuclear watchdog to strengthen presence at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant

From CNN's Jo Shelley
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (28)

Russian military vehicles escorting a motorcade of the IAEA expert mission arrive at theZaporizhzhianuclear power plant on March 29.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will strengthen its presence at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant next week, the UN nuclear watchdog said Wednesday.

A new, larger team will replace the group currently at the plant in southern Ukraine when director Rafael Grossi visits the facility next week, according to an IAEA statement.

Russia captured the nuclear plant inMarchlast year though it is still mainly operated by Ukrainian staff. Throughout the war, the IAEA has warned of a nuclear disaster following repeated shelling near the facility, which is Europe’s largest nuclear plant.

“Now more than ever, the IAEA’s reinforced presence at the Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant is of vital importance to help prevent the danger of a nuclear accident and its potential consequences for the people and the environment at a time of increased military activity in the region,” Grossi said.

Dam impact: The plantlies upstream from the Nova Kakhovka dam, which collapsed on Tuesday. The reservoir supplies cooling water to the plant and is crucial for its safety.

600 square kilometers of Kherson region is flooded, regional commander says

From CNN's Olga Voitovych

At least 600 square kilometers (232 square miles) of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region has been flooded following the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse on Tuesday, according to a regional military commander.

Floodwaters have risen to an average level of 5.61 meters, Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said in a statement on Telegram.

The collapse of the dam and hydro-electric plant sent torrents of water gushing down the Dnipro River.

The east bank, which sits lower than the west, suffered the worst of the flooding. Of the whole flooded area, 68% was on the east bank and 32% on the west, Prokudin said.

Nearly 2,000 people have now been evacuated from the “danger zone” and were being housed and fed in temporary aid shelters, Prokudin said.

Russian attacks: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday that Russian forces have been shooting atrescuers trying to reach flooded areas that are under Russian control. “When our forces try to get them [the residents] out, they are shot at by occupiers from a distance,” he told German outlet Bild. A volunteer taking part in the rescue efforts in Kherson told CNN that rescue workers face Russian shelling on nearly every sortie.

Climber proudly waves Ukrainian flag at top of Mount Everest

From CNN staff

Ukrainian climber Antonina Samoilova has summited Mount Everest for the second time and dedicated her success to the Ukrainian people.

She says she wanted to fly the Ukrainian flag “on top of the world” in support of her country.

WATCH:

Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (29)

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It's early morning in flooded Kherson, southern Ukraine. Here's what you need to know

From CNN staff

As the southern Kherson region reels from flooding brought by thecollapse of a major dam, Ukrainian officials sayRussia carried out strikesthat killed one person inthe region.

The Nova Kakhovka dam’s collapse has prompted evacuations forthousands of peopleand spurred fears of anecological catastrophe.

Here’s the latest:

  • Rescue efforts:Evacuations in flooded areasare ongoing after the Nova Kakhovka dam’s collapse on Tuesday, officials in Ukrainian-controlled Kherson said. The head of the Kherson region military administration, Oleksandr Prokudin, said: “We expect that the water will stay and accumulate for another day and then will gradually decrease for another five days.” At least 1,854 people have been evacuated since Tuesday, Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs said.
  • Refusal to leave:Some peopleare determined to stay in flooded homesrather than be evacuated,an aid worker in Kherson told CNN Wednesday.CARE Ukraine area managerSelena Kozakijevic said there are an “unknown number of people who are determined to stay in their houses even though they are flooded,” and many of them are elderly.
  • Russian attacks: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russian forces have been shooting atrescuers trying to reach flooded areas that are under Russian control. “When our forces try to get them [the residents] out, they are shot at by occupiers from a distance,” Zelensky told German outlet Bild. On Wednesday, a volunteer taking part in the rescue efforts in Kherson told CNN that volunteers face Russian shelling on nearly every sortie.
  • Call for help:Ukrainian Prime MinisterDenys Shmyhalappealed Wednesday to international aid organizations to help evacuate residents in flooded areas. He claimed occupying Russian forces have offered “no help” following the dam breach. Shmyhal addressed leaders of the UN and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in a video on Twitter, urging them to “act immediately.”
  • “Ecocide” probe:Ukraine is investigating theNova Kakhovka dam incidentasa war crime and as possible “ecocide,” or criminal environmental destruction, a statement from the Prosecutor General’s Office said Wednesday. Zelensky has described the situation as “an environmental bomb of mass destruction.”
  • Blow to Russia:Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said with the dam’s collapse, “the Russians have actually donemore damage to themselves.” Mailar said the flooding hit Russian fortifications and military positions.“Basically, the territory that is now under the control of the aggressor will be more affected,” she said.

Zelensky says Russians are shooting at rescuers in flooded areas

From CNN's Olga Voitovych, Yulia Kesaieva, Fred Pleitgen,Radina Gigova,Sarah DeanandHelen Regan
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (30)

Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during a press conference in Bulboaca on June 1.

Russian forces have been shooting atUkrainianrescuers trying to reach flooded areas in the Kherson region that are under Russian control, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday.

Rescuers are trying to evacuate thousands of people in the flood zone of the Russian-occupiedNova Kakhovka damand hydro-electric power plant, which collapsed on Tuesday sending torrents of water gushing down the Dnipro River.

Zelensky made the comments in an exclusive interview with German tabloid newspaper Bild published Wednesday.

On Wednesday, a volunteer taking part in the rescue efforts in Kherson told CNN volunteers face Russian shelling on nearly every sortie.

“Of course it is extremely dangerous,” said Roman Skabdrakov from the Kaiman Volunteer Group.

The destruction of the dam and subsequent flooding forced more than 1,800 people to flee their homes, inundated thousands of hectares of farmland, threatened vital water supplies and prompted warnings ofcatastrophic environmental damagefrom Ukrainian officials and experts.

Kyiv and Moscow have traded accusations over the dam’s destruction, without providing concrete proof that the other is culpable. The dam was occupied by Russia at the time of its collapse. It is not yet clear whether the dam was deliberately attacked or whether the breach was the result of structural failure.

Read more here.

China sees biggest trade increase with Russia in 2023, Chinese customs data shows

From CNN's Philip Wang

Bilateral trade between Russia andChinatotaled more than $93.8 billion from January to May in 2023, a 40.7% increase compared to the same period last year, data from China’s General Administration of Customs showed.

The data published on Wednesday also showed that China’s exports to Russia have reached $42.96 billion since January 2023, a 75.6% increase compared to 2022. The numbers of total trade values and total exports have seen their biggest jumps since the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with Russia becoming China’s fastest-growing trade partner in the world.

Russia has been hit by unprecedented Western sanctions since it invaded Ukraine and has been shut out of much of the global economy.

But China, which has declared “no limits” to its friendship with its northern neighbor, has thrown the Kremlin an economic lifeline, tempering the impact of its banishment from the global financial system.

Trade between China and other countries or regions have mostly fallen compared to last year.

Read more here.

International NGO warns of landmine risk after Nova Kakhovka dam collapse

From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London
Russia’s war in Ukraine | CNN (31)

People ride on a rubber boat in a flooded neighbourhood in Kherson, Ukraine, on June 7.

The international humanitarian organization CARE cautioned that landmines are likely floating in the flood of water unleashed by the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam in the southern Kherson region.

Martin also noted “the catastrophic consequences” the dam breach could have on the environment.

He said that oil had been released into the Dnipro River and warned that more could leak, echoing concerns thatthe head of Ukraine’s main hydropower generating companymade in an interview with CNN on Tuesday.

“At least 150 tons of oil have been released into the Dnipro River with the risk of further leakage of more than 300 tons,” Martin said. “This may lead to the Nyzhniodniprovskyi National Nature Park to disappear, which is more than 80,000 hectares of protected land.”

Russia's war in Ukraine is undermining global efforts to tackle the climate crisis, report says

From CNN's Laura Paddison

Thewar in Ukrainehas brought an enormous human toll: Thousands of civilians have been killed, millions have been forced to flee overseas, it has destroyed homes, schools and hospitals. But beyond the immediate, visceral impacts, the conflict is also causing aclimate disasterat a time when the world is already struggling to meet climate goals, according to a new report.

A team of carbon accounting experts has evaluated the climate impact of the first year of the conflict, which started in February 2022.

They found that a total of 120 million metric tons of planet-heating pollution can be attributed to the first 12 months of the war, according to the report published Wednesday. That’s equivalent to the annual emissions of Belgium, or those produced by nearly27 million gas-powered carson the road for a year.

The report, titled Climate Damage Caused by Russia’s War in Ukraine, follows on from afirst interim assessmentpresented at theUN COP27 climate conferencein November 2022.

Data was drawn from a wide range of sources, including satellites, scientific papers, expert interviews, industry reports and open-source intelligence.

Read more here.

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