
Russian attack kills three in Zaporizhzhia region, governor says
Governor Ivan Fedorov, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said the three people were killed in the daytime strike on the town of Stepnohirsk. Private homes were destroyed.
Reuters could not independently confirm the report.
In Kamianske, a town a few kilometers south of Stepnohirsk on the Dnipro River in Zaporizhzhia region, a military spokesman said on Saturday that Ukrainian troops were holding on to their positions despite Russian attempts to take control.
Fedorov's account came amid reports in recent days of new Russian military action in Ukraine's east and southeast.
Ukraine's top commander said Moscow's forces were changing their tactics, using smaller sabotage units in a bid to push forward with their drive through eastern Donetsk region.
Russian forces have focused their drive on parts of Donetsk region, particularly the logistics center of Pokrovsk, under Russian attack for months.
Russia's Defence Ministry said on Thursday its forces had scored a major gain by capturing the town of Chasiv Yar, to the northeast, after months of fighting, though Ukraine has not acknowledged this. Russia's Defence Ministry on Saturday said it had taken control of another village closer to Pokrovsk.
Denis Pushilin, the Russia-installed head of parts of Donetsk region under Moscow's control, said in a video posted online on Sunday the capture of Chasiv Yar, located on high ground would enable them to make further gains.
Oleksandr Syrskyi, Ukraine's top commander, writing on Facebook on Saturday, said his forces faced the fiercest fighting around Pokrovsk and in two other sectors.
"At the same time, the Russians are resorting to the tactic of 'total infiltration' with the increase of sabotage actions in our rear," he wrote. "It is in this way that they are trying to enter Pokrovsk."
Ukrainian forces, he said, had set up "counter-sabotage reserves, whose task is to seek out and destroy enemy reconnaissance and sabotage groups."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
19 minutes ago
- BBC News
Warwickshire MP drives 1,300 miles to deliver aid to Ukraine
An MP has driven an ambulance full of humanitarian aid 1,300 miles to Taylor, MP for North Warwickshire and Bedworth, completed the three-day trip from her constituency to the Poland-Ukraine border on 31 journey formed part of a long-running charitable initiative formed by LKQ UK & Ireland, a company that distributes automotive Taylor said she had been "honoured" to have been asked by the company to drive the ambulance, adding it was an "extraordinary experience". A convoy of ambulances started their journey at LKQ's headquarters in Birch Coppice Business Park in Tamworth, included overnight stops in Germany and Poland before reaching the Taylor's ambulance was the 50th to be driven in the initiative. Dawid Kozlowski, a demand supply planner at LKQ UK & Ireland, has co-ordinated the delivery of more than 200 tonnes of aid since the war broke out in 2022, including 34 ambulances and more than £6,000 worth of prescription medicine."We have always focused on the most practical and immediate needs – medical supplies, vehicles, and support for children," he Kozlowski, who has also overseen more than a thousand Christmas gifts to Ukrainian children, was honoured with a Volunteer Award in BBC CWR's Make A Difference Awards in 2023."The suffering of those in Ukraine continues to be a big issue at the heart of my community, and the support we've had from the company to help those in need has made an incredible difference," he said. Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Netherlands to start NATO's new Ukraine weapons finance scheme with $578 mln payment
AMSTERDAM, Aug 4 (Reuters) - The Netherlands will be the first contributor to NATO's new "Priority Ukraine Requirements List" (PURL) financing mechanism for Ukraine weapons with a 500 million euros ($578 million) payment, the Dutch defence ministry said on Monday. U.S. President Donald Trump said last month the U.S. would supply weapons to Ukraine, paid for by European allies, but did not provide details on how this would work. Reuters reported on Friday that NATO countries, Ukraine, and the U.S. were developing a new Ukraine weapons financing mechanism. ($1 = 0.8649 euros)


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Trump envoy to visit Moscow this week before deadline for ending Ukraine war
Donald Trump has said he will dispatch his special envoy to Moscow this week before his Friday deadline for progress to be made on ending the war in Ukraine. Trump said Steve Witkoff would visit Moscow on Wednesday or Thursday. When asked on Sunday what message Witkoff would take to Russia and what Vladimir Putin could do to avoid new sanctions, the US president answered: 'Yeah, get a deal where people stop getting killed.' In Kyiv, there is little expectation that Witkoff will make a breakthrough with Putin, but a hope that Trump's changed rhetoric and tougher stance on Moscow may lead to a real change in US support for Ukraine. Trump came into office convinced he could do a deal with Putin, but in recent weeks appears to have become increasingly frustrated with Russia's actions. On Thursday he described its continued attacks on civilian areas in Ukraine as 'disgusting' and on Sunday said that two nuclear submarines that he ordered to be deployed after online threats from the former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev were now 'in the region', without giving further details. Trump had initially announced in July a 50-day deadline for Russia and Ukraine to end the war, but said last week he said he no longer believed Russia was serious about ending the war and shortened it to '10 or 12' days, later clarified as this Friday, 8 August. Trump has previously said the new measures he has in mind if the deadline is not met could involve 'secondary tariffs' targeting Russia's remaining trade partners, such as China and India. Mykhailo Podolyak, an aide to Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said if Russia did not change its course by Friday, Kyiv would expect the 'irreversible logistics' of secondary sanctions on Russian oil exports to be set in motion. 'After that he'll look whether this is helping to bring about the end of the war or not, and if not then he will move to the next step,' said Podolyak, in an interview in Kyiv. The next move, he said, could be further sanctions, and the increased militarisation of Ukraine. 'Trump has already said he's ready to sell Europe as much weapons as they want [to pass to Ukraine]. Before he didn't say that … This is already a different conception of the world,' he said. Before that, though, all eyes will be on Witkoff's visit to Moscow. On previous trips, he has held long one-on-one meetings with Putin and has spoken of his warm feelings for the Russian leader. On one occasion Putin gifted him an oil painting of Trump, on another, Witkoff arrived without an interpreter and used a Kremlin-provided translator. The camaraderie has left both Kyiv and other US allies wondering whether Witkoff is capable of delivering harsh messages to Moscow, although his visit this week will be the first since Trump's rhetoric on Ukraine became noticeably harsher. The Kremlin said on Monday it was 'always happy to see Mr Witkoff in Moscow' and a meeting with Putin was possible, the spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters. Putin said on Friday that he was in favour of 'a lasting and stable peace on solid foundations that would satisfy both Russia and Ukraine, and would ensure the security of both countries'. Despite periodically making such statements, Putin has also made clear that Russia's maximalist war goals remain essentially unchanged, demanding as a minimum control over four Ukrainian regions to which Moscow has laid claim, and a commitment that Ukraine will never join Nato. Direct talks between Russia and Ukraine have taken place in Turkey, with the third round in Istanbul last month, but the last set of talks broke down in less than an hour and the only substantive outcome from the meetings has been a series of agreements on prisoner exchanges. Zelenskyy said on Sunday that a new exchange agreed at the last meeting in Istanbul would result in 1,200 Ukrainian troops returning home. Zelenskyy has said he wants to meet directly with Putin, with Trump or Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as a mediator, but the Russian president has said he sees no point in a meeting until the outline of a ceasefire has been drawn up. However, the delegation he sent to Turkey, led by the former culture minister and patriotic author Vladimir Medinsky, suggests the Kremlin is not serious about a deal. 'Those countries who thought Russia was ready for talks, and that the war could end at any moment if Ukraine would only agree to negotiations, they can now see that Russia is not ready for any real talks,' said Podolyak. Russia continues to target Ukraine with almost nightly drone and missile attacks. Last week was one of the deadliest for some time in terms of civilian casualties, with one set of attacks on Kyiv killing 31 people, including five children. Both sides continue to target infrastructure in the opposing country with drones. Russia's ministry of defence said on Monday that its air defences had intercepted 61 Ukrainian drones overnight.