Russian forces still attacking Kyiv as Ukraine takes back some areas, says Zelensky - Action News
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Russian forces still attacking Kyiv as Ukraine takes back some areas, says Zelensky

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskysaid late Monday that Russian forces are still attacking Kyiv, despite being driven out of Irpin, a suburb northwest of the capital that has seen heavy fighting.

Warning: This story includes images of violence and death

The latest:

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskysaid late Monday that Russian forces are still attacking Kyiv, despite being driven out of Irpin, a suburb northwest of the capital that has seen heavy fighting.

The mayor of Irpinsaid Monday the city has been "liberated" from Russian troops.

"We have good news today Irpin has been liberated," Mayor Oleksandr Markushyn said, adding that it expected further attacks and would defend itself.

Irpin gained wide attention after photos circulated of a mother and her two children who were killed by shelling as they tried to flee, their bodies lying on the pavement with luggage and a pet carrier nearby.

Zelenskysaid the Russians remain in control of northern suburbs and are trying to regroup after losing Irpin. He urged Ukrainians not to let up in the war.

"We still have to fight, we have to endure," Zelenskysaid in his nighttime video address to the nation. "We can't express our emotions now. We can't raise expectations, simply so that we don't burn out."

Zelenskysaid the situation remains tense in the northeast, around Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkhiv, and also in the eastern Donbas region and in the south around Mariupol, which remains blockaded by Russian troops. The president said no humanitarian corridors could be opened Monday out of the besieged city.

Zelenskysaid he spoke Monday with the leaders of Azerbaijan, Britain, Canada and Germany, urging them to strengthen the sanctions against Russia.

Additionally, a senior U.S. defence official said the U.S. believes the Ukrainians have retaken the town of Trostyanets, south of Sumy, in the east.

Local residents pass by a damaged Russian tank in the town of Trostyanets, some 400 kilometres east of Kyiv, on Monday. (Efrem Lukatsky/The Associated Press)

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. intelligence assessments, said Russian forces largely remained in defensive positions near Kyivand were making little forward progress elsewhere in the country.

The official said Russia appeared to be de-emphasizing ground operations near Kyiv and concentrating more on the Donbas,the predominantly Russian-speaking eastern region of Ukraine where Moscow-backed rebels have been fighting a separatist war for the past eight years.

Russian attempts to swiftly capture the capital Kyiv, Kharkivand other big cities in the northeast have been thwarted by well-organized Ukrainian defences and logistical challenges that stalled the Russian offensive.

Russian forces have been poundingthe outskirts of Kyivand other cities with artillery and air raids from a distance while putting their ground offensive on hold.

'Humanitarian catastrophe' inMariupol

Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne has quoted the mayor of Mariupol as saying that about 160,000 people remain in the besieged port cityand that a "humanitarian catastrophe" would ensue if more evacuations are not possible.

Vadym Boichenko said on Monday that Russian forces were preventing civilians from evacuating from the city and had been turning back some who tried to make it out.

The city, which had a pre-war population of more than 400,000, has seen some of the worst conditions since Russian forces invaded Ukraine. Russian forces have pounded the city, and scores of civilians have been unable to escape, with no access to essentials and cut off from communication with the shelling of cell, radio and TV towers.

WATCH |Mayor calls for evacuation of Mariupol:

Mayor calls for evacuation of Mariupol, says 160,000 people trapped

3 years ago
Duration 6:14
The mayor of the besieged Ukrainian port city of Mariupol is calling for the evacuation of the remaining population. He says about 160,000 people remain trapped in the city as fighting continues block-by-block.

Biden stands by Putin comments

U.S. President Joe Biden said Monday that he is "not walking anything back" after his weekend comment that Russian President Vladimir Putin "cannot remain in power," although Biden insisted he's not calling for regime change in Moscow.

"I was expressing the moral outrage that I felt toward this man," he said. "I wasn't articulating a policy change."

The U.S. president's jarring remark about Putin, which came at the end of a Saturday speech in Warsaw that was intended to rally democracies for a long global struggle against autocracy, stirred controversy in the United States and rattled some allies in Western Europe.

WATCH |Biden's comments 'unfortunate,' saysex-NATO commander:

Biden's comments on Putin 'unfortunate', former NATO commander says

3 years ago
Duration 9:30
Ukraines president pressed NATO leaders for more support at a meeting of the alliance this week. Appearing on Rosemary Barton Live, former NATO Supreme Allied Commander for Europe Gen. Joseph Ralston weighs in on the state of Russias war in Ukraine and what more NATO could do to help end the conflict.

Biden on Monday rejected the idea that his comment could escalate tensions over the war in Ukraine or that it would feed Russian propaganda about Western aggression.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Monday that Biden's statement "undoubtedly causes alarm." He added that the Kremlin will carefully monitor the U.S. president's statements.

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres responded to Biden's comment on Monday by saying, "We need military de-escalation and rhetoric de-escalation."

WATCH |UN seeks humanitarian ceasefire:

UN seeks humanitarian ceasefire in Ukraine

3 years ago
Duration 1:28
United Nations Secretary General Antnio Guterres says this is a good moment for the UN to seize the initiative in pushing for a humanitarian ceasefire in Ukraine.

Another oil depot hit

A missile attack hit an oil depot in western Ukraine late Monday, Rivne's regional governor said, marking the second attack on oil facilities in the region and the latest in a series of such attacks in recent days.

Western Ukraine has not seen ground combat, but missiles have struck oil depots and a military plant in Lviv, a major city close to Poland where hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have gone to escape fighting elsewhere.

Zelenskysuggested in an interview with Russian journalists released on Sunday that the attacks on oil depots are intended to disrupt the planting season in Ukraine, which is a major grain producer.

Millions of refugees

The number of refugees who have flooded out of Ukraine is nearing fourmillion, but data shows fewer people have crossed the border in recent days.

The total exodus through Sunday now stands at 3.87 million, according to the latest tally announced Monday by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). In the previous 24 hours, only 45,000 people crossed Ukraine's borders to seek safety, the slowest one-day count yet.

On Sunday,the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights says it has confirmed 1,119 civilian deaths and 1,790 people injured since Russia invaded Ukraine.

WATCH | Ukrainians refugees unsure of next steps:

Ukrainians flee their country unsure of next steps

3 years ago
Duration 3:49
Power & Politics host Vassy Kapelos speaks with a Ukrainian refugee who fled to Poland with her daughter.

Cyberattackcauses severe outage

A "massive" cyberattack knocked Ukraine's national telecommunications provider Ukrtelecom almost completely offline Monday in what network monitors called its most severe outage since Russia's Feb. 24 invasion.

The chair of Ukraine's state service for special communication, Yurii Shchyhol, blamed "the enemy" in a statement without specifically naming Russia. So that service could continue to Ukraine's military, most customers were cut off, he said.

The outage began Monday morning and persisted into the evening, when Shchyhol said services were being restored. Alp Toker, director of the London-based monitor Netblocks, said connectivity for Ukrtelecom has collapsed to just 13 per cent of pre-war levels.

Ukrtelecom is the seventh-largest provider in Ukraine in traffic moved but, as the pre-independence incumbent, it's likely the lone provider in much of rural Ukraine, said Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at the network management firm Kentik.

With files from Reuters