Closing out tonight's liveblog with a gratuitous, but always welcome, kitten shot.
We'll be back tomorrow morning.
Good morning!
Interfax reports that Valeriy Chaly, the deputy head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, has said that Kyiv will not declare another unilateral cease-fire in the east.
Speaking on ICTV television late July 7, Chaly said, "the unilateral cease-fire proved to be inefficient. Only a bilateral cease-fire can be on the table now."
Ukraine's Information Resistance website reports that members of an illegal armed group shot mortar fire overnight at three checkpoints manned by Ukrainian troops.
The posts were located near Ilyinki, Marynovki, and Dykovo.
No deaths were reported. Information Resistance also reports that an additional city in the Donetsk region, Konstantynovka, has come under full control of national troops.
RFE's Crimea desk reports that Russian LDPR lawmaker Roman Khudyakov has proposed a redesign of the 100-ruble note to feature an image of Sevastopol.
Khudyakov says the note, which currently features a drawing of the Apollo statue atop the Bolshoi Theater, violates Russian law on the protection of children from harmful information, because it shows "intimate parts of the body."
Apollo's intimate parts were covered with fig leaves during the reconstruction of the Bolshoi, but the bank note remains unchanged.
Khudyakov suggested the bill should be marked with an "18+" warning.
"Given that this denomenation of banknote often falls into the hands of children as pocket money, I urge you to help change the design of the banknotes or otherwise bring it in line with current legislation," he wrote in a letter to the head of the Bank of Russia, Elvira Nabiullina.
UNIAN reports the Ukrainian Interior Ministry has announced it will conduct an internal investigation on all employees serving in the eastern city of Slovyansk, which was liberated from pro-Russian separatists on July 6.
Deputy Interior Minister Serhiy Yarovyi says the investigation is meant to determine which employees remained loyal to Ukraine and which colluded with the separatists.
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said police from throughout Ukraine are prepared to serve in Slovyansk to fill any gap left by the investigation.
Keeping it classy at Moscow's Kievsky railway station, where one of the men's bathroom now sports a Hollywood-style walk of stars who have angered the Kremlin by supporting Ukraine.
Members of the pro-separatist Donetsk People's Republic have kidnapped the heads of two of the region's biggest coal mines -- Skochinskiy and Kalinin.
"Novosti Donbassa" reports that Donetsk Mayor Oleksandr Lukyanchenko announced the two directors were taken from their offices this morning. The terms of their release are not yet clear.
BBC Ukraine reports that Turkey has condemned Russia's ruling prohibiting Refat Chubarov, the current leader of the Crimean Tatar Mejlis, from entering Crimea for the next five years.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the ban has no legal or legitimate reason, and constitutes a clear violation of the European Convention on Human Rights.
The ministry also said the ruling constitutes "intolerance" toward the national struggle of the Crimean Tatars.
Chubarov was banned from returning home from Kherson on July 5 when prosecutors said a speech he had given a day earlier showed "signs of extremism."
The statement comes a day after Chubarov and Tatar figurehead Mustafa Dzhemilev, who was given a similar five-year ban in April, met with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.