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Moscow Court Upholds Extending Pretrial Detention Of Ukrainian Sailors
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WATCH: Moscow Court Upholds Extending Pretrial Detention Of Ukrainian Sailors

Live Blog: A New Government In Ukraine (Archive Sept. 3, 2018-Aug. 16, 2019)

-- EDITOR'S NOTE: We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog as of August 17, 2019. You can find it here.

-- A court in Moscow has upheld a lower court's decision to extend pretrial detention for six of the 24 Ukrainian sailors detained by Russian forces along with their three naval vessels in November near the Kerch Strait, which links the Black Sea and Sea of Azov.

-- The U.S. special peace envoy to Ukraine, Kurt Volker, says Russian propaganda is making it a challenge to solve the conflict in the east of the country.

-- Two more executives of DTEK, Ukraine's largest private power and coal producer, have been charged in a criminal case on August 14 involving an alleged conspiracy to fix electricity prices with the state energy regulator, Interfax reported.

-- A Ukrainian deputy minister and his aide have been detained after allegedly taking a bribe worth $480,000, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau said on Facebook.

*Time stamps on the blog refer to local time in Ukraine

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Zelenskiy calls on Putin to meet face-to-face for talks:

By RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service

KYIV -- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to talk.

In a July 8 video statement on Facebook, Zelenskiy said he was ready to hold talks with Putin in the Belarusian capital, Minsk.

"We need to talk? We do. Let us discuss who Crimea belongs to and who is not there in Donbas," Zelenskiy said, adding that he wanted the leaders of the United States, Germany, France, and the United Kingdom present at the talks.

Moscow annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula in March 2014. Shortly thereafter, Moscow began supporting separatists in eastern Ukraine, a region known as the Donbas, in a conflict in which some 13,000 people have been killed since April 2014.

Russia has denied its involvement in the Donbas conflict.

Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters in Moscow that the Kremlin will consider Zelenskiy's call for talks with Putin, but added that he was "not prepared" to respond at the moment.

"Firstly, we need to understand whether such a meeting has any prospects, and secondly, we need to understand what kind of new format is being offered," Peskov said.

Zelenskiy's video statement comes amid concerns voiced by Ukrainian politicians and activists regarding the television "bridge" proposed by Russia's state-owned Rossia-1 channel and Ukraine's NewsOne television network, which is associated with Viktor Medvedchuk, the head of Ukraine's pro-Kremlin Opposition Platform -- For Life party.

On July 7, a Russian state TV presenter known for his fiery anti-Western diatribes, Dmitry Kiselyov, announced that the Russian-Ukrainian "TV bridge" called We Need To Talk would be held on July 12.

Zelenskiy called the project "a cheap and dangerous PR tool " ahead of the snap parliamentary elections scheduled for July 21.

He said that the purpose of the show was "to divide" Ukrainians into "two camps," pro-Russian and pro-EU, ahead of the polls.

He also said that the program might be used by Russia to present Ukrainians as a "junta" with whom there is no way to have a dialogue and who violate "freedom of speech."

Meanwhile, NewsOne announced shortly after Zelenskiy's video-statement that it decided to cancel the show due to "threats."

Marathon "bridge" programs became very popular in the final years of the Soviet Union, when, in the wake of Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms, ordinary Soviet and American citizens could talk during televised shows. (w/TASS, UNIAN, Gordon, and Interfax)

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