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Ten-year-old Sasha stands in a bomb shelter in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.
Ten-year-old Sasha stands in a bomb shelter in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

Follow all of the latest developments as they happen.

Final News Summary For September 29

-- We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog. Find it here.

-- Ukraine is marking 75 years since the World War II massacre of 33,771 Jews on the outskirts of Nazi-occupied Kyiv.

-- German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to stabilize a fragile cease-fire in Ukraine and do all he could to improve what Merkel called a "catastrophic humanitarian situation" in Syria.

-- Russia's Supreme Court has upheld a decision by a Moscow-backed Crimean court to ban the Mejlis, the self-governing body of Crimean Tatars in the occupied Ukrainian territory.

* NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv (GMT/UTC +3)

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08:55 20.7.2016
Journalist Pavel Sheremet was killed when a car he was driving exploded in Kyiv on the morning of July 20.
Journalist Pavel Sheremet was killed when a car he was driving exploded in Kyiv on the morning of July 20.

Prominent Belarusian Journalist Killed In Car Blast In Kyiv

KYIV -- Prominent Belarusian journalist Pavel Sheremet was killed early on July 20 when the car he was driving exploded in the Ukrainian capital.

Investigators are working to determine the cause of the explosion.

Pavel Sheremet
Pavel Sheremet

Sheremet, 44, was driving at about 7:45 a.m. to the office of the Ukrayinska Pravda news website, where he worked, when a red sedan owned by his partner and Ukrayinska Pravda owner Olena Prytula blew up.

Originally from Minsk, Sheremet had lived and worked for five years in Kyiv as a journalist for Ukrayinska Pravda and a presenter at Radio Vesti.

Sheremet had also worked within the Belarusian and Russian media.

He was widely respected in the Ukrainian journalistic community, which is mourning his passing.

“It's terrible. We're all very sad today,” Mustafa Nayyem, a member of parliament and former journalist at Ukrayinska Pravda, told RFE/RL by phone from the site of the explosion.

Sheremet, a crusader for human rights, freedom of speech, and freedom of the press, was imprisoned in Belarus in 1997 in a move widely viewed as political.

He had been especially critical of Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka's crackdown on dissent.

Sheremet's reporting earned him the Committee to Protect Journalists' International Press Freedom Award in 1999 and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's Prize for Journalism and Democracy in 2002.

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