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A woman carries a baby as she passes destroyed houses following what locals say was overnight shelling by Ukrainian forces in the eastern town of Slovyansk on June 9.
A woman carries a baby as she passes destroyed houses following what locals say was overnight shelling by Ukrainian forces in the eastern town of Slovyansk on June 9.

Live Blog: Crisis In Ukraine (Archive)

Summary for June 9

-- Ukraine's Foreign Ministry says that Moscow and Kyiv have reached a "mutual understanding" on key parts of a plan proposed by President Petro Poroshenko for ending violence in separatist-controlled eastern Ukraine.

-- Reports say up to 20 armed gunmen were trying to seize property from a factory (Topaz) that makes communications and electronic-warfare equipment in the Donetsk region.

-- A deputy foreign minister says Russia will consider any expansion of NATO forces near its borders a "demonstration of hostile intentions" and "take the necessary political and military-technological measures to support our security."

-- A two-man crew for Russian Zvezda TV arrived in Moscow after being released from detention in Ukraine.

-- Serbian officials say their own work on the Russian-backed South Stream gas pipeline will have to be suspended after Bulgaria stopped construction of its portion based on EU and U.S. concerns.

-- Ukrainian security forces are reportedly still battling pro-Russian separatists in the east near Slovyansk and Donetsk.

*NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv
13:36 23.5.2014
13:33 23.5.2014
Short news item on Putin's latest comments.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said sanctions imposed on Russia for its actions in Ukraine will end up having a "boomerang effect" on the Western world.

Speaking at an international business forum in St. Petersburg on May 23, Putin said the EU and the United States are only aggravating the global economic crisis by their actions.

Putin also said the model of a unipolar world has failed and said Moscow must diversity its exports away from energy products.

He slammed Ukraine's current leadership for its inability to pay its natural-gas debts, accusing Kyiv of misusing its role as a transit country for Russian natural gas exports to Europe.

The conference has been boycotted by the leaders of dozens of Western companies in response to Russia’s annexation of Crimea and its role in the Ukrainian crisis.
13:09 23.5.2014
12:55 23.5.2014
We've just updated our news wrap on Ukraine for the day.
12:09 23.5.2014
Amid tensions in Ukraine's east, border guards in Kharkiv Oblast get some relief through entertainment, religious services, and education. Video from our Ukrainian Service.
Entertainers Boost Troop Morale On Ukraine's Eastern Border
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12:00 23.5.2014
Update from our news desk on Lavrov's comments:
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told an international security conference in Moscow that the West sparked the current conflict in Ukraine by its "megalomania" and needed to learn the "right lesson" from the Ukraine crisis.

Lavrov said at the May 23 conference that in order to help the Ukrainian people out of the crisis, "it is necessary to…stop encouraging xenophobic and neo-Nazi sentiments."

Lavrov accused Western nations of "extending the geopolitical space under their control to the east" after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall and the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

Earlier, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu addressed the conference and said Ukraine had "effectively slid into civil war."

Shoigu told delegates that a "hotbed of tension has been artificially created in Europe" and that "foreign values are being forced on people under the guise of democracy."
10:56 23.5.2014
Russian Deputy Defence Minister Anatoly Antonov has just said that Moscow plans to pull back "100 percent" of its forces near its border with Ukraine "within a few days."
10:44 23.5.2014
From our very own Glenn Kates in Dnipropetrovsk.
08:24 23.5.2014
From our news desk:
Candidates vying to become Ukraine's next president are due to hold their final campaign rallies on May 23, one day after 17 Ukrainian soldiers were killed by pro-Russian separatists in the east.

The May 25 vote pits front-runner Petro Poroshenko, a 48-year-old confectionary magnate, against nearly 20 other challengers, including former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. A second round is expected June 15.

Poroshenko is pledging to resolve the unrest in the east within three months if elected.

Those promises come after the Health Ministry said 16 soldiers were killed in an ambush in the Donetsk town of Volnovakha on the morning of May 22, while the Defense Ministry said another soldier was killed near Rubizhne in Luhansk.

Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk accused Russia of trying to disrupt the vote. He called for an urgent meeting of the UN Security Council to discuss the crisis.
07:51 23.5.2014

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