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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
12:33 3.6.2014
12:35 3.6.2014
12:38 3.6.2014
12:40 3.6.2014
Ukraine's acting President Oleksandr Turchynov speaking today in parliament, via Reuters:
"Yesterday forces of the antiterrorist operation destroyed terrorist checkpoints. Terrorist units were attacked -- so the attempt to destroy our border post located in the Luhansk suburbs was prevented."

"Early this morning, a lot of terrorists who were located in a hidden camp in the industrial area near the city of Severodonetsk were destroyed. Divisions of the antiterrorist operation are carrying out a set of active measures to free northern Donetsk."

"The aim of the antiterrorist operation is to stop terrorism, to stop the destruction of people, to stop soldiers of another country who are killing, torturing and raping. The aim of the operation is to stop this crime. This crime will be stopped, regardless of whatever and whoever is screaming and saying, no matter the threats being heard here from the podium or in the east of our border."
12:41 3.6.2014
U.S. President Barack Obama has announced that he will be asking Congress for $1 billion to finance an increased U.S. military presence in Eastern Europe in the wake of the Ukraine crisis. He said Russia needs to use its influence with Ukrainian separatists to get them to lay down their arms.
12:46 3.6.2014
At his televised press conference, Obama says the world has learned from history that peoples' ability to make their own determination about their future is the cornerstone of European security, and that that is threatened by Russia's actions in Ukraine.
12:49 3.6.2014
13:02 3.6.2014

From our newsroom:
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen says Russia's "irresponsible and illegal actions" in Ukraine represent a "serious challenge to a Europe whole, free, and at peace."

Rasmussen was speaking at the start of a two-day meeting of defense ministers from the alliance's 28 countries in Brussels to discuss whether to station permanent forces in the bloc’s easternmost states in response to Russia’s moves.

The NATO chief said Moscow's behavior shows that it "is ready to use force to redraw borders" and to destabilize sovereign nations in pursuit of its geopolitical goals.

He said Russia's actions "threaten the stability of the entire euro-Atlantic area" and called for a NATO that is "fitter, faster, and more flexible,"

Earlier on June 3, U.S. President Barack Obama, who is in Poland, proposed $1 billion to finance extra U.S. military deployments to Eastern Europe amid the ongoing crisis in Ukraine.
13:08 3.6.2014
RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service spoke with Ukrainian Orthodox priest Ivan Katkalo, who told RFE/RL the local residents and armed men in Russian Cossack uniforms who seized his church in the village of Perevalne in Crimea threatened to kill him if he refused to leave.
Pro-Russian Cossacks Seize Ukrainian Church In Crimea
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