First modification:
Both countries resolved that they will stop hostilities for 12 hours in some sectors so that the cities that are the scene of confrontations are evacuated and thus prevent the number of civilian deaths from continuing to increase. Furthermore, the Kremlin confirmed a conclave between Lavrov and Kuleba in Turkey on March 10.
The conflict that began on February 24 with the Russian invasion of Ukrainian soil will have a brief de-escalation in these hours after both countries agreed to evacuate civilians in six sectors where the fighting is taking place.
For example, a portion of Kiev, Mariúpol and Sumy, three of the places most affected in recent hours, will have humanitarian corridors – a total of six – to get citizens to a safe place.
These are the most relevant news this Wednesday 9 about the war in Ukraine:
- 6:13 (BOG) UK bans its soldiers from traveling to Ukraine
The Ministry of Defense announced that “until further notice” all its members of the Armed Forces will not be able to move to Eastern Europe after information circulated about some soldiers who went to fight in Ukraine.
“All service personnel are prohibited from traveling to Ukraine until further notice,” the spokesman told the EFE agency. In addition, he warned that those who travel “will face disciplinary and administrative consequences.”
- 5:45 (BOG) Russia confirmed diplomatic meeting in Turkey
The spokeswoman for Russian diplomacy, Maria Zajárova, assured that Sergey Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba, foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine, respectively, will meet on Thursday, the Sputnik agency reported.
Based in the Turkish city of Antalya, it will take place within the framework of an economic forum that will take place from Friday and to which both officials had stipulated to attend.
So far, the parties have held three rounds of negotiations, but to no avail. In the third, which took place on March 7 at the Belarusian border, they advanced in logistical methods to establish humanitarian corridors.
- 05:13 (BOG) Ukraine deploys six humanitarian corridors amid ceasefire
For this Wednesday, Kiev established six routes to accelerate the evacuation of civilians in conflict zones after reaching an understanding with Moscow to stop the aggressions, said Iryna Vereshchuk, deputy prime minister and minister for the Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories.
“At half past six in the morning we received a message from the Russian Federation about the approval of our previously proposed routes,” he said in his Telegram account. In addition, he assured that Moscow made “a formal public commitment to a ceasefire from 9 a.m. on March 9.”
The corridors, which will be in operation from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. local time, will depart from the area between Energodar and Zaporizhia, Mariupol-Zaporiye, Volnovakha-Pokrovsk, Raisins-Lozova (in Kharkov), Sumy in direction to Poltava and finally, Kyiv on a tour that covers the Vorzel, Bucha, Borodyanka, Gostomel, Irpin, Stoyanka and Belgorodka regions.
Vereshchuk referred to “negative experiences” in recent failed attempts with humanitarian corridors, especially in the Mariupol area. Ukraine accused Russia of not fulfilling the agreed commitments.
With EFE, Reuters and AP
First modification:
Both countries resolved that they will stop hostilities for 12 hours in some sectors so that the cities that are the scene of confrontations are evacuated and thus prevent the number of civilian deaths from continuing to increase. Furthermore, the Kremlin confirmed a conclave between Lavrov and Kuleba in Turkey on March 10.
The conflict that began on February 24 with the Russian invasion of Ukrainian soil will have a brief de-escalation in these hours after both countries agreed to evacuate civilians in six sectors where the fighting is taking place.
For example, a portion of Kiev, Mariúpol and Sumy, three of the places most affected in recent hours, will have humanitarian corridors – a total of six – to get citizens to a safe place.
These are the most relevant news this Wednesday 9 about the war in Ukraine:
- 6:13 (BOG) UK bans its soldiers from traveling to Ukraine
The Ministry of Defense announced that “until further notice” all its members of the Armed Forces will not be able to move to Eastern Europe after information circulated about some soldiers who went to fight in Ukraine.
“All service personnel are prohibited from traveling to Ukraine until further notice,” the spokesman told the EFE agency. In addition, he warned that those who travel “will face disciplinary and administrative consequences.”
- 5:45 (BOG) Russia confirmed diplomatic meeting in Turkey
The spokeswoman for Russian diplomacy, Maria Zajárova, assured that Sergey Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba, foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine, respectively, will meet on Thursday, the Sputnik agency reported.
Based in the Turkish city of Antalya, it will take place within the framework of an economic forum that will take place from Friday and to which both officials had stipulated to attend.
So far, the parties have held three rounds of negotiations, but to no avail. In the third, which took place on March 7 at the Belarusian border, they advanced in logistical methods to establish humanitarian corridors.
- 05:13 (BOG) Ukraine deploys six humanitarian corridors amid ceasefire
For this Wednesday, Kiev established six routes to accelerate the evacuation of civilians in conflict zones after reaching an understanding with Moscow to stop the aggressions, said Iryna Vereshchuk, deputy prime minister and minister for the Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories.
“At half past six in the morning we received a message from the Russian Federation about the approval of our previously proposed routes,” he said in his Telegram account. In addition, he assured that Moscow made “a formal public commitment to a ceasefire from 9 a.m. on March 9.”
The corridors, which will be in operation from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. local time, will depart from the area between Energodar and Zaporizhia, Mariupol-Zaporiye, Volnovakha-Pokrovsk, Raisins-Lozova (in Kharkov), Sumy in direction to Poltava and finally, Kyiv on a tour that covers the Vorzel, Bucha, Borodyanka, Gostomel, Irpin, Stoyanka and Belgorodka regions.
Vereshchuk referred to “negative experiences” in recent failed attempts with humanitarian corridors, especially in the Mariupol area. Ukraine accused Russia of not fulfilling the agreed commitments.
With EFE, Reuters and AP
First modification:
Both countries resolved that they will stop hostilities for 12 hours in some sectors so that the cities that are the scene of confrontations are evacuated and thus prevent the number of civilian deaths from continuing to increase. Furthermore, the Kremlin confirmed a conclave between Lavrov and Kuleba in Turkey on March 10.
The conflict that began on February 24 with the Russian invasion of Ukrainian soil will have a brief de-escalation in these hours after both countries agreed to evacuate civilians in six sectors where the fighting is taking place.
For example, a portion of Kiev, Mariúpol and Sumy, three of the places most affected in recent hours, will have humanitarian corridors – a total of six – to get citizens to a safe place.
These are the most relevant news this Wednesday 9 about the war in Ukraine:
- 6:13 (BOG) UK bans its soldiers from traveling to Ukraine
The Ministry of Defense announced that “until further notice” all its members of the Armed Forces will not be able to move to Eastern Europe after information circulated about some soldiers who went to fight in Ukraine.
“All service personnel are prohibited from traveling to Ukraine until further notice,” the spokesman told the EFE agency. In addition, he warned that those who travel “will face disciplinary and administrative consequences.”
- 5:45 (BOG) Russia confirmed diplomatic meeting in Turkey
The spokeswoman for Russian diplomacy, Maria Zajárova, assured that Sergey Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba, foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine, respectively, will meet on Thursday, the Sputnik agency reported.
Based in the Turkish city of Antalya, it will take place within the framework of an economic forum that will take place from Friday and to which both officials had stipulated to attend.
So far, the parties have held three rounds of negotiations, but to no avail. In the third, which took place on March 7 at the Belarusian border, they advanced in logistical methods to establish humanitarian corridors.
- 05:13 (BOG) Ukraine deploys six humanitarian corridors amid ceasefire
For this Wednesday, Kiev established six routes to accelerate the evacuation of civilians in conflict zones after reaching an understanding with Moscow to stop the aggressions, said Iryna Vereshchuk, deputy prime minister and minister for the Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories.
“At half past six in the morning we received a message from the Russian Federation about the approval of our previously proposed routes,” he said in his Telegram account. In addition, he assured that Moscow made “a formal public commitment to a ceasefire from 9 a.m. on March 9.”
The corridors, which will be in operation from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. local time, will depart from the area between Energodar and Zaporizhia, Mariupol-Zaporiye, Volnovakha-Pokrovsk, Raisins-Lozova (in Kharkov), Sumy in direction to Poltava and finally, Kyiv on a tour that covers the Vorzel, Bucha, Borodyanka, Gostomel, Irpin, Stoyanka and Belgorodka regions.
Vereshchuk referred to “negative experiences” in recent failed attempts with humanitarian corridors, especially in the Mariupol area. Ukraine accused Russia of not fulfilling the agreed commitments.
With EFE, Reuters and AP
First modification:
Both countries resolved that they will stop hostilities for 12 hours in some sectors so that the cities that are the scene of confrontations are evacuated and thus prevent the number of civilian deaths from continuing to increase. Furthermore, the Kremlin confirmed a conclave between Lavrov and Kuleba in Turkey on March 10.
The conflict that began on February 24 with the Russian invasion of Ukrainian soil will have a brief de-escalation in these hours after both countries agreed to evacuate civilians in six sectors where the fighting is taking place.
For example, a portion of Kiev, Mariúpol and Sumy, three of the places most affected in recent hours, will have humanitarian corridors – a total of six – to get citizens to a safe place.
These are the most relevant news this Wednesday 9 about the war in Ukraine:
- 6:13 (BOG) UK bans its soldiers from traveling to Ukraine
The Ministry of Defense announced that “until further notice” all its members of the Armed Forces will not be able to move to Eastern Europe after information circulated about some soldiers who went to fight in Ukraine.
“All service personnel are prohibited from traveling to Ukraine until further notice,” the spokesman told the EFE agency. In addition, he warned that those who travel “will face disciplinary and administrative consequences.”
- 5:45 (BOG) Russia confirmed diplomatic meeting in Turkey
The spokeswoman for Russian diplomacy, Maria Zajárova, assured that Sergey Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba, foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine, respectively, will meet on Thursday, the Sputnik agency reported.
Based in the Turkish city of Antalya, it will take place within the framework of an economic forum that will take place from Friday and to which both officials had stipulated to attend.
So far, the parties have held three rounds of negotiations, but to no avail. In the third, which took place on March 7 at the Belarusian border, they advanced in logistical methods to establish humanitarian corridors.
- 05:13 (BOG) Ukraine deploys six humanitarian corridors amid ceasefire
For this Wednesday, Kiev established six routes to accelerate the evacuation of civilians in conflict zones after reaching an understanding with Moscow to stop the aggressions, said Iryna Vereshchuk, deputy prime minister and minister for the Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories.
“At half past six in the morning we received a message from the Russian Federation about the approval of our previously proposed routes,” he said in his Telegram account. In addition, he assured that Moscow made “a formal public commitment to a ceasefire from 9 a.m. on March 9.”
The corridors, which will be in operation from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. local time, will depart from the area between Energodar and Zaporizhia, Mariupol-Zaporiye, Volnovakha-Pokrovsk, Raisins-Lozova (in Kharkov), Sumy in direction to Poltava and finally, Kyiv on a tour that covers the Vorzel, Bucha, Borodyanka, Gostomel, Irpin, Stoyanka and Belgorodka regions.
Vereshchuk referred to “negative experiences” in recent failed attempts with humanitarian corridors, especially in the Mariupol area. Ukraine accused Russia of not fulfilling the agreed commitments.
With EFE, Reuters and AP