Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,364

On Wednesday, November 19, 2018, this is how things are going.

Fighting

  • Authorities in Kharkiv, the second-largest city in Ukraine, reported that five people were hurt in an apartment building as a result of Russian drone strikes on two central districts, Slobidskyi and Osnovyansk, which set off a fire.
  • Ihor Terekhov, the mayor of Kharkiv, reported that 22 residents had been evacuated from one section of the damaged apartment complex, while another drone struck a medical facility, injuring a doctor, and causing damage to the building and nearby cars.
  • Oleh Syniehubov, the governor of the Kharkiv region, claimed that in total, seven people were hurt in the attack thanks to 11 drones deployed.
  • On Wednesday morning, Russia’s civil aviation authority announced that it was temporarily halting flights at the southern Russian airport, citing only the safety of the situation.
  • On Tuesday, the city’s mayor reported that four Ukrainian drones were shot down by Russian air defenses on their way to Moscow. Russia’s aviation watchdog reported that Sheremetyevo and Vnukovo, Russia’s two biggest airports, temporarily stopped all air traffic before later reopening.
  • In the Donetsk region, which is under Russian control, Ukrainian drone attacks have seriously damaged the power grid. About 65 percent of local residents were without power, according to Denis Pushilin, the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic’s head, who was appointed by Moscow.
  • The commander of Ukraine’s drone forces claimed that Ukraine attacked two thermal power stations in Donetsk, which is located in the Russian-occupied territory. Major Robert Brovdi claimed that his forces had struck the Starobeshivska and Zuivska power plants.
  • Ukraine called it a “significant development” when it used ATACMS missiles from the United States to attack Russian military installations. The military continued to use long-range strike capabilities, including systems like ATACMS, according to a statement from the military.
  • According to his ministry’s outlet, Zvezda, Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov regularly inspects troops fighting in eastern Ukraine. Belousov presented awards to military personnel in a video posted by Zvezda.

military assistance

  • To help Ukraine maintain its current Patriot missile air defense systems, the Trump administration approved a $ 105 million deal. Upgrades to M901 and M903 launchers, which can simultaneously fire more missiles, are included in the sale.
  • Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced on Tuesday that Spain will provide Ukraine with a new $ 710 million military aid package.
  • Along with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Sanchez said, “Your fight is ours,” adding that Vladimir Putin’s “neoimperialism” aims to “weaken the European project and everything it stands for.”

Regional security

  • Members of parliament expressed concern that the United Kingdom lacks a strategy for defending itself from military assault, and that at least 13 locations have been identified as new manufacturing facilities, according to a report.
  • Authorities have located two Ukrainian nationals, according to Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who had a history of colliding with Russia and caused an explosion on a Ukrainian railway line.
  • According to Tusk, “the most crucial information is that we have located the perpetrators of the sabotage,” according to Tusk. We are certain that the railroad infrastructure violation and the rail explosion attempt were made with the intention to end railroad traffic.
  • After Warsaw placed the explosion on a railroad en route to Ukraine on the hands of two Ukrainian citizens who it claimed were being recruited by Russian intelligence, Poland was accused of succumbing to Russian xandria.
  • Soldiers from the NATO alliance gathered in Nowa Deba, Poland, to practice counterdrone skills on Tuesday. They included members from the US, the UK, and Romania.
  • According to a draft document that the Reuters news agency saw, the European Commission will make a new proposal to accelerate the development and purchase of cutting-edge defense technologies.
During a presentation in Nowa Deba, Poland, a US soldier [Kacper Pempel/Reuters] poses with an AS3 interceptor, a component of the US-made, AI-powered counterdrone system MEROPS.

Ceasefire

  • Zelenskyy promised to “reactivate” the diplomatic dialogue to put an end to the Russian-Russian conflict. Later, Selenskyy announced that he would travel to Turkiye on Wednesday to try to resume discussions with Russia about ending the Ukrainian conflict.
  • Since their July meeting in Istanbul, there haven’t been any face-to-face discussions between Kyiv and Moscow.
  • Another Ukrainian official involved in the meeting’s preparations, according to the AFP news agency, Steve Witkoff, a US special envoy, is scheduled to attend the discussions with Zelenskyy in Turkiye.
  • At the UN climate conference in Brazil, Ukrainian deputy minister for economy, environment, and agriculture Pavlo Kartashov announced that the country plans to receive $ 43 billion in climate compensation from Russia to support a planet-friendly rebuild.
  • The climate shockwaves of this aggression will be felt far beyond our borders and into the future, according to Kartashov, who lives in Ukraine directly.

diplomacy and politics

  • A major opposition party physically prevented lawmakers from removing two ministers from parliament on Tuesday because of a corruption investigation and demanded that the entire cabinet be removed.
  • Zelenskyy traveled to Spain for one day on Tuesday, and he got to see Pablo Picasso’s Guernica, a painting that depicts the horrors of war, and specifically the German and Italian forces’ bombardment of civilian targets.

Economy

  • Rostec, a Russian state conglomerate, reported that as a result of the Ukraine war, domestic orders had fallen by half since 2022. Russia’s defense exports were second only to the US in the world up until 2022, but the volumes dropped because we had to give our army the majority of our production, Rostec CEO Sergey Chemezov told reporters.
  • As Moscow looks for new revenue sources to boost its economy during its nearly four-year conflict with Ukraine, Russian lawmakers on Tuesday approved new tax increases. The State Duma, the lower house of parliament, gave the crucial second reading to a bill increasing the value-added tax from 20% to 22%.

Sanctions

  • According to sources with knowledge of the situation, US oil company Exxon Mobil and rival Chevron Corp are considering options to purchase shares of sanctioned Russian oil company Lukoil’s international assets.
  • According to the sources, Exxon is considering options for Lukoil assets in Kazakhstan, where both the US and the Russian company own stakes in the Karachaganak and Tengiz fields. Another partner in these assets, Chevron, is also researching purchase options.

Families of Bangladesh protest victims want Hasina ‘brought back, hanged’

As a special court sentenced former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan and former prime minister Sheikh Hasina and her close aide, former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan, to death for crimes against humanity in Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka, and Shahina Begum wept in agony.

Sajjat Hosen Sojal, Begum’s 20-year-old son, was shot and burned by the police on August 5, 2024, just before a student-led uprising forced Hasina to step down and flee the nation she had ruled with an iron fist for 15 years.

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Six student protesters were killed that day in Ashulia, a readymade clothing store on the outskirts of Dhaka, according to the prosecution: five were shot and their bodies burned, and another was allegedly burned alive inside the police station.

The killings, allegedly ordered by Hasina to hold onto onto the hold of power, came as part of a brutal crackdown by security forces against the ‘July Uprising’, in which more than 1,400 protesters were killed, the UN claims.

The two were sentenced to death on Monday after a months-long absentee trial because Hasina and Khan had fled to neighboring India, and former police chief Chowdhury Abdullah al-Mamun, who had turned himself in as a state witness, received a five-year jail term.

As the historic verdict sparked a rise in emotions in the nation of 170 million people, Begum told Al Jazeera on Monday night, saying, “I cannot be calm until she is brought back and hanged in this country.”

“In that police station, my son screamed for assistance. He was not saved by anyone. I’ll be at ease until the burners can never again harm another mother’s child.

[Photo by Shahina Begum] Begum and her son Sojal at the City University campus where he studied.

Many people are debating whether Hasina will face justice as hundreds of families who lost loved ones during the uprising last year come to terms with Monday’s landmark sentencing.

Questions remain as to whether India, a close ally of Hasina during her 15 years of rule, would extradite them and Khan, or whether it would help them avoid justice.

Begum, a resident of Shyampur village in northern Gaibandha district, remarked, “They took five minutes to burn my son alive, but it took almost a year and a half to deliver this verdict.”

Can she really be brought back from India by this government? What would happen if Hasina and her coworkers were to be protected by the new government? Who can guarantee that these murderers won’t be able to flee?”

Sentence must be carried out, according to the law.

Mir Mahbubur Rahman Snigdho, whose brother Mir Mugdho was shot dead during the uprising, urged the authorities to bring her back to Bangladesh on Monday as hundreds of people gathered outside the tribunal building to enforce the verdict.

Syed Gazi Rahman, the father of the protester Mutasir Rahman, was standing close to him. He demanded that Hasina be executed “swiftly and publicly” and that the sentence be swiftly and publicly delivered.

Family members of Abu Sayeed welcomed the death sentence against the former prime minister at Bhabnapur Jaforpara village in the northern district of Rangpur, which is 300 kilometers (186 miles) away.

Sayeed was the first victim of the July Uprising, which began with mostly student-led demonstrations against a contentious quota system for government jobs that disproportionately favored the young people who fought for Pakistan’s independence in 1971.

The police fatally shot Sayeed, a student leader, on July 16, 2024, while demonstrating in Rangpur.

“My heart has finally cooled.” I’m satisfied. His father, Mokbul Hossain, called for his daughter to be immediately brought back from India and put to death in Bangladesh.

“My son has vanished. I’m in pain because of it. His mother, Monowara Begum, called for the sentence to be carried out. After the verdict, she claimed, the family gave out candy to those who came by.

Shahriar Khan Anas, the mother of the 10-year-old student who was fatally shot on August 5, 2024 in Dhaka’s Chankharpul neighborhood, claimed the verdict was “only a consolation.”

She said, “Justice will be served the day it is put to death.”

Even 1, 400 death sentences as a mother would not suffice to serve the needs of thousands of mothers, according to the author. When a ruler uses mass murder to cling to power, the world must be aware of the consequences. God may give you some time, but He won’t give you any.

Dipti expressed disappointment with the trial’s outcome regarding former police chief al-Mamun.

Because Abdullah al-Mamun murdered our children as a member of the country’s security forces, he should have received a longer prison term, she said.

No dictator should rise once more.

Following Hasina’s death sentence, several processions took place on Monday in Dhaka and other parts of the nation.

Second-year undergraduate student Ar Rafi, a student in his second year, said they would organize a march to demand Hasina’s extradition from India.

“We’re content for the moment,” we said. However, we want Hasina to be executed and returned from India. He told Al Jazeera, “We, the students, will remain on the streets until her sentence is carried out.”

Following the tribunal’s decision, a group called Maulik Bangla staged a symbolic performance of Hasina’s execution in the Shahbagh intersection area of Dhaka.

According to Sharif Osman bin Hadi, a spokesperson for the non-partisan cultural organization Inquilab Manch (Revolution Front), “This is a message that no dictator should rise again.”

The ruling was welcomed by political parties, including Bangladesh’s main opposition, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami.

According to BNP leader Salahuddin Ahmed, “This decision proves that no matter how powerful a fascist or autocrat becomes, they will one day have to stand in the dock.”

Mia Golam Porwar, a leader of the Jamaat, claimed the ruling demonstrated that “no head of government or powerful political leader is above the law” and that the verdict offers “some measure of comfort” to the families of the people who died during the uprising.

The UN human rights office reiterated its opposition to the death penalty and reaffirmed that it was “an important moment for the victims” when it cited the verdict as “an important moment for the victims.”

The victims “deserved much better,” according to Amnesty International, and the rights organization warned that rushed proceedings in absentia could undermine justice.

The death penalty only adds to human rights violations, according to the author, “but victims need justice and accountability.” It is the most cruel, hateful, and inhumane punishment that has no place in the legal system, it said.

The verdict, according to the victims’ families, was seen as a recognition of the brutality of the crackdown, and raises hopes for a resolution.

Atikul Gazi, a 21-year-old TikToker from Dhaka’s Uttara region who survived being shot at close range on August 5, 2024, but ultimately lost his left arm, said, “This verdict sends a message that justice is inevitable.”

Congress passes bill to release ‘Epstein files’, sending measure to Trump

A bill allowing the release of government documents relating to Jeffrey Epstein has been approved by the US Congress.

The Senate quickly approved the measure by unanimous consent even before it was formally transmitted to the chamber on Tuesday in a 427-to-1 vote.

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President Donald Trump will sign the bill into law once it is officially approved, according to the president’s statement.

Given his connections to powerful figures in the media, politics, and academia, including ties to Trump, the case of Epstein, a financier who sexually abused girls and young women for years, has sparked controversies in the US for years.

Trump initially opposed the release of the files, calling the late sex offender a “hoax,” before reversed course&nbsp this month.

The files should be released immediately so the president and his Department of Justice can access them without waiting for Congress to pass it. They are permitted to make them public.

Democrats Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie, the bill’s sponsor, and Republicans Thomas Massie and Marjorie Taylor Greene, who have been supporting the bill, gathered outside the US Capitol to speak with Epstein’s survivors.

To achieve this victory, we battled the president, the attorney general, the FBI director, the House speaker, and the vice president. Let’s give them some credit as well because they’re on our side right now, Massie told reporters.

One of the survivors, Jena-Lisa Jones, took a photo of herself at the time she met Epstein, who was 14 years old.

When I was a child, I. I was in the ninth grade. I was optimistic about life and what it would bring me. She claimed that he had taken a lot of my stuff.

In 2008, Epstein first admitted guilt to the charges of soliciting prostitution with a minor. He was permitted to work for 12 hours a day after serving 13 months in a minimum-security facility. Critics claimed that the punishment was too severe for the offence.

Federal authorities reopened the case against Epstein after the Miami Herald’s investigation into the case, detained him, and charged him with sex trafficking minors in 2019.

He was discovered dead in his New York City jail cell two months later. His death was declared a suicide.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, Prince Andrew&nbsp, Prince Andrew, and former US President Bill Clinton were among Epstein’s collaborators over the years.

Epstein continued to have close personal connections with powerful people even after his first conviction, including Larry Summers, a former head of Harvard University, who recently expressed regret for keeping ties to the sex offender.

Trump criticized an ABC News reporter on Tuesday, pointing out that Epstein was a significant donor to Democratic politicians and asked him why he wouldn’t release the files on his own.

“You just keep working on the Epstein files,” the statement read. The US president claimed that what the Epstein is is a Democrat hoax.

When asked why Trump refused to release the documents earlier in the day, Massie asserted that Epstein’s connections were above partisan politics.

Israeli attack on Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon kills at least 13

According to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, an Israeli airstrike on a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon has claimed the lives of at least 13 people.

The Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, which is located near Sidon, is where a drone strike struck a car on Tuesday, according to the Lebanese state-run National News Agency.

According to the ministry, the attack left at least four people dead, adding that “ambulances are still transporting more wounded to nearby hospitals.”

Israel claimed to have struck Hamas members who were stationed in a training facility in the refugee camp.

The Israeli military’s Arabic spokesperson Avichay Adraee stated in a statement that “all terrorist organizations operating in the region are included when we declare that we will not tolerate any threat on our northern border.” We will continue to fight back with force against Hamas’s threats to our security by gaining traction in Lebanon.

Hamas disputed Israel’s claim, calling it a “fabrication,” and pointing out that the organization lacks training facilities in Lebanon’s refugee camps.

A statement read, “The Zionist bombardment was a barbaric aggression against our innocent Palestinian people as well as Lebanon’s sovereignty.”

Two people were killed earlier in Lebanon when Israeli strikes on cars in the south of the nation were reported as two dead earlier on Tuesday.

Since starting its war on Gaza in October 2023 after Hamas led an attack on southern Israel, Israel has killed a number of officials from Palestinian groups, including Hamas, in Lebanon.

At least 69 Palestinians, 483 Palestinians, and 170 or 706 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s war against Gaza. In Israel, on October 7, 2023, the Hamas-led attacks claimed the lives of 1, 139 people, and more than 200 were taken prisoner.

Hezbollah began firing rockets at Israel the day after it launched its conflict against Gaza, prompting Israeli shelling and airstrikes against the country. The conflict escalated to a full-fledged conflict in late September 2024, which Israel escalated to.

In Lebanon, hundreds of civilians were killed in the conflict between Israel and Israel, among them. 127 people were killed in Israel, including 80 soldiers, overall.

Late in November 2024, a United States-brokered ceasefire brought the conflict to an end, but since then, Israel has launched numerous airstrikes against Lebanon, accusing Hezbollah of attempting to resurrect its forces.

Since the ceasefire, Israeli military actions have claimed the lives of more than 270 people and about 850 others.

According to Lebanese political analyst Karim Emile Bitar, “the Lebanese government consistently violates the ceasefire in Lebanon,” it would be unfair to lay the blame at this point on the Lebanese government. The Lebanese government “asked the Lebanese army to disarm Hezbollah above and beyond what was necessary” in a historically historic statement.

Paramount Skydance prepares $71bn bid for Warner Bros Discovery: Report

Warner Bros. Discovery is reportedly being considered for acquisition by Paramount Skydance.

The looming proposal was first reported on Tuesday by Variety, a trade magazine for the entertainment industry, using sources with knowledge of the discussions.

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According to the publication, Warner Bros Discovery was purchased by the company after it formed an investment consortium with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi.

According to the report, Paramount Skydance would contribute about $50 billion to the proposed acquisition, with the rest going to the wealthy.

The involvement of sovereign wealth funds has been deemed “categorically inaccurate,” according to Paramount Skydance.

David Ellison, the son of Larry Ellison, cofounder of Oracle, and close ally of US President Donald Trump, is now in charge of Paramount Skydance. The Ellison family, which has all-board voting at Paramount Skydance, has previously turned down a bid from Warner Bros Discovery.

Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount both declined to comment on Al Jazeera’s request.

The wealth funds would own a small minority stake in the proposed structure, and each would receive “an IP, a movie premiere, and a movie shoot,” according to the report.

Warner Bros Discovery, which includes Warner Bros. Entertainment, HBO, CNN, TNT, and Warner Bros. Games, is in danger of dissolving, hurt by declines in its television industry.

The business announced in October that it was considering a number of options, including a planned separation, a deal for the entire business, or separate transactions for its Warner Bros or Discovery Global operations.

On Thursday, first-round bids are due in non-binding amounts.

According to the US news website Axios, Paramount is the only company that is currently considering a complete buyout. According to Axios’ reporting, Warner Bros. Discovery also wants to close a deal by the year’s end.

political pressures

How the Trump administration views coverage of Warner Bros Discovery’s news outlets plays a role in the looming deal.

Any bids from Comcast and Netflix are reportedly open, but any bids from Comcast would need to be approved by the regulatory body.

Trump has also repeatedly criticized Comcast for its coverage of TV news, saying the company “should be forced to pay enormous sums of money for the harm they’ve done to our country.”

Versant Media, the parent company of MS-Now, formerly MSNBC, and CNBC, is owned by Comcast, which owns NBC News and its subsidiary.

After settling a Trump lawsuit alleging that CBS’ flagship program, 60 Minutes, allegedly deceptively edited an interview with 2024 Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, who lost to Trump, CBS, has adopted a more cordial attitude toward the administration. This includes employing a Trump nominee as an ombudsman to investigate bias allegations.

Bari Weiss, a journalist without television experience and with a right-leaning opinion, was recently appointed to lead CBS’s broadcast news division.

Antitrust concerns are raised by any of the proposed deals. However, Rodney Benson, a professor of media, culture, and communication at New York University, said, “that would create an additional civic risk” if Paramount Skydance, which already owns CBS, now buys CNN as part of Warner Bros Discovery.

According to Benson, “asking a deal would place two important news outlets under the control of the same large, multi-industry conglomerate with avowed close ties to the party in power,” which would result in more conflicts of interest, less independent watchdog reporting, and a narrowing of diverse voices and viewpoints in the public sphere.

The parent company of CNN continues to be Warner Bros.

Unbeaten Spain qualify for 2026 World Cup after 2-2 draw with Turkiye