[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Near Sderot, Israel — Israeli emergency responders with years of experience doing the grim work of recovering bodies broke down in tears Wednesday as they told CBS News what they’d witnessed in the aftermath of Hamas’ brutal terror attack on Israel. The depth of the horror unleashed by Hamas Saturday on Israeli communities near the border with the Gaza Strip was still emerging five days later.
After finally wresting back control of the small farming community of the Kfar Aza kibbutz, Israeli security forces discovered the aftermath of what a military spokesperson said could only be described as “a massacre.”
Residents were murdered wherever the Hamas gunmen found them on the kibbutz, a type of communal living enclave unique to Israel, witnesses have said.
“We see blood spread out in homes. We’ve found bodies of people who have been butchered,” said Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Maj. Libby Weiss. “The depravity of it is haunting.”
Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty
Weiss told CBS News that more than one of the Israeli soldiers who first reached Kfar Aza reported finding “beheaded children of varying ages, ranging from babies to slightly older children,” along with adults who had also been dismembered.
Yossi Landau, the head of operations for the southern region of Zaka, Israel’s volunteer civilian emergency response organization, told CBS News he saw with his own eyes children and babies who had been beheaded.
“I saw a lot more that cannot be described for now, because it’s very hard to describe,” he said, speaking of parents and children found with their hands bound and clear signs of torture.
Israel is accustomed to living in close proximity to its enemies, but the last four days have shocked the nation and shaken its sense of security.
Yehuda Gottlieb, a dual U.S.-Israeli national who works as a first responder, was outside the Be’eri kibbutz, another small farming community, as Israel’s security forces battled the militants over the weekend. Security camera video shows the gunmen breaking into the compound and opening fire on its defenseless residents. Israel says more than 100 people were killed in that community alone.
Gottlieb said he’d never seen anything like it as he recalled driving into the town, carefully avoiding bodies that littered the road.
For many — both in Israel and the Gaza Strip, the small Palestinian territory run by Hamas and used as a launch pad for its terror attack — the question on Wednesday, five days after the brutal assault, was how Israel would respond.
It was raining down deadly airstrikes on the blockaded strip of land Wednesday for a fifth consecutive day, perhaps trying to soften Hamas’ defenses ahead of a widely expected ground invasion.
Palestinian officials said the strikes had killed at least 950 people as of Wednesday morning, with some 5,000 more wounded — most of them purportedly women and children.
“We do whatever we can, whatever is operationally feasible, to minimize the impact on the civilians within the Gaza Strip,” the IDF’s Weiss told CBS News. “They are not our targets.”
“The loss of life here is tragic,” she said, but added that Israel “must make sure Hamas cannot launch massacres and slaughter civilians as they did this past weekend. It’s just a reality with which we cannot live anymore.”
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Anti-government protests have been gaining steam in Syria for more than a month, echoing the demonstrations that President Bashar Assad sent his security forces to crack down on in 2011, sending the country into a downward spiral that morphed into a full-scale civil war.
The demonstrations, focused predominantly in the southern city of Suwayda, were initially driven by a deepening cost of living crisis — Syria’s economy has been crippled by years of war and is straining under the weight of myriad international sanctions. But anger over the crumbling economy has evolved quickly into demands for the downfall of the Assad government.
The demonstrations in Suwayda and nearby Deraa — where the 2011 uprising began — started after Assad’s government reduced fuel subsidies and raised gasoline prices by nearly 250% in August.
Assad doubled already-meager public sector wages and pensions, but the efforts to mitigate public anger did little to cushion the economic blow. Instead, the move accelerated inflation and further weakened the Syrian pound. Millions of Syrians who were already living in poverty after more than a decade of war found themselves even worse off.
The government insists the country’s economic trouble is the result of the sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its European allies since the war broke out.
Three protesters were wounded in Suwayda on Sept. 13, when armed individuals opened fire as the demonstrators attempted to shut down a branch of the ruling Baath party. The shooters went unidentified, but reports said they were plain-clothes security forces. It was the first time that shots were fired at protesters during the recent demonstrations.
Leys El-Cebel/Anadolu Agency/Getty
Overall, however, the government’s response to the loud but non-violent demonstrations in Suwayda has been restrained.
The city is the heartland of the Druze religious minority in southwest Syria, and Assad has appeared reluctant to wield overwhelming force against the group. During the civil war, the government has presented itself as a defender of religious minorities against “Islamist extremism.”
In 2010, the last year before the initial Syrian revolt, Druze made up 3% of the country’s 22 million people. Members of the community, which is concentrated in Suwayda and in the Damascus suburb of Jaramana, are generally well-educated, and it is one of the most secular groups within Syrian society. They are also a transnational minority, with a presence in Lebanon, Jordan and Israel.
After the 2011 revolt, the Druze remained largely on the sidelines of the civil war, though many young men from the community refused to be conscripted in the Syrian military. Now, at least one powerful figure within the community is advocating for resistance to central than neutrality
Sheikh Hikmat al-Hijiri, the most influential of the so-called Sheikh al-Aql (Sheikhs of Reason) who lead the Druze community in Syria, has called for the establishment of a new democratic state and rejected the Syrian national government’s control over the region.
U.S. Rep. French Hill, a Republican from Arkansas, paid a brief visit to a rebel-held part of northwest Syria last month. Hill joined two other U.S. lawmakers for the trip, which was the first known visit to the war-torn country by American politicians in six years.
After his visit, Hill held a video call with Sheikh Hijiri, “to learn first-hand about the experiences of the Syrians living in Suwayda.”
Leys El-Cebel/Anadolu Agency/Getty
The congressman told CBS News they’d “discussed the frustrations of the local people and their peaceful protests,” and that Hijiri had informed him that Syrian government forces were “cutting off access to water and electricity” in the city. The sheikh also accused the Assad government and “Iranian militia operators” allied with it of trafficking the illegal drug Captagon in the area.
The Biden administration, in conjunction with the U.K., sanctioned several members of Assad’s own family in March for “facilitating the export of Captagon,” with the U.S. Treasury saying the sanctions package, “underscores the al-Assad family dominance of illicit Captagon trafficking and its funding for the oppressive Syrian regime.”
OMAR HAJ KADOUR/AFP/Getty
Maher Sharafeddine, a Druze writer, journalist and opposition activist from Suwayda, told CBS News that Hill had made it clear to Hijiri that he hoped relations between the U.S. and the local Druze community would deepen, and Sharafeddine hoped the initial contact could signal new support in Washington for the opposition in Syria’s civil war.
Assad has held on to power through the war thanks in large part to the armed assistance of his allies in Russia and Iran. But the conflict has splintered the country, left at least 300,000 civilians dead and displaced half of Syria’s pre-war population of 23 million.
The protests in Suwayda have rattled the Syrian government, but they don’t seem to pose an existential threat. Government forces have consolidated their control over most of the country and, after years spent fighting demonization for alleged war crimes against his own people, Assad has very literally retaken his seat at the table.
Other Middle Eastern leaders have been restoring relations with the Assad government, arguing that engagement is the best way to address the flow of refugees and illegal drugs across Syria’s borders.
SANA via AP
The 22-member Arab League, which cut ties with Syria early in the war, recently reinstated Syria as a member and, for the first time in more than a decade, Assad joined the bloc’s other leaders as they met in May.
The Biden administration, however, has indicated no softening of its stance on the heavily-sanctioned Assad government.
“We don’t support normalization of relations with the Assad regime,” U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said bluntly in March as the U.S. worked to get humanitarian aid into parts of Syria devastated by a powerful earthquake.
Rep. Hill, after his visit to rebel-held ground in Syria and his discussion with Sheikh Hijiri, told CBS News he felt the objective for the U.S. and all other nations should be “to work for a political solution that ends Assad’s systematic destruction of his country and finds an outcome where Syrians can securely and safely return to homes and villages to live and work.”
Syria’s state-controlled media outlets have made no mention of the demonstrations in Suwayda. The Syrian Arab News Agency SANA has instead been reporting on food aid provided to the rural village of Salkhad, outside Suwayda, by Russia.
CBS News’ Ellis Kim in Washington contributed to this report.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Dnipro, Ukraine — Russian missiles and drones once again targeted cities in Ukraine overnight, with at least 10 people killed and dozens injured in an attack on the central city of Kryvvi Rih — President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s hometown — according to its mayor. Ukraine accuses Russia of deliberately targeting civilians to distract from the gains being made by Ukrainian forces as they push a counteroffensive on the front lines.
Russian missiles and drones rained down on the town, with one rocket hitting an apartment building as people slept. Firefighters battled the blaze into Tuesday morning, but the work soon turned to the grim task of searching for the missing and the dead.
Andriy Dubchak/AP
“The first bang woke me up and I went straight to my balcony,” said resident Ihor Avrenenko, 60. “The second explosion roared over my head as hot debris fell, and I saw the building on fire.”
The latest aerial attack came as Ukraine’s counteroffensive slowly pushed forward. Ukrainian troops are fighting fiercely to recover occupied ground inch by inch, meticulously clearing small towns and villages as they push toward the Russian forces entrenched further south and east. So far, Ukrainian officials say they’ve recaptured at least seven settlements.
But the gains, so far steady but modest, come at a cost in both lives and hardware. Ukraine hasn’t released new casualty figures, but Russia has destroyed, and claims to have captured, Western-supplied equipment including German Leopard tanks and American Bradley armored fighting vehicles.
Civilians are also paying a heavy toll.
Askold and Tetiana fled from their home in Soledar, not far from the obliterated front-line city of Bakhmut. Their apartment is now a burnt-out shell of the home they knew.
“We have no home,” Tetiana told CBS News through tears. “Who knows where we’ll live… on the street?”
Tears aren’t in short supply in eastern Ukraine. The couple still has family members missing.
“We don’t know where they are,” she told us. “We pray we’ll find them, and also that we’ll find some place to live in peace.”
Ukraine continues asking the U.S. and its other Western partners for more heavy weapons to keep its counteroffensive going, and a Pentagon official told CBS news that the White House would announce later Tuesday a new $325 million military aid package, drawing down existing U.S. supplies. It will include more Bradley and Stryker armored fighting vehicles.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
The chaos continued in southern Ukraine Friday as security forces, emergency workers and regular citizens risked life and limb to evacuate people from a vast area flooded by the destruction of a crucial dam in Russian held territory. At least several square miles along a southern stretch of the Dnipro river, lined by industry and farmland, have been inundated by floodwater that’s swirling with debris, fuel and other contaminants.
Ukraine accused Russia of blowing up the Nova Kakhovka hydro-power plant and dam “from inside” early Tuesday morning, unleashing a torrent of water from the massive reservoir it held back onto the surrounding Kherson region.
The city of Kherson is less than 50 miles downstream from the broken dam. Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said Friday in a social media post that four people were confirmed dead and at least 13 more were missing amid the flooding. He said some 2,412 people had been evacuated. A Russian official in the region put the death toll at eight.
ALINA SMUTKO/REUTERS
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on the Telegram messaging app that “hundreds of thousands of people” in towns and villages along the flooded Dnipro were struggling to find fresh drinking water.
“In more than 40 settlements, life is broken,” said the president, who’s top diplomat earlier this week accused Russia of blowing up the dam in a “heinous war crime.”
Russia, whose forces had occupied the key piece of infrastructure for months, claimed it was Ukrainian forces that damaged the dam, but Moscow has offered no evidence to back up the claim. Military analysts have said Vladimir Putin’s troops, who are facing a mounting counteroffensive by Ukrainian forces, stood the most to gain with the dam’s destruction.
Yasin Demirci/Anadolu Agency/Getty
The dam was also a key road across the Dnipro river, which in much of southern Ukraine serves as a geographic barrier between Ukrainian-held ground to the west, and Russian-held ground to the east. By flooding a wide stretch along the southern portion of the river, the border between the two sides has been enlarged by several times, which will complicate any concerted bid by Ukrainian troops to push Russia back in the parts of the Kherson region it still occupies.
In the city of Kherson, which Ukraine reclaimed from Russian forces last year, and the flooded areas around it, rescue efforts in the disaster zone have been severely hampered by the fact that it is also an active war zone.
STRINGER/REUTERS
Evacuating residents is a deadly business. Boats move swiftly through the flood-stricken areas, ferrying people not only to dry land, but also away from the ongoing Russian bombardment.
News cameras rolled as one elderly man was rescued by volunteers from his submerged home, only to be hit moments later in the head by flying shrapnel as a shell landed nearby.
Asked what it was like operating under such conditions, one rescue worker just blurted out, “adrenaline!” before indicating that he needed to get moving because of incoming fire.
Ukraine’s Chief Rabbi, Moshe Reuven Azman, was among those helping emergency crews bring residents to safety on Thursday when more shells landed nearby. He was recording a video for social media about the efforts when he and his fellow rescuers were forced to duck for cover as explosions rang out nearby.
“We are now in Kherson, we’re trying to evacuate people… miraculously survived,” he said later in a tweet with the video.
North of Kherson, meanwhile, on the long front line that stretches up and down the full length of eastern Ukraine, the country’s forces have stepped up offensive operations around the beleaguered city of Bakhmut, which was only recently taken by Russian troops.
Ukrainian officials have said they’re making steady gains along the front line in recent days and weeks but, despite intense speculation, they have not declared a formal start to the long-awaited full-scale counteroffensive.
U.S. officials told CBS News this week that the counteroffensive appeared to be in its opening phases, and they’ve noted an increase in fighting in a key region along the southern front line.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Moscow — Moscow said Thursday it thwarted a Ukrainian attempt to “invade” its southwestern border as Russia pounded Kyiv with missiles, killing three people including a woman and child. The Ukrainian capital faced nearly nightly air raids in May, including an unusual daytime attack on Monday that sent residents running for shelter.
As Kyiv deployed its air defenses against a fresh volley of Russian missiles, fragments from one of the rockets rained down on a neighborhood in northern Kyiv, killing the three civilians whom residents identified to the Reuters news agency as two local women and the 9-year-old daughter of one of them.
VALENTYN OGIRENKO/REUTERS
Ukraine’s air force said it intercepted and destroyed all 10 missiles launched by Russia. Another 16 people were wounded.
The husband of one of the victims, Yaroslav Ryabchuk, said the shelter where they routinely hid from Russian strikes was closed on Thursday, and he ran to seek help.
“When I came back there was a lot of blood, children and women were lying there. There were screams and dust,” he told AFP. “Nothing matters anymore,” he said, adding that his children had been “left without a mother.”
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko confirmed that three people were killed when “a fragment of rocket” fell close to a clinic as they ran for cover after an air raid alert.
“A closed shelter in wartime is not just indifference, it is a crime,” said Interior Minister Igor Klymenko, adding that an investigation had been opened.
Moscow has always claimed that it only targets military installations and infrastructure in Ukraine, despite strikes regularly hitting civilian homes, hospitals and other buildings.
Moscow said, meanwhile, that it thwarted an attempt by Ukrainian troops to “invade” its southwestern Belgorod region.
“At about 3:00 am (0000 GMT), Ukrainian units comprising up to two motorized infantry companies, reinforced with tanks, attempted to invade,” the Russian defense ministry said.
Moscow used jets and artillery to repel the attacks and prevent Ukrainian troops from crossing over into Russia, it added.
The Belgorod region, which saw an unprecedented two-day armed incursion last week claimed by Russian dissidents, has come under intensified fire in recent weeks.
Regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said eight people were wounded in “uninterrupted shelling” in the town of Shebekino. As shelling continued on Shebekino, its residents poured into centers for displaced people in the regional capital, also called Belgorod, he claimed.
Gladkov said that the city’s main center was filling up with hundreds of arrivals, so additional people arriving were ” being sent in an organized manner to the remaining centers.”
“The main question now is to provide assistance to people, and support resettlement for those who need it,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, adding that Putin was being constantly informed of the situation.
Peskov also denounced what he said was silence from the international community over the strikes.
Despite “every opportunity to see the footage describing strikes on residential buildings, social infrastructures… there is not a single word criticizing Kyiv,” Peskov said.
Russia has seen unprecedented attacks on its soil this year, including a drone attack in Moscow last week. After at least eight drones were used in the attack, the Russian foreign ministry accused the West of “pushing the Ukrainian leadership towards increasingly reckless acts.”
Ukraine, which has seen almost daily attacks on its capital, denied any “direct involvement.”
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Johannesburg — The foreign ministers of the five nations of the BRICS bloc of developing economies, Brazil, Russia, China, India and South Africa, were meeting Thursday in Cape Town, South Africa, amid mounting speculation over the prospect of Russian President Vladimir Putin attending an August summit in the country. In March, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued a warrant for Putin’s arrest over alleged war crimes in Ukraine, so he could potentially face arrest if he sets foot in South Africa, which is an ICC signatory country.
The South African government has said it’s seeking legal advice about possible loopholes in the Rome Statute, which established the international court, that might enable Putin to attend the higher-level BRICS summit this summer.
Handout/Facebook/South African Department of International Relations and Cooperation
On Monday, South Africa’s foreign minister Naledi Pandor announced an order granting diplomatic immunity to all foreign dignitaries attending the meeting this week, as well as the upcoming one in August. It was the clearest signal to date that the South African government is keen to enable Putin to attend the meeting.
Obed Bapela, a senior official in the office of South Africa’s presidency, told the BBC World Service, meanwhile, that the government planned to submit changes to the country’s laws, specifically the ICC Implementation Act, to parliament in June that would give leaders the power to decide who to arrest, regardless of ICC warrants.
Bapela said the government would also seek a specific waiver from the ICC to ensure it would not have to arrest Putin if he did show up in August.
The Democratic Alliance, South Africa’s main opposition party, has launched a court application to force authorities to arrest Putin if he comes this summer.
LUCA SOLA/AFP/Getty
Speaking Wednesday at the National Assembly in Cape Town, President Cyril Ramaphosa said there had been “concerted efforts to draw South Africa into the broader geopolitical contest around the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Yet we have consistently maintain our non-aligned stance, our respect for the U.N. Charter, and for the peaceful resolution of conflict through dialogue.”
As the debate over Putin’s possible visit intensified, Ramaphosa said he would send four of his senior government ministers, including Pandor, to G7 countries as envoys to explain South Africa’s commitment to a “non-aligned” position on Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Earlier in May, Ramaphosa announced an African leaders’ “peace mission” to Ukraine and Russia in June. Presidents Putin and Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine have said they will meet the African heads of state, who will be led by Ramaphosa.
“Principal to our discussions are efforts to find a peaceful resolution to the devastating conflict in Ukraine,” Ramaphosa said when announcing the mission by himself and six other African heads of state.
Russian Foreign Ministry/Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty
The BRICS meetings come on the heels of a late-May summit of the Group of Seven (G-7) leaders in Japan. That meeting was marked by the U.S. and the world’s other biggest economies hitting Russia with a raft of new sanctions over its ongoing invasion of Ukraine, and discussion of countering an increasingly assertive China.
South Africa was not invited to the recent G-7 summit — the first time the country had not been invited since Ramaphosa took office in 2018.
U.S. Ambassador to South Africa Reuben Brigety, who on May 11 accused the country of providing Russia with weapons in contradiction to its stated neutrality in Ukraine, noted that officials from BRICS nations had framed the bloc as a “counterpoint” to the G-7, and he made it clear the U.S. was watching.
“Our officials expressed quite serious concern of the explicit articulation of the BRICS configuration as a, quote, counterpoint to the G-7,” Brigety said. “Of course, South Africa is free to choose its diplomatic and economic partners however it chooses and so is the United States of America.”
“This is not a matter of bullying, as I often hear in this context. It’s not a matter of threatening,” Brigety said. “This is how any relationship works.”
Regarding the prospect of Putin visiting South Africa in August and authorities declining to place him under arrest under its obligations as an ICC signatory nation, Brigety said the U.S. could not “understand why the government of South Africa will not publicly and fulsomely commit to the obligations that it has voluntarily taken upon itself.”
South African-U.S. relations have been strained since the country asserted its “non-aligned stance” on the Russian war in Ukraine, and they deteriorated further when Brigety accused South Africa of secretly loading arms onto a sanctioned Russian ship in the Simon’s Town harbor in December 2022, before the ship returned to Russia with its contents.
His remarks came after tension flared in February over South Africa’s decision to host joint naval war games off its coast with Russian and Chinese warships, as the world marked a full year since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Themba Hadebe/AP
During the Thursday meetings in Cape Town, the five BRICS foreign ministers will be joined virtually by their counterparts from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Cuba, Egypt, Argentina and the Democratic Republic, to name a few.
This wider group, referred to as “Friends of BRICS,” represent a growing collection of nations from what’s referred to as the Global South who are interested in joining the BRICS bloc.
Russian News agency TASS quoted a source on May 26 as saying Putin had “not withdrawn his participation in the summit,” adding: “The Russian leader has been invited.”
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
UN appeals court expands war crime convictions of 2 allies of Slobodan Milosevic, raises sentences to 15 years
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Kharkiv, Ukraine — Russia launched some of its heaviest air attacks to date targeting Ukraine‘s capital and other major cities overnight and into Monday morning. Videos posted online showed children and adults running for shelters as air raid sirens blared in Kyiv.
The head of Ukraine’s armed forces said in a social media post that “up to 40 missiles” and “around 35 drones” were launched, of which virtually all were shot down by the country’s air defenses. Emergency workers doused burning rocket debris that fell onto a road in northern Kyiv, and Mayor Vitaly Klitschko said fragments that fell in another district set a building alight, killing at least one person and injuring another.
Danylo Antoniuk/Anadolu Agency/Getty
Searchlights combed the night skies over Kyiv, hunting for exploding drones before they could hurtle into the ground. It was the second night in a row that swarms of the Iranian-made aircraft were sent buzzing over the capital’s skies.
Video captured the moment one of them was shot down near the northern city of Chernihiv. That city is only about 20 miles from the border with Belarus, an autocratic country whose dictator has let Vladimir Putin use its soil to launch attacks on Ukraine since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022.
CBS News
Kyiv claimed that 58 out of the staggering 59 drones launched overnight were shot down. That success is thanks not only to the high-tech air defense systems that are forced into action almost nightly, but also by Ukrainians putting some good old-fashioned technology to use.
At an undisclosed military site, we watched as Ukrainian forces tested powerful new searchlights that help them locate those low-tech drones in the sky so they can be targeted from the ground.
But the other, more lethal threats flying at Ukraine require more advanced defenses. The arrival of American-made Patriot missile defense systems this spring has enabled the Ukrainians to intercept more powerful Russian missiles.
Oleksandr Ruvin, Kiyv’s chief forensic investigator, showed us what was left of a Russian hypersonic “Kinzhal” missile. The Kremlin had boasted that the weapon was unstoppable, even untouchable given its speed and maneuverability.
“Thanks to our American partners, we can actually touch this missile,” Ruvin told CBS News.
It now sits, along with the remains of other advanced ballistic missiles, in a growing graveyard of destroyed Russian munitions — evidence for the massive war crimes dossier Ruvin is helping compile.
He told CBS News that as Ukraine prepares for its looming counteroffensive, Russia appears to be targeting his country’s air defense network, and those attacks have become more frequent.
Reuters/Handout
Not all of Russia’s missiles are stopped, and another one of its hypersonic rockets, an “Iskander,” slipped though the net early Monday and hit an apartment building in Kharkiv, according to the region’s governor. Governor Oleh Synehubov said six people, including two children and a pregnant woman, were injured in the strike, and he posted video online of the damaged building.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
BELGRADE, Serbia — At one end of a long avenue leading through the western districts of Belgrade, there is a large and freshly painted mural that reads: Boulevard of Ratko Mladic.
It’s been there for months or even years, regularly renovated and kept in clean blue and white colors, never vandalized or painted over although thousands of people pass it by every day.
The busy avenue is not officially named after the Bosnian Serb general who was convicted of genocide by an international court for war crimes committed by his troops during the clashes in the Balkans in 1990s, however. It carries the name of Serbia’s first pro-Western prime minister, Zoran Djindjic, who was gunned down by a sniper bullet in front of his government’s offices on March 12, 2003.
This is a country where public lives — and private ones — are intertwined with violence.
When two mass killings in two days last week left 17 dead and 21 injured in Serbia, including eight students killed by a 13-year-old boy, people were shocked, but many were not surprised. Serbia is a country that went through multiple wars in the 1990s, where war criminals are often glorified, where violence is openly displayed in the mainstream state-controlled media and where every second household has at least one gun stacked in a cupboard.
“In Serbia, there has never been a serious debate about the wars and crimes of the ’90s,” said prominent historian and university professor Dubravka Stojanovic. “About why those wars happened, how much is whose responsibility, how we managed to go to war four times. … There is no mention of how we reached the complete dehumanization … to be so indifferent to all these crimes, without any sympathy for the victims.”
Experts say the Balkan nation’s recent history has left a deep mark on the entire society.
Though Serbia is now seeking membership in the European Union, it has never fully come to terms with its role in the conflict in the former Yugoslavia and the war crimes that were committed by Serb troops in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo, analysts say.
In the 1990s, Serbia’s nationalist leader, Slobodan Milosevic, was widely blamed for triggering the breakup of Yugoslavia by launching wars to incorporate Serb-populated lands in Bosnia and Croatia into one state.
As the Serb onslaught saw cities besieged and reduced to rubble and non-Serbs killed or driven from their homes, Serbia’s state-run propaganda portrayed the Serbs as the biggest victims of the Yugoslav conflict and U.N. sanctions as an anti-Serb conspiracy — a narrative that still persists in the Serbia of today, which is ruled by autocratic, pro-Russian President Aleksandar Vucic, who was Milosevic’s information minister during the 1998-1999 war in Kosovo.
In the ’90s, poverty surged, crime and corruption flourished and mafia-style killings flooded the streets. Inflation was world’s highest, ordinary people lost their savings and jobs, while crime bosses and soccer hooligans rose to prominence.
Scores of people, including a former president, an ex-defense minister, senior police officers, journalists and politicians, all were killed during those years, and many of the murders still remain unresolved.
The war era culminated in 1999, when NATO launched airstrikes to stop the conflict in Kosovo and force Serbia to end its crackdown on separatist ethnic Albanian rebels. The United States and its allies said they feared Milosevic could repeat a slaughter from 1995 when Bosnian Serb troops killed more than 8,000 Bosniak men and boys in Srebrenica, in a military operation led by Mladic.
The 78-day bombing brought Milosevic to his knees and left Serbia in ruins. A year later, an opposition-led populist uprising ousted Milosevic from power to install Djindjic’s government, the first democratic one in Serbia since World War II. Pro-democracy supporters sighed with relief, but not for long.
In 2003, two years after he orchestrated Milosevic’s extradition to the U.N. war crimes tribunal, Djindjic was gunned down by a special paramilitary unit that used to fight in Bosnia and Croatia. That action paved the way for the fall of his government and the gradual disintegration of Serbia’s fragile democracy.
A decade later, a coalition government of parties that led the wars in the 1990s was again firmly in power. And another decade on, Vucic now rules the country almost single-handedly. While portraying himself as a reformist who will take Serbia into the EU, he controls all means of power and keeps tight control over a mainstream media that promotes hate speech against his critics.
Fed up with Vucic’s populist rule, tens of thousands on Monday marched through Belgrade and other Serbian cities in silence to commemorate the victims of the mass killings. It was the biggest anti-government protest in years.
The protest organizers demanded the resignations of government ministers and the withdrawal of broadcast licenses for two state-controlled TV stations that promote violence and often host convicted war criminals and crime figures on their programs.
After the protest officially ended, some of the protesters chanted slogans against Vucic, demanding that he step down. Another rally by opposition supporters is planned for Friday.
Vucic reacted with anger, claiming the opposition wants to topple his government, and called for “the biggest rally in Serbia’s history” on May 26, creating a potential for clashes between his and opposition supporters.
“Their only goal is to take over power by force and to lead Serbia into chaos, instability and unrest,” Vucic said, referring to the opposition and its supporters.
But opponents say Vucic has to take responsibility for creating an atmosphere of uncertainty and hopelessness in the country that they say led to the mass killings.
“The weapons used to kill the children had been filled with evil for a decade,” tweeted opposition leader Zdravko Ponos. “We will not be healed even if all the weapons were taken away and all the sociopaths were put behind bars, as long as our destiny is shaped by the one who unlocked and rode that evil.”
___
Jovana Gec contributed to this story.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy took his campaign against Russia to the international war crimes court in the Netherlands on Thursday, saying he was certain Russian President Vladimir Putin would be convicted once his invasion of Ukraine is defeated.
In The Hague, where the International Criminal Court is based, Zelenskyy urged the global community to hold Putin accountable and told the ICC judges that Russia’s leader “deserves to be sentenced for (his) criminal actions right here in the capital of the international law.”
In March, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Putin for war crimes, accusing him of personal responsibility for the abductions of children from Ukraine. It was the first time the global court, which circulated a warrant for a leader of one of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council.
Zelenskyy’s unannounced visit to the Netherlands came a day after he went to Finland, which doubled the size of NATO’s border with Russia when it joined the military alliance last month, largely out of its concerns about Moscow’s long-term ambitions.
The Ukrainian president also used his trip to press the prime ministers of Belgium and the Netherlands to send advanced warplanes so his country can achieve “justice on the battlefield.” Zelenskyy has successfully assembled significant Western military and political support for Ukraine’s defense since the war began in February 2022.
Zelenskyy traveled in a Dutch-supplied plane and an armored car, with security kept tight at his appearances. Next week, he is expected to go to Berlin, the capital European Union economic powerhouse Germany, in the latest display of the Western might marshaled against Putin.
Zelenskyy’s trips have paid dividends. After traveling to Washington last December and then London, Paris and Brussels in February, Ukraine received heavy artillery and tanks.
But the chances of Putin standing trial in The Hague are remote. The court, which puts individuals on trial for genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and aggression, does not have a police force to execute its warrants. The Russian leader is unlikely to travel to any of the ICC’s 123 member nations, which are under obligation to arrest him, if they can.
Zelenskyy’s speech at the ICC came a day after he denied that Ukrainian forces were responsible for what the Kremlin called an attempt to assassinate Putin in a drone attack on Moscow. The Kremlin promised unspecified retaliation for what it termed a “terrorist” act, and pro-Kremlin figures called for the assassinations of senior Ukraine leaders.
Uncertainty still surrounds exactly what happened in the purported attack.
Putin’s spokesman on Thursday accused the United States of being behind the alleged attack. Moscow has often tried to blame Washington for trying to destroy Russia through its help for Ukraine.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters during a daily conference call that the Kremlin was “well aware that the decision on such actions and terrorist attacks is not made in Kyiv, but in Washington.”
“And then Kyiv does what it’s told to do,” Peskov said, without offering evidence for his claim.
John Kirby, a spokesman for the National Security Council at the White House, described the claim as “ludicrous.” Zelenskyy said in the Netherlands that he was “not interested” in the Kremlin’s opinion.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s military claimed three Russian drones that hit the southern city of Odesa early Thursday had “for Moscow” and “for the Kremlin” written on them, seemingly referring to the Kremlin’s reported strike attempt.
Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv was the target of an air attack for the third time in four days. In total, Ukraine’s air forces intercepted 18 out of 24 Iranian-made drones launched by Russian forces in various regions. No casualties were reported.
In Russia, drones attacked two oil facilities in southern regions of the country near Ukraine in what appeared to be a series of attacks on fuel depots behind enemy lines, Russian media reported Thursday.
Four drones struck an oil refinery in the Krasnodar region, which borders Russia-annexed Crimea, Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported, citing law enforcement sources. Another facility was reportedly hit in the Rostov region.
The Netherlands has been a strong supporter of the Ukrainian war effort. Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s government has promised 14 modern Leopard 2 tanks it is buying together with Denmark. They are expected to be delivered next year.
The Netherlands also joined forces with Germany and Denmark to buy at least 100 older Leopard 1 tanks for Ukraine.
In addition, the Dutch government sent two Patriot air defense missile systems, promised two naval minehunter ships and sent military forensic experts to Ukraine to assist with war crime investigations.
___
Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Pavlohrad, Ukraine — The U.S. military said Monday that Russia had lost some 20,000 troops amid the battle over the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, which Russia has claimed repeatedly to be on the verge of seizing, since December alone. Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the casualty figure rose to 100,000 when including wounded Russian fighters.
Russia dismissed the casualty toll from Washington on Tuesday as having been “plucked from thin air,” but it did not provide any of its own statistics. The last time Moscow gave any indication about its troop loses in Ukraine was September, when the defense minister said about 6,000 service members had been killed.
Kirby said he didn’t have casualty figures for Ukraine’s forces in Bakhmut, but the battle has been grueling, and it emerged this week that a former U.S. Marine is among those to have fallen on the Ukrainian side of the front line. Former Marine Cooper “Harris” Andrews, 26, from Cleveland, was killed in Ukraine last week, his mother told CNN. She said he was hit by a mortar while helping evacuate civilians from Bakhmut, where Russian and Ukrainian forces have fought each other to a bloody stalemate.
As anticipation mounts for a looming Ukrainian spring counteroffensive, Russia has been taking preemptive revenge on the Ukrainian people, targeting civilian areas far from the front lines.
For three days Russia has fired salvos of missiles and explosive drones at cities across Ukraine, including a second barrage that targeted the capital Kyiv. Ukraine’s air defense systems stop many of the Russian missiles — a wall of protection that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy promised his country he was working to bolster with the help of the U.S. and other “partners.”
Zelenskyy said Monday night that during just seven hours, between midnight and Monday morning, Ukraine had “managed to shoot down 15 Russian missiles. But unfortunately, not all of them.”
Several missiles slipped through the air defense net, and at least one of them slammed into the eastern town of Pavlohrad, about 70 miles from the front line and Russian-occupied ground.
A huge fireball lit up the skies amid the strikes. Ukrainian authorities would only say “an industrial complex” was struck. But not all the missiles hit their mark.
Two people were killed and 40 more injured in the attack on Pavlohrad. Residents told CBS News that air raid sirens blared all night.
As the alarm was raised, Olga and Serheii Litvenenko took shelter in a garage on their property. They went back inside at about 2:30 a.m., but as the sound of explosions echoed closer, they decided it was time to seek shelter again.
“I told to my wife, ‘Let’s run, it could hit the house,’” Serheii said, so they quickly pulled on their shoes and headed back toward the garage.
Then there was an explosion. Serheii said a rocket slammed right into the garage as they approached it. He pointed to the charred remains of their car.
“It overturned in front of my eyes… There was so much smoke, dust, and the fire started,” he recalled. He said he ran to a well and tried to connect a hose to douse the flames, but the pump was damaged, and he had to resort to a bucket.
“I was pouring [water] on the car, I wanted to save it. But I couldn’t… It just burned in a minute,” he said.
CBS News
Serheii, who spent 36 years working in the mines around Bakhmut, knows how close a call he and his wife had, and the shock was still fresh.
“I got lucky,” Serheii told CBS News. “Extremely lucky. I’m still trying to process exactly what happened. In my mind, it feels like I’m somewhere else.”
“I have a son on the front line right now,” Serheii said, cursing Russian President Vladimir Putin as a “beast.”
Ukrainian soldiers and civilians alike are all bracing for more pre-emptive Russian strikes ahead of the much-anticipated spring counteroffensive.
A senior Ukrainian defense official told CBS News that preparations were nearly complete, but that recent rainy weather may have delayed the start. When it does begin, he said, “the whole world will know.”
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Nikopol, Ukraine — Russia fired a barrage of more than 20 cruise missiles and two explosive drones at Ukraine early Friday, killing at least 12 people according to Ukrainian officials. The deadliest strike was at least one missile that tore into an apartment building in the central city of Uman, bringing death and destruction hundreds of miles from any active front line.
At least 10 people were killed in that strike, which tore off one end of the residential building as families slept.
Yevhenii Zavhorodnii/Global Images Ukraine/Getty
“We’re covered in blood,” wailed a young mother in a video she posted on social media. “The children were sleeping here… it’s good that everyone’s alive.”
As she pointed her camera at a burning crater outside their building, she swore at the Russians responsible for the attack.
It was a terrifying glimpse at the reality of life in Ukraine: Nowhere is completely safe amid the threat of Russian missiles raining down indiscriminately on towns and cities, killing civilians in their sleep.
At least two young children were said to be among the dead from the wave of pre-dawn strikes across the country.
Anton Gerashchenko, a Ukrainian government advisor, shared images of a strike in the city of Dnipro that he said had killed a 3-year-old girl and a woman.
“Russia continues terrorizing civilians,” he said.
The capital, Kyiv, also came under attack, for the first time in about two months. Officials said there were no casualties there, however, with the country’s air defenses downing 11 missiles and two drones.
Each civilian victim constitutes a potential war crime, the head of the United Nations human rights mission in Ukraine told CBS News.
“If you look at the scale of the injuries, of the killings, of the destruction, it’s very clear that international humanitarian law, the rules of war, have been broken,” said Matilda Bogner.
Shelling is a regular occurrence in front-line cities like Nikopol, just across a river from Russian-occupied territory. There is no military objective in towns and cities like Nikopol or Uman, but that doesn’t stop Russia’s forces from taking potshots into residential neighborhoods, to spread terror.
[ad_2]