Ukraine: What we know on day 21 of Russian invasion

Kharkiv under attack overnight with two dead and two residential buildings destroyed

  • In Kyiv, a 12-storey residential building has been damaged after it was hit by Russian shelling this morning.
  • Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv also came under attack overnight with two people confirmed dead and two residential buildings destroyed, Ukraine's state emergency services said in an update this morning.
  • Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy gave a late-night national address where he confirmed meetings between Ukrainian and Russian officials continue, adding that "the positions at negotiations are more realistic now".
  • However, Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak said there are "fundamental contradictions" in talks aimed at ending Russia's military attack but there is "certainly room for compromise".
  • Addressing Russian citizens, Mr Zelenskiy said the war would end in "disgrace, poverty, year-long isolation [and] a brutal repressive system".
  • "If you stay in your posts, if you don't speak out against the war, the international community will strip you off of everything you have earned over the years. They are working on it," he said.
  • Mr Zelenskiy is due to address US Congress on Wednesday and is likely to make fresh calls for a no-fly zone and requests for more military aid, including fighter jets.
  • EU leaders vowed support for Ukraine during a visit to Kyiv. The prime ministers of the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovenia arrived in the capital earlier on Tuesday in a show of support for Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who briefed them on the war with Russia. Poland's Jaroslaw Kaczynski called for a peacekeeping mission in Ukraine, with Czech prime minister Petr Fiala saying: "You are not alone. Our countries stand with you. Europe stands with your country".
  • Nato is set to tell its military commanders on Wednesday to draw up plans for new ways to deter Russia following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, including more troops and missile defences in eastern Europe, officials and diplomats said. The Ukrainian minster for defence, Oleksii Reznikov, is expected to plead for more weapons from individual Nato countries, according to a Reuters report.
  • US president Joe Biden is expected to announce an additional $800m in security assistance to Ukraine on Wednesday, a White House official said as reported by Reuters news agency.
  • The US Senate unanimously passed a resolution late on Tuesday night condemning Russian president Vladimir Putin as a war criminal, a rare show of unity in the deeply divided Congress.
  • Russian forces have reportedly taken patients and medical staff of a hospital in the besieged Ukrainian city of Mariupol hostage. According to the BBC, the city's deputy mayor Sergei Orlov said there were 400 people in the hospital and the Russian army were "using our patients and doctors like hostages".
  • About 2,000 cars were able to leave Mariupol, according to local authorities.
  • A woman who interrupted a live news programme on Russian state TV last night to protest against the war in Ukraine has been fined 30,000 roubles (€247) by a Russian court. Marina Ovsyannikova, a Russian television producer, was found guilty of flouting protest legislation, the Russian state news agency RIA reported.
  • The UK is to impose sanctions on 370 more Russian individuals, including more than 50 oligarchs and their families with a combined net worth of £100bn (€118bn). More than 1,000 individuals and entities have now been targeted with sanctions since the invasion of Ukraine, with fresh measures announced against key Kremlin spokespeople and political allies of Mr Putin, including the defence minister, Sergei Shoigu.
  • Boris Johnson will visit Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on Wednesday to ask the Gulf states to produce more oil and help the UK reduce dependence on Russian oil.
  • More than 100,000 people in the UK have offered homes to Ukrainian refugees in the first 24 hours of a government scheme that allows families and individuals to bring them to the UK.
  • China's ambassador to the US penned an interesting op-ed for the Washington Post, saying his government knew nothing of Russia's plans and would have tried to stop it if they had.
  • China also lambasted Taiwan's humanitarian aid for Ukraine and sanctions on Russia as "taking advantage of other's difficulties" after the island announced it was sending more funds donated by the public for refugees. – Guardian