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Germany's Merz condemns Russian 'terror against civilians' in Ukraine

Germany's Merz condemns Russian 'terror against civilians' in Ukraine

Local Germany11-06-2025

Speaking at a press conference with his Dutch counterpart Dick Schoof, Merz called the recent Russian attacks "the most serious war crimes" and said Russia had "attacked no military targets but the civilian population".
Merz said that Russia's latest actions were "anything but a proportionate response to the very precise Ukrainian attacks on military airfields and infrastructure in the last week".
"Russia wanted to create a bloodbath and the fact that this only happened in a limited way is thanks to effective Ukrainian defence," he said, adding: "Once again, Russia is escalating instead of negotiating".
Merz's comments come ahead of a G7 summit in Canada on June 15-17 and a NATO meeting later in the month, where allies will push US President Donald Trump to be more aggressive in punishing the Kremlin.
Schoof agreed on the importance of supporting Kyiv, saying that Ukraine was fighting not only for its own security "but also for the security of Europe... after a war of aggression that was started by Russia".
On the question of new sanctions on Russia from the European Union, Merz said he had been in touch with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen in recent days "and I encourage her to introduce this new round quickly".
"There will be further sanctions on the banking sector, in the energy sector," he said.
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Merz said that while Kyiv's allies were "ready for negotiations at any time, if negotiations are refused -- and they are being refused on the Russian side", then the response must be "military strength and massive economic pressure".
Ukraine's allies must send "a signal of strength and deterrence" to Russia, Merz said.
"This is unfortunately the only language that Moscow understands in the current weeks and months."

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What's next for Ukrainians returning from Russian prisons?  – DW – 06/20/2025
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What's next for Ukrainians returning from Russian prisons? – DW – 06/20/2025

Humiliation, subjugation, torture — Ukrainian prisoners of war often recount degrading treatment and other horrors. What they choose to do after returning home from Russia varies widely. When Yuriy Hulchuk returned to Ukraine after two and a half years of Russian captivity, he seemed strangely emotionless. A video on social media shows his mother hugging him upon his return, but he doesn't react. Days later, he spoke about the torture he suffered while a prisoner of war. Hulchuk, 23, was born and raised in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. He studied foreign languages ​​and although he didn't graduate, he was an exchange student in Hungary and Germany and also traveled throughout Europe and China. When he couldn't find any work, he enlisted in the Ukrainian army in December 2021 to make ends meet. That's how Hulchuk ended up in the 36th Brigade of the Ukrainian Marine Corps, fighting in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol when the full-scale Russian invasion of his country began in 2022. In April 2022, Hulchuk was captured by Russian forces and spent the next two and a half years in prison, including in the village of Olenivka in Donetsk, in the Russian-occupied part of eastern Ukraine. The Olenivka prison colony has been described as a "concentration camp" because of the conditions there. In July 2022, over 50 Ukrainian prisoners of war held in Olenivka were killed in an explosion that ripped through the barracks. Ukraine and Russia blamed each other for the incident. An analysis by the United Nations found Russia was likely at fault. Hulchuk was also held in western Russia in Ryazan, as well as in Mordovia, a Russian republic. He returned home in September 2024 a prisoner exchange, To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Another Ukrainian man, Vlad Zadorin, 26, has also spoken of systematic torture in Russian prisons. Zadorin joined the Ukrainian military in 2019 and served in the 35th Brigade of the Ukrainian Marine Corps. At the beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion he was stationed on Snake Island in the Black Sea, where he was captured by the Russian navy. Almost two years later, in January 2024, he too returned home as part of a prisoner exchange. Despite both men reporting similar experiences, today Zadorin and Hulchuk have very different attitudes towards those who tormented them. "I've been advised to publish the full name and address of the employee of the secret IK-10 [Russian prisons are numbered and start with IK] camp in Mordovia," Hulchuk said. "He's a medic there, a cruel man who likes to use electric shocks. There are guys there not afraid of beating you, with hands, feet, a pipe or a wet rag." Hulchuk said dogs were also used to torture prisoners and that electric shocks were administered to prisoners' genitals. 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Local Germany

time3 hours ago

  • Local Germany

German military sees Russia as 'existential risk' to Germany and Europe: report

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Putin says 'all of Ukraine is ours' as he eyes Sumy city – DW – 06/20/2025
Putin says 'all of Ukraine is ours' as he eyes Sumy city – DW – 06/20/2025

DW

time15 hours ago

  • DW

Putin says 'all of Ukraine is ours' as he eyes Sumy city – DW – 06/20/2025

Russian President Vladimir Putin has revived a controversial narrative, claiming that theoretically "all of Ukraine is ours." He also sparked more immediate concerns with comments about seizing Ukraine's city of Sumy. Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared that Russians and Ukrainians are "one people" and that, in that sense, "all of Ukraine is ours." The assertion underscores Moscow's continued underlying rejection of Ukrainian sovereignty and raises renewed alarm over Russia's territorial ambitions. Speaking at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Friday, Putin issued a series of provocative remarks, notably stating: "We have a saying… where the foot of a Russian soldier steps, that is ours." He was responding to a question about Russia's objectives for its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, launched in February 2022. The Russian leader emphasized that while Russia "never doubted" Ukraine's sovereignty after its 1991 independence, it had declared itself a neutral state — a stance he accused Ukraine of having abandoned. Reiterating a longstanding narrative, he said Russians and Ukrainians were essentially the same nation — a position Kyiv and its Western allies categorically reject. "I have said many times that I consider the Russian and Ukrainian peoples to be one people. In this sense, all of Ukraine is ours," Putin said. Ukraine said Putin's comments showed his "disdain" for the peace process. "Putin's cynical statements demonstrate complete disdain for US peace efforts," Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiga said in a post on X. "The only way to force Russia into peace is to deprive it of its sense of impunity." Among the key developments, Putin said he did not "rule out" the capture of the northeastern Ukrainian city of Sumy, which lies roughly 30 kilometers (just over 18 miles) from the Russian border. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video "We have no objective to take Sumy but, in principle, I do not rule it out," he said, accusing Ukrainian forces of persistently shelling Russian border areas. He added that Russian troops had already penetrated up to 12 kilometers into Ukrainian territory in the Sumy region to create what he called a protective "buffer zone." Sumy, though not among the five Ukrainian regions Moscow claims to have annexed — Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Crimea — has been a frequent target of Russian attacks. It also served as a launching point for a Ukrainian counteroffensive into Russia's western Kursk region last August, during which Kyiv's forces briefly captured dozens of settlements before being pushed back by Russian troops — bolstered by thousands of North Korean soldiers, according to reports. Putin's remarks come amid growing skepticism over the viability of peace negotiations, with Moscow continuing to demand further Ukrainian territorial concessions as a precondition for any ceasefire.

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