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Ukraine

Russian air strike hits military range; Moscow warns that convoys are targets: March 12 recap

Editor's note: This page recaps the news from Ukraine on Saturday, March 12. Follow here for the latest updates and news from Sunday, March 13, as Russia's invasion continues.

With the Russian invasion now in its third week, attention is increasingly focused on the West's efforts to arm and re-supply Ukrainian forces against an enemy with vastly superior weaponry.

Days after the Biden administration rejected Poland's proposal to provide Soviet-built MiG-29 fighter jets to the U.S. to give to Ukraine, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters Friday other military equipment was continuing to reach Ukrainian fighters.

"We are working with allies and partners to help get the kinds off capabilities that we know the Ukrainians need and are using very well inside Ukraine," he said. "Some of that material we have and we are providing. Some of that material we don't have but we know others have were helping coordinate that as well and that security assistance is flowing."

A Ukrainian Territorial Defence Forces member holds an NLAW anti-tank weapon, in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, March 9, 2022.

That drew a warning from Russia's deputy foreign minister Saturday who said convoys transporting foreign weapons into Ukraine will become “legitimate targets” for attacks.

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Also Saturday, President Joe Biden authorized the State Department to provide up to $200 million for arms and equipment to aid Ukraine. 

Devastating economic sanctions from the U.S. and its allies haven't stopped Russia's assault on Ukraine, which resulted in damage to another hospital — this time a cancer hospital in the southern city of Mykolaiv, according to Ukrainian officials. 

Several hundred patients were in the hospital during the attack but no one was killed, according to the hospital’s head doctor, Maksim Beznosenko.

And on Saturday, Ukraine's Foreign Ministry accused Russian forces of shelling a mosque in Mariupol where more than 80 children and adults were seeking shelter.

Russia currently appears to be regrouping from recent losses and possibly gearing up for operations against Kyiv. Fighting has intensified close to Ukraine's capital, where doctors are bracing for the prospect of widespread casualties from war.

More:Biden says the Ukraine crisis shows why the U.S. must become energy independent. Is that possible?

Meanwhile, Russia's economy is in shambles: The ruble has crashed and the Moscow stock market remains closed.

U.S. leaders have hinted the economic pressure is intended to provoke the Russian people to take action against their government.

In the meantime, experts warn the Ukrainian people will continue to suffer, especially if fighting in Kyiv escalates.

A volunteer of the Ukrainian Territorial Defense Forces walks on the debris of a car wash destroyed by a Russian bombing in Baryshivka, east of Kyiv, on Friday.

“Where that leads, I think, is for an ugly next few weeks in which he doubles down with scant regard for civilian casualties, in which urban fighting can get even uglier,” said CIA Director William Burns, a former U.S. ambassador to Russia.

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Latest developments:

► Ukraine's Foreign Ministry said Russian forces shelled a mosque in Mariupol sheltering more than 80 children and adults.

► Russia's deputy foreign minister warned Saturday that convoys transporting foreign weapons into Ukraine will become “legitimate targets” for attacks.

►Russia announced it will ban Instagram beginning March 14, citing messages on the social media platform encouraging and provoking violent acts against Russians.

► President Joe Biden on Friday called for a removal of normal trade relations with Russia, allowing for new tariffs on Russian imports in yet another effort to ratchet up sanctions over Moscow’s intensifying invasion of Ukraine. Biden said the move will be another “crushing blow” to Russia’s economy.

► Ukraine's chief prosecutor’s office says at least 79 children have been killed since the invasion began on Feb. 24. At least 2.5 million people have fled the country, according to the United Nations refugee agency.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks in Kyiv in this image from a video provided by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office and posted on Facebook early Saturday.

► Some 1,300 Ukrainian troops have been killed since Russia began its invasion, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

► On Friday, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of kidnapping the mayor of the city of Melitopol. 

Russia pounds military range in Ukraine's west

Russian forces carried out an air strike on a military range near Lviv in western Ukraine, expanding its offensive closer to the border with Poland.

The Russian military on Sunday morning fired eight rockets at the Yaroviv military range 30 kilometers northwest of Lviv, the Lviv regional administration said, without offering any details about possible casualties.

The Yaroviv military range, also known as the Yaroviv International Peacekeeping and Security Center, is located 35 kilometers from Ukraine’s border with Poland.

Since 2015, the U.S. has regularly sent instructors to the Yaroviv military range to train Ukraine’s military. The range has also hosted international NATO drills.

On Friday, Russian forces shelled two airfields in the western cities of Lutsk and Ivano-Frankivsk, firing more than 10 cruise missiles from Tu-95MS strategic bombers, the Ukrainian General Staff said.

- The Associated Press

Explosions reported outside Lviv, Ukraine's western capital

Multiple explosions were reported in the northwestern city of Lviv on Sunday morning, according to CNN and journalists in the area.

The explosions were reported about 6 a.m. local time Sunday on the outskirts of the city, near Ukraine's border with Poland, CNN said.

The explosions were from Russian missiles fired at the International Peacekeeping and Security Centre in the Yavoriv district, about 20 miles northwest of Lviv, according to reports from CNN and the BBC. 

Air raid sirens went off throughout the night in Lviv and many other regions in Ukraine and continued through the morning, the BBC reported.

Lviv has been identified as a potential capital if Kyiv falls to the Kremlin.

USA TODAY reporters this week spent 36 hours with a team of overseas nurses, engineers and logistics personnel invited by Ukraine's authorities to build a field hospital for emergency and specialized trauma care on the outskirts of Lviv.

Already, Lviv was feeling the strain of hundreds of people pouring off trains each day as they flee for destinations in western Europe and beyond. About 1.5 million people have left Ukraine for Poland and other neighboring countries, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

Lviv's streets this week were congested with vehicles, people and pockets of patrolling soldiers. Some private buildings, such as art galleries, have been hastily converted into impromptu distribution centers for humanitarian aid. 

►On the ground:In Lviv, Ukraine's beleaguered government plans for what might happen in war with Russia

Medical train carries Ukraine kids with cancer

About 60 child cancer patients from Ukraine boarded a medical train in a Polish town Saturday, bound for hospitals in Warsaw and elsewhere.

Medical workers carried some young patients in their arms, on stretchers and in a wheelchair at a station in Medyka, near the Ukrainian border.

“Some of them will require oxygen, will require some form of intensive care,” and some have COVID-19 and have to be kept separate from others,” said Dominik Daszuta, an anesthesiologist from Warsaw Hospital. He said the train has transported 120 children with cancer so far.

The United Nations refugee agency says at least 2.5 million people have fled Ukraine in the two weeks since Russia invaded it.

-The Associated Press

A third Russian general has died in fighting, Ukraine officials say

A Russian general was killed in fighting at Ukraine's southern city Mariupol, Ukrainian officials said.

Maj. Gen. Andrei Kolesnikov would be the third Russian general to die since the invasion of Ukraine began, making an unusual loss of such a high-ranking military official during fighting. Kolesnikov was the commander of Russia's Eastern Military District, according to Ukraine's military.

Russia did not confirm Kolesnikov's death, and has not shared many details about its military losses during the invasion of Ukraine. Maj. Gen. Andrei Sukhovetsky, the commanding general of the Russian 7th Airborne Division, and Maj. Gen. Vitaly Gerasimov, who had fought with Russian forces in Syria and Chechnya, had previously been reported killed.

Ukraine: 7 dead, including one child, after shooting in humanitarian corridor

The Ukrainian Ministry of Defence said Saturday that seven people, including one child, were killed Friday by Russian soldiers while traveling along a humanitarian corridor, calling the act a “military crime.” 

The ministry claimed Russian soldiers shot at a group of civilians, consisting primarily of women and children, behind “the agreed ‘green’ corridor.” The attack allegedly occurred during an evacuation attempt in the village of Peremoga, which is in the Baryshevskyi district of the Kyiv region. The number of non-fatal injuries from the shooting is unknown, the agency said. 

The defense ministry additionally claimed that after the shooting, Russian soldiers would not allow other individuals to escape.

“At present, it is practically impossible to contact them, as well as to provide humanitarian and medical care,” the agency said.

- Ella Lee

More:Putin war crimes in Ukraine will be investigated, but Russian leaders unlikely to be prosecuted

Kamala Harris: ‘When democracy is threatened anywhere, it threatens us all.’

Hours after returning from a trip to Poland and Romania, Vice President Kamala Harris told Democratic Party officials Saturday that the U.S. must do whatever it can short of direct military action to help Ukraine resist the Russian invasion.

"When democracy is threatened anywhere, it threatens us all," Harris said during an otherwise campaign-style speech at the winter meeting of the Democratic National Committee.

The vice president emphasized the U.S. military alliance with the European nations of NATO, and told Democratic supporters that "the ocean that separates us will not leave us untouched by this aggression."

She also referred to the invasion as "Putin's war."

Harris spoke shortly after President Joe Biden, who is spending the weekend at Camp David in Maryland, authorized an additional $200 million for arms and equipment to help Ukraine fight off the Russian military.

– David Jackson

Ukraine Foreign Ministry: Mosque sheltering 80+ children, adults shelled 

Russian forces shelled a mosque sheltering more than 80 children and adults in the war-ravaged city of Mariupol, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said Saturday. 

Both the ministry and Ukraine’s first deputy minister of foreign affairs shared images of the mosque to Twitter.

“At this very moment, the (Russian) army is bombing the Magnificent Mosque, which was built in memory of Suleiman the Magnificent and Hürrem Sultan,” Emine Dzheppar, the deputy minister of foreign affairs, tweeted Friday.

Firefighters extinguish a fire on a house after shelling in Kyiv on March 12, 2022.

The ministry said that Turkish citizens were also hiding in the mosque when it was shelled, which the Ukrainian Embassy in Turkey confirmed. The embassy said a group of 86 Turkish nationals, including 34 children, were among the people who sought safety in the mosque.

- Ella Lee, Associated Press

Russian Foreign Ministry: Foreign weapons convoys ‘legitimate targets’

Convoys transporting foreign weapons into Ukraine will become “legitimate targets” for the Russian Armed Forces, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said on Russian television Saturday.

"We warned the United States that pumping Ukraine with weapons from a number of countries orchestrated by them is not just a dangerous move, but these are actions that turn the corresponding convoys into legitimate targets," Ryabkov said on Russia’s Channel One, according to state-run media RIA Novosti.

Western countries have pledged to provide Ukraine with weaponry to support its fight against Russia, but attacks on convoys could make that aid more difficult to offer.

Smoke billows from burning containers after shelling in Vasylkiv, south west of Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday, March 12, 2022. \

“We’ve actually been flowing more stuff forward, uniforms, protective equipment, some munitions and weaponry,” British Armed Forces Minister James Heappey said in a Feb. 28 interview with British Forces radio. “We reach a stage now, though, where because combat operations are ongoing, routes for the Ukrainians to get the stuff into the country are much more challenging.”

The New York Times reported March 6 that in less than a week’s time, the U.S. and NATO transported more than 17,000 antitank weapons into Ukraine from neighboring countries like Poland and Romania. Those weapons had to make the trip to Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, by land, as airspace over the country has become a war zone in which Western countries have vowed to steer clear.

- Ella Lee

Zelenskyy asks world leaders to help him free kidnapped Ukrainian mayor

Ukraine President President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called on world leaders Saturday to help secure the release of a mayor he says was kidnapped by the Russians.

“We appeal to all world leaders who speak to Moscow – France, Germany, Israel, and others,” he told reporters.

On Friday night, the Ukrainian president announced that Russian soldiers had abducted Melitopol Mayor Ivan Fedorov during their occupation of that city in the southeasternn part of Ukraine.

Zelenskyy said Saturday he raised Fedorov's fate in talks with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

"I ask my partners to help in releasing the captive mayor of Melitopol," Zelensky tweeted. "Prospects for peace talks also discussed. We must stop the aggressor together."

- David Jackson

Biden authorizes $200M in additional State Department aid for Ukraine

President Joe Biden on Saturday authorized the State Department to provide up to $200 million in additional aid to Ukraine. 

The funds could finance weapons, education, training and other military services as Ukraine continues its efforts to beat back Russian troops. 

Congress on Thursday passed a bill that included $13.6 billion in emergency military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine. About $6.5 billion of those funds will cover the cost of sending U.S. troops and weapons and equipping allied forces. $6.8 billion was marked for refugees and giving help to allies. Other funds will help U.S. federal agencies enforce sanctions against Russia and protect against cyber attacks.

The U.S. provided Ukraine with more than $1 billion in the last year, according to the Department of Defense.  

- Ella Lee

1,300 Ukrainian troops killed since start of invasion, Zelenskyy says

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Saturday that about 1,300 Ukrainian troops have been killed since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine in late February.

"Some 1,300 military people died in our country, and more than 12,000 in Russia,” Zelensky said, according to the Ukrainian news website Hromadske. “One to ten. I'm not happy that 12,000 of them died. This is not my vision of the world.”

The Ukrainian president had not previously offered a figure for the number of troops killed since the first day of the attack, when he said 137 Ukrainian soldiers and civilians were killed with hundreds more wounded.

It's not clear on what Zelenskyy is basing his estimate of Russian forces killed. Russia has reported only 2,095 casualties – 498 killed and 1,597 wounded – but that was 10 days ago and hasn't been updated by Moscow. Some Western sources told the BBC the number of Russians killed is closer to around 6,000.

Zelenskyy also claimed that 500 to 600 Russian troops on Friday surrendered to Ukraine's armed forces, though USA TODAY could not independently verify this information. 

- Ella Lee

In call with Putin, Macron, Scholz urge 'immediate cease-fire'

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron spoke Saturday with Russian President Vladimir Putin urging him to agree an “immediate cease-fire in Ukraine.”

Scholz’s office said the 75-minute call Saturday was part of “ongoing international efforts to end the war in Ukraine.”

It said the leaders of Germany and France called on Putin to begin the process of finding a diplomatic solution to the conflict.

Further details of the call were not released.

Separately, Scholz spoke earlier Saturday with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to get his assessment of the current situation.

- Associated Press

How global conflicts like the war in Ukraine impact US gas prices

Propelled by the highest inflation in 40 years and Russia's war in Ukraine, gas prices are the most expensive in U.S. history, not accounting for inflation.

President Joe Biden on Tuesday announced a ban on the U.S. import of all Russian energy products to target "the main artery of Russia’s economy." But he warned there will be costs at home.

More:Inflation reaches highest level since 1982 as consumer prices jump 7% in 2021

Some Americans told USA TODAY they have already started canceling road trips, carpooling, giving up side gigs, walking to work, streamlining errand runs and doing more shopping online to cut down on driving.

In a report this week, Goldman Sachs strategists warned the war in Ukraine could result in the fifth largest one-month disruption in global commodities markets since World War II.

The U.S. also saw sharp increases in crude oil prices in the 1970s, stemming from the Yom Kippur War and Arab oil embargo in 1973 and the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979.

What can the U.S. learn from its past? "Unlike in the 1970s ... we're really on the verge of a sort of renewable future," one expert told USA TODAY. Read more.

— Grace Hauck

Russia to ban Instagram, citing ‘calls for violence against Russian citizens’

Russia will ban Instagram beginning March 14, the country’s communications agency Roskomnadzor announced Saturday

“Messages are circulating on the Instagram social network encouraging and provoking violent acts against Russians, in connection with which the Russian Prosecutor General's Office demanded that Roskomnadzor restrict access to this social network,” the announcement reads.

More:Oil, gold, trade: Congress is looking for options to punish Russia for invading Ukraine

Reuters first reported Thursday that Meta, the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, would make a temporary change to its hate speech policy to allow users in some countries to call for violence against Russians in the context of the Ukraine invasion. A Meta spokesperson confirmed the matter to several news organizations, adding that the company “still won’t allow credible calls for violence against Russian civilians.”

Head of Instagram Adam Mosseri tweeted the news Friday, calling Russia’s decision to block the social media app “wrong.”

“On Monday, Instagram will be blocked in Russia,” he said. “This decision will cut 80 million in Russia off from one another, and from the rest of the world as ~80% of people in Russia follow an Instagram account outside their country. This is wrong.”

Russia restricted access to Facebook and Twitter on March 4, Forbes reported.

- Ella Lee

War toll: 79 children killed, more than 280 educational institutions 'destroyed

Dozens of children have been killed and more than 100 injured since Russia began its invasion, the Ukrainian Office of the Attorney General said Saturday in a Telegram post. 

The agency said that 79 children have died during the 16 days Ukraine has been at war with Russia, but the figure is “not final” due to the inability to inspect locations still under attack. Most deaths occurred in the Kyiv, Kharkiv, Donetsk, Sumy, Kherson and Zhytomyr regions, according to the post.

More:'Worse than hell': Mariupol mother fears for her daughter as Russia lays siege to the Ukrainian city

More than 280 educational institutions also were attacked, of which nine were “completely destroyed, the agency said. Of those institutions, 110 were in the Donetsk region, 28 in the Sumy region and 17 in Kyiv. Ten children’s medical institutions were also attacked, the post says.

“On average, 17 educational institutions are destroyed daily by the occupier during the war,” the attorney general’s office said. “As a result, 7 million children are deprived of the opportunity to study due to active hostilities on the territory of Ukraine and the deliberate destruction of such institutions.”

- Ella Lee

Misinformation abounds amid Russia-Ukraine war

Misinformation and disinformation is easily spreading on social media — here's the latest from the USA TODAY fact-check team:

Italy seizes Russian billionaire's $578M yacht

MILAN — Italian financial police has seized a Russian-owned superyacht valued at $578 million in the port of Trieste as part of seizures of oligarch wealth to pressure Russian President Vladimir Putin to halt the war on Ukraine.

The "Sy A" yacht was identified by Italian police as belonging to belonging to billionaire Andrey Igorevich Melnichenko, who made a fortune in fertilizer production and coal energy. It was seized Friday evening.

Video shows police in cars with flashing lights approaching the triple-mast yacht and officers boarding it.

Italian authorities last week seized some $156 million in luxury yachts and villas belonging to Russian billionaires in such picturesque retreats as Sardinia, the Ligurian coast and Lake Como.

– Associated Press

UK: Bulk of Russian ground forces about 15 miles from the Kyiv's center

LONDON — Britain's Defense Ministry says fighting northwest of Kyiv has continued with the bulk of Russian ground forces now around 15 miles from the center of the city.

A daily intelligence update says elements of the large Russian military column north of Kyiv have dispersed. It says this is likely to support a Russian attempt to encircle the Ukrainian capital. According to the brief, it could also be an attempt by Russia to reduce its vulnerability to Ukrainian counterattacks, which have taken a significant toll on Russian forces.

The update says that beyond Kyiv, the cities of Kharkiv, Chernihiv, Sumy and Mariupol remain encircled and continue to suffer heavy Russian shelling.

– Associated Press

Russia's space agency demand an end to sanctions, cites ISS

Russia's space agency has sent NASA and other international partners a letter demanding an end to sanctions, saying they could threaten the International Space Station.

In a tweet Saturday, the head of Roscosmos, Dmitry Rogozin, said the letter appealed to the space agencies of the United States, Canada and Europe to keep the space station operational.

He illustrated the appeal with a map showing the flight path of the ISS — and a potential fall zone that straddles much of the world but barely touches upon Russia.

Four NASA astronauts, two Russian cosmonauts and one European astronaut are currently on the space station.

– Associated Press

Ukraine receives more Starlink internet access terminals

SpaceX's Starlink network of internet satellites in Earth orbit continues to make its case during real-world crises, this time with the delivery of more hardware to Ukraine.

Mykhailo Fedorov, vice prime minister of Ukraine, this week confirmed his country's government received its second shipment of Starlink user terminals, each of which include a satellite dish and built-in WiFi router. Non-traditional communications channels, especially satellite-based, are critical during crises like war or natural disasters.

SpaceX founder Elon Musk this month agreed to open up the satellite-based internet service to Ukraine after Russia's invasion. Users only need the terminal, power, and a device like a smartphone or laptop to access the internet, meaning Starlink's connectivity is less prone to being knocked out by Russian forces.

– Emre Kelly, Florida Today

Downtown Kyiv hospital braces for carnage doctors fear will come

As Russian troops accumulate on the outskirts of Kyiv, Dr. Vitaliy Krylyuk said an uneasy calm has settled at the city's largest downtown hospital.

Doctors at the Kyiv Hospital of Emergency Medicine are tending to conventional injuries such as car crashes and gunshot wounds. But Krylyuk, who spoke with USA TODAY over a video call, fears things will soon worsen if Russian missiles target the city or enemy troops close on the heart of Ukraine’s capital.

“The biggest problem we need to think about is a mass casualty situation,” said Krylyuk, who serves at the Ukrainian Scientific and Practical Center of Emergency and Disaster Medicine, a division of Ukraine’s Ministry of Health. “We’ve never had a mass casualty situation. We know this theoretically, not practically.”

Emergency planners have sought to address gaps that would emerge if the number of people with life-threatening wounds outstripped the hospital's capacity to care for them. They sought to figure out which hospital entrance to direct ambulances to quickly get patients to hospital beds. Government planners have drafted documents on how to prioritize patients, ensure patients can breathe, secure blood transfusions or notify family members if a loved one is killed or wounded.

— Ken Alltucker 

As companies leave Russia, their assets could be seized

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that if foreign companies shut down production in Russia, he favored a plan to “bring in outside management and then transfer these companies to those who want to work.”

A draft law could allow Russian courts to appoint external administrators for companies that cease operations and are at least 25% foreign-owned. If the owners refuse to resume operations or to sell, the company’s shares could be auctioned off, the ruling United Russia party has said, calling it “the first step toward nationalization.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki criticized “any lawless decision by Russia to seize the assets of these companies,” saying that it “will ultimately result in even more economic pain for Russia.”

“It will compound the clear message to the global business community that Russia is not a safe place to invest and do business,” she said in a tweet, adding that "Russia may also invite legal claims from companies whose property is seized.”

Even before its invasion of Ukraine, Russia was already trying to domesticize its food supply following sanctions it had placed on the European Union in 2014. With little to no fresh food imported from those trading partners, Russia put greater focus on domestic food and importing from friendlier countries like Turkey.

One voice pushing back against confiscating foreign firms’ assets is billionaire metals tycoon Vladimir Potanin, who compared it to the Russian Revolution of 1917, when Communists took power.

“It would set us back 100 years to 1917 and the consequences of a step like this one — global distrust in Russia by investors — would be felt by us for many decades,” he said in a statement Thursday on the social media of his company, Nornickel.   

– Associated Press

Contributing: The Associated Press

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