Ukraine Daily Summary - Sunday, August 7

Russia’s shelling of Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant could be ‘nuclear disaster' -- The Insider alleges Russian army storing mines, explosives at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant -- 1,060 settlements are liberated -- North Macedonia sends 4 Su-25 aircraft to Ukraine -- and more

Ukraine Daily

Sunday, August 7

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Russia’s war against Ukraine

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Operator launches a reconnaissance SKIF drone, produced in Ukraine, as a part of the program ‘The Army of Drones’ during test flights in the Kyiv region on August 2, 2022. (Kostyantyn Chernichkin)

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Atomic agency: Russia’s shelling of Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant could be ‘nuclear disaster.’ The attacks on Europe’s largest nuclear power plant “underline the very real risk of a nuclear disaster,” said Rafael Mariano Grossi, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). According to Grossi, Ukraine has informed the IAEA that there is no damage to the reactors themselves, but the IAEA’s presence at the plant is “of paramount importance” and it is ready to deploy a mission. Meanwhile, President Zelensky drew attention to Amnesty International during his evening address, after the organization failed to release a report on Russia’s shelling of the Zaporizhzhia plant. On Aug. 4, Amnesty International published a report, which accuses the Ukrainian military of endangering civilians.

Institute for the Study of War: Russian opposition outlet alleges Russian army storing mines, explosives at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant. The U.S. think tank cited opposition outlet The Insider in its Aug. 6 report, by saying that Russian forces may have already mined the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant and established Grad rocket batteries near the village of Vodyane, approximately 4 km from the plant’s reactors. The experts previously assessed that Russian forces are likely using the plant to play on Western fears of a nuclear disaster in Ukraine in an effort to degrade Western resolve to provide military support to a Ukrainian counteroffensive, while also effectively using the plant as a nuclear shield to prevent Ukrainian strikes on Russian forces and equipment.

Zelensky: 1,060 settlements are liberated. President Volodymyr Zelensky said during his evening address on Aug. 6 that at least 1,060 out of 3,649 settlements have been liberated from Russian occupation. However, most of them require significant restorative work and demining. The previous update from July 18 stated at the time that 1,028 settlements had been liberated.

Official: 230 damaged buildings repaired in Kyiv Oblast. According to Kyiv Oblast Governor Oleksiy Kuleba, 273 other buildings are undergoing repair. Among the repaired buildings are 139 private homes, 58 apartment buildings, 18 healthcare institutions, eight secondary education institutions, and five administrative buildings. In April, Hr 400 million ($10.78 million) from the state budget’s reserve fund was allocated for the restoration of Kyiv Oblast.

Ukraine still controls Pisky in Donetsk Oblast despite Russian claims over settlement. Donetsk Oblast Governor Pavlo Kyrylenko acknowledged the fierce fighting but said the Russian message was “fake.”

Eight-year-old boy performs outside to raise $1,700 for Ukraine’s military. Serhiy, from Chernihiv, handed over the money he gathered from singing Ukrainian songs outside to the Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation, the organization said on Aug. 5. The young boy said that he would like the money to be spent on a jeep, a thermal imaging camera, weapons or protective ammunition for Ukrainian soldiers.

Official: Pivdennyi Port to begin operations next week. The largest and most profitable port in Ukraine will begin to operate next week under the Black Sea Grain Initiative, Mustafa Nayyem, deputy infrastructure minister announced. Nayyem said that the Pivdennyi Port will work alongside the Odesa and Chornomorsk ports to export 3 million tons of Ukrainian agricultural products within a month. Since Feb. 24, four ships have left from the Odesa and Chornomorsk ports.

Reintegration Ministry: Over 2,000 civilians evacuated from Donetsk Oblast in one week. According to Ukraine’s Ministry of Reintegration of Temporarily Occupied Territories, women, children, the elderly, and people with disabilities were among those evacuated. On July 30, Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said that 200,000 civilians must be evacuated from Donetsk Oblast. Mandatory evacuation from Donetsk Oblast began on Aug. 2.

Governor: Russia shells Sumy Oblast nearly 200 times on Aug. 6. According to Sumy Oblast Governor Dmytro Zhyvytskyi, Russia attacked the Esman, Hlukhiv, Buryn, Shalyhyne, Bilopillia, and Mykolaivka communities on Aug. 6. No casualties were reported, Zhyvytskyi said.

The human cost of Russia’s war

Russian shelling kills 1, injures 5 in Mykolaiv Oblast. A retiree was killed by Russian shelling on Aug. 6 in the village of Bereznehuvate, local authorities reported. Russian forces are shelling the entire front line between Mykolaiv and occupied Kherson, according to authorities.

Prosecutor General’s Office: Russia’s war has killed at least 361 children, injured 702 since Feb. 24. According to the Prosecutor General’s Office, the numbers are expected to be higher since they do not include casualties in the Russian-occupied territories and near the front line.

General Staff: Russia has lost 41,900 troops in Ukraine since Feb. 24. Ukraine’s General Staff reported on Aug. 6 that Russia also lost 1,802 tanks, 4,051 armored fighting vehicles, 2,970 vehicles and fuel tanks, 955 artillery systems, 260 multiple launch rocket systems, 127 anti-aircraft systems, 191 helicopters, 223 airplanes, 744 drones, and 15 boats.

International response

EU condemns Russia’s military activity near Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. European Union’s foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell called for Russian forces to open access to the plant to the International Atomic Energy Agency. Ukraine’s state nuclear energy company Energoatom said that there is “a serious risk” to the plant after Russia used anti-aircraft missiles on-site, evoking fire hazards and safety violations.

North Macedonia sends 4 Su-25 aircraft to Ukraine. Mykhailo Podolyak, adviser to the head of the President’s Office, confirmed on Aug. 6 the country had sent the planes it received from Kyiv in 2001 back to Ukraine. “Many nations today show more courage than half of the G20,” Podolyak wrote on Twitter.

Amnesty International’s Polish Office condemns Russia’s war crimes. The NGO’s Polish branch stressed that Ukraine’s military is “defending from a cruel and unjust attack, fighting in unequal conditions imposed by the aggressor,” as Russian troops have been carrying out “inhumane attacks not only on individual civilian objects but also on multimillion cities, small towns and villages, often populated only by civilians.” The comments come as a response to Amnesty International’s report published on Aug. 4 accusing Ukraine’s military of endangering civilians.

Erdogan: Turkey ready to host a potential Zelensky-Putin summit. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Aug. 6 that he offered Russian dictator Vladimir Putin to hold talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Turkey. “Despite the difficulties, I also maintain a firm belief that the crisis will be resolved at the negotiating table,” Erdogan said, referring to Russia’s full-scale war.

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