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America Age > Blog > World > Putin drives across bombed-out Crimean bridge; Zelenskyy named ‘person of the year’: Ukraine live updates
World

Putin drives across bombed-out Crimean bridge; Zelenskyy named ‘person of the year’: Ukraine live updates

Enspirers | Editorial Board
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Putin drives across bombed-out Crimean bridge; Zelenskyy named ‘person of the year’: Ukraine live updates
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Russian President Vladimir Putin drove a car across the Crimean bridge Monday, two months after it was severely damaged in a truck bombing Russian officials blamed on a Ukrainian terrorist attack. 

Contents
EU, international court clash over how to prosecute PutinExplosions rock Russian basesOdesa’s 1 million people without water after Russian missile strikeGermany will upgrade military to counter Russian threat

Putin drove with Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin, who oversaw the bridge reconstruction, and spoke with some of the 500 workers at the site. Repairs on the railroad portion of the bridge are expected to be completed in 6-7 months, authorities said.

Ukraine hinted at responsibility for the attack but never fully acknowledged involvement. Russian authorities blamed Ukraine’s intelligence service and responded with several waves of missile and drone strikes that have battered Ukraine’s energy facilities and other key infrastructure.

The bridge links Russia’s mainland with the Crimean Peninsula, which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014. Ukraine officials have vowed to take back Crimea.

ONLY 25% OF RUSSIANS SUPPORT WAR:Ukraine wants price cap on Russian oil cut in half

Other developments:

►Global oil prices rose Monday as a West-imposed $60-per-barrel limit on Russian oil took effect. Russia said it would cut production before accepting the cap. India was among countries saying it would continue paying for Russian oil – though at a discount from the international benchmark Brent crude price of $87.30 per barrel.

►The Financial Times named Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy its person of the year for 2022. “I am more responsible than brave,” he told FT.

Russian opposition activist Ilya Yashin stands inside a glass cubicle in a courtroom prior to a hearing in Moscow on Dec. 5, 2022. Yashin faces trial on charges stemming from his criticism of the Kremlin's action in Ukraine.

EU, international court clash over how to prosecute Putin

The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court rejected a European Union proposal to create an U.N.-backed special tribunal to prosecute crimes in Ukraine. Karim Khan said the ICC is capable of dealing with war crimes committed in Ukraine, including prosecution of  high-ranking political figures. EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced her plan last week amid concerns President Vladimir Putin could avoid prosecution for the crime of aggression under ICC rules. Khan said his office could prosecute Putin for war crimes or genocide if found appropriate.

Liz Evenson, international justice director at Human Rights Watch, expressed support for the ICC investigation.

“The serious international crimes being committed in Ukraine and elsewhere demonstrate once again the importance of the ICC’s promise of accountability and the court’s crucial role,” Evenson said.

Explosions rock Russian bases

Explosions rocked two air bases in western Russia on Monday, including a base that houses nuclear-capable bombers involved in launching strikes against Ukraine, Russian media reported. The Ukraine military said Ukraine forces were not involved in the attacks, both more than 500 miles from the Ukraine border.

Russian state RIA Novosti news agency said three servicemen were killed, six were injured and a plane was damaged when a fuel truck exploded at an air base in Ryazan, in western Russia. The base houses long-range flight tankers that serve to refuel bombers in the air.

Authorities in the Saratov region said an explosion struck the area of the Engels air base, which houses Tu-95 and Tu-160 strategic bombers that have been involved in launching strikes on Ukraine. Those bombers are capable of carrying nuclear weapons. The Ukraine military said it had reports that two Russian servicemen were injured and two planes damaged. 

“No matter how much the enemy wants (to blame Ukraine forces), we haven’t started anything yet,” said Yuriy Ignat, the spokesman of the Ukraine Air Force Command. “They have to scratch their heads, think, how and who did it, how did it happen?”

Odesa’s 1 million people without water after Russian missile strike

Cities across Ukraine faced another bombardment of Russian missiles Monday, prompting widespread power outages and leaving Odesa, a city of almost 1 million people, without running water. Air raid alerts sounded across the country, and authorities urged people to take shelter. Ukraine’s air force said it shot down more than 60 of about 70 missiles, but national electricity supplier Ukrenergo said emergency blackouts began almost everywhere and that efforts to restore power began immediately. 

In Odesa, the local water supply company said a missile strike cut power to pumping stations, shutting down the entire system.

“Russians are terrorists who have nothing to do with civilization and human values!” Kyrylo Tymoshenko, the deputy head of the Ukrainian president’s office, wrote on Telegram.

Germany will upgrade military to counter Russian threat

The German government will soon unveil a new national security strategy aimed at becoming one of the main providers of security in Europe in the face of Russian aggression, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in an article for the Foreign Affairs magazine. He warned that current threats include assaults on allied territory, cyberwarfare, and even the “remote chance” of a nuclear attack.

The plan calls for strengthening the European defense industry, beefing up the military presence on NATO’s eastern flank and training and equipping Ukraine’s armed forces, Scholz said. He confirmed his government’s plans to buy U.S. F-35 fighter jets.

“For the last three decades, decisions regarding Germany’s security and the equipment of the country’s armed forces were taken against the backdrop of a Europe at peace,” Scholz wrote. “Now, the guiding question will be which threats we and our allies must confront in Europe, most immediately from Russia.”

Contributing: The Associated Press

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