Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the northeastern city of Izium has become the latest location where the Russians have left behind mass graves.
Zelenskyy said Thursday that Ukrainian authorities have found a mass burial site near Izium in the recently recaptured Kharkiv region.
“Bucha, Mariupol, now, unfortunately, Izium,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly televised address, adding that confirmation would likely come Friday. “Russia leaves death everywhere. And it must be held accountable for it. The world must bring Russia to real responsibility for this war.”
The Associated Press reported that its journalists saw the site in a forest outside Izium on Thursday. A mass grave had a marker saying it contained the bodies of 17 Ukrainian soldiers. It was surrounded by hundreds of individual graves with only crosses to mark them.
Sergei Bolvinov, a senior investigator for Ukrainian police in the Kharkiv region, told Sky News of Britain that a pit with more than 440 bodies was found near Izium after the Russians were driven away. He described the grave as “one of the largest burial sites in any one liberated city.”
TURNING POINT IN UKRAINE WAR:As Russia admits defeat in Kharkiv, Ukraine regains land, confidence
Latest developments:
►The Biden administration said it will send another $600 million in military aid to Ukraine, trying to boost Kyiv’s counteroffensive with some of the same weapons that have helped defeat Russian forces in parts of the east and south.
►Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky did not sustain any serious injuries when his vehicle was struck by another one early Thursday after a battlefield visit, his spokesman said. The driver of the other vehicle received first aid and was taken away by ambulance, the spokesman said.
►Air raid sirens went off twice in Kyiv while Zelenskyy met Thursday with Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, who reiterated the EU’s support for Ukraine.
►The U.N. atomic agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors passed a resolution Thursday calling on Russia to immediately end its occupation of the Ukrainian nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia, where shelling of the facility and nearby areas in recent weeks heightened fears of a possible radiation disaster.
►Superstar guard Stephen Curry of the NBA champion Golden State Warriors said his “contacts in the Biden administration rebuffed an offer to help” the efforts to free WNBA star Brittney Griner from Russian captivity.
Russians flee to the border near Kharkiv
Tensions were rising in Russian villages bordering the Kharkiv region Thursday as the roar of the Ukraine military’s firepower edged closer to the border.
The governor of Russia’s Belgorod region said residents were wounded when Ukraine shells slammed into one border village, and private houses, farm buildings and power lines in another were partially destroyed. Vyacheslav Gladkov also ordered the evacuation of several villages.
Ukraine has retaken thousands of miles and more than 300 villages and towns this month. The Ukraine Defense Ministry said Russian troops fleeing the Ukraine advance are massing at the Belgorod border, where other Russian troops are keeping them from crossing over.
“They have no communication with the command,” the ministry said in a statement. “There is no supply of food and ammunition.”
The New York Times and Wall Street Journal, reporting from Belgorod in recent days, found locals who expressed fear and concern. One schoolteacher said she told students who heard missiles that the sound was only thunder.
Some residents have fled to Belgorod from villages in Ukraine after working for Russian administrations – only to have the Russians abandon the Ukraine towns. Now they fear payback from Ukrainian authorities who view them as traitors.
Biden to meet relatives of Brittney Griner, Paul Whelan at White House
President Joe Biden will hold separate meetings Friday at the White House with relatives of WNBA star Brittney Griner and Michigan security executive Paul Whelan, the Associated Press reported, citing senior administration officials.
This will be the first in-person contact between the president and family members of the two Americans being held captive in Russia, considered by the U.S. government to be “wrongfully detained.”
The Biden administration said in July that it had made a “substantial proposal” to get them home in a prisoner exchange, but those efforts so far have proved fruitless.
Griner has been held in Russia since February on drug-related charges. She was sentenced last month to nine years in prison after pleading guilty, and has appealed the punishment. Whelan is serving a 16-year sentence on espionage-related charges that he and his family say are false. Bill Richardson, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, visited Moscow this week to discuss their release.
Putin acknowledges China’s ‘concerns’ about war in Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged China has “questions and concerns” about Moscow’s war in Ukraine as he met with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, on Thursday in Uzbekistan.
“We highly appreciate the well-balanced position of our Chinese friends in connection with the Ukrainian crisis,” said Putin, who took the opportunity to blast the West. “We understand your questions and concerns in this regard.”
Putin’s rare mention of Chinese worries comes as Beijing has been anxious about the impact of volatile oil prices and economic uncertainty resulting from a war that has lasted nearly seven months and has seen Russia experience some embarrassing battlefield setbacks.
China’s