Latest war in Ukraine: At least 3 killed in Russian missile attack on construction site in Lviv

The home of the exiled head of the Wagner Group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, in St. Petersburg, raided by Russian security services.

Inside, they discovered a number of objects, plus wigs, a hammer and weapons.

Gold bars were also provided in the building, the price of which has been calculated.

The images and videos were published in the pro-Kremlin newspaper Izvestia after the raid.

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry shared the consequences of a missile attack that destroyed about fifty apartment buildings.

Andriy Sadovyi, the city’s mayor, said in his latest update that three other people have been killed, but the Foreign Ministry’s tweet says four dead and nine others wounded are now shown.

Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko also showed the deaths of four other people on Telegram.

“At 7am (5am UK time), another 4 people died, nine were injured, seven other people were rescued through state emergency services, 64 were evacuated,” he said.

Welcome to our policy of war in Ukraine.

As Ukraine’s counteroffensive resounded, rumors of a nuclear crisis at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant persisted, with all sides engaged in discussions about its security.

We heard that so-called explosive devices, if they were really there, might not cause the same damage that was feared in the past.

Before we get into today’s coverage, here are the previews of the last 24 hours:

The White House continues to monitor the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

Earlier today, we reported how journalist Yelena Milashina brutally assaulted masked men in Chechnya before being taken to a Moscow hospital.

Ms. Milashina’s hands were damaged and her head was shaved and dyed blue during the attack. Nemov’s leg was stabbed in the attack.

For context: Milashina works for the newspaper Novaya Gazeta, which lost its press license in Russia a year.

On the front line near Bakhmut, Ukrainian servicemen fire shells at Russian troops.

Photographs taken via Reuters show the separate 57th motorized infantry brigade Kost Hordiienko in action.

British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace has long expressed interest in NATO’s next secretary general, but Joe Biden opposed the move, according to reports.

The president refused to endorse Wallace after the UK began educating Ukrainian pilots on F-16 fighter jets without White House permission, according to the Telegraph.

Rishi Sunak told the president Mr Wallace, but Telegraph resources said British attempts to form a foreign F16 coalition have ended the defence secretary’s ambitions.

The UK has no F16, while the US has no F16. It controls the planes’ export license and is wary of any movement perceived as escalating the fighting since the war began.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is Biden’s favorite, the Telegraph reported.

Earlier we told them about an explosion in a Kiev courthouse, which they described as an “extraordinary” scene.

The most recent update from Ukraine’s interior minister is that the user who carried out the explosion was killed and “could” have stepped on an explosive device.

However, there is still very little information about the incident, and officials asked others to stay away.

As UN experts today exchanged accusations through Ukraine and Russia, the citizens of the power plant domain have remained calm.

It’s essential to listen to trusted experts and reliable data resources, he said.

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